Detection of infectious disease outbreaks in twenty-two fragile states, 2000-2010: a systematic review

<p>Abstract</p> <p>Fragile states are home to a sixth of the world's population, and their populations are particularly vulnerable to infectious disease outbreaks. Timely surveillance and control are essential to minimise the impact of these outbreaks, but little evidence is p...

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Main Authors: Checchi Francesco, Bruckner Catherine
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMC 2011-08-01
Series:Conflict and Health
Online Access:http://www.conflictandhealth.com/content/5/1/13
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spelling doaj-ee713da60cfe4220a4618f7feae13e2b2020-11-24T22:01:01ZengBMCConflict and Health1752-15052011-08-01511310.1186/1752-1505-5-13Detection of infectious disease outbreaks in twenty-two fragile states, 2000-2010: a systematic reviewChecchi FrancescoBruckner Catherine<p>Abstract</p> <p>Fragile states are home to a sixth of the world's population, and their populations are particularly vulnerable to infectious disease outbreaks. Timely surveillance and control are essential to minimise the impact of these outbreaks, but little evidence is published about the effectiveness of existing surveillance systems. We did a systematic review of the circumstances (mode) of detection of outbreaks occurring in 22 fragile states in the decade 2000-2010 (i.e. all states consistently meeting fragility criteria during the timeframe of the review), as well as time lags from onset to detection of these outbreaks, and from detection to further events in their timeline. The aim of this review was to enhance the evidence base for implementing infectious disease surveillance in these complex, resource-constrained settings, and to assess the relative importance of different routes whereby outbreak detection occurs.</p> <p>We identified 61 reports concerning 38 outbreaks. Twenty of these were detected by existing surveillance systems, but 10 detections occurred following formal notifications by participating health facilities rather than data analysis. A further 15 outbreaks were detected by informal notifications, including rumours.</p> <p>There were long delays from onset to detection (median 29 days) and from detection to further events (investigation, confirmation, declaration, control). Existing surveillance systems yielded the shortest detection delays when linked to reduced barriers to health care and frequent analysis and reporting of incidence data.</p> <p>Epidemic surveillance and control appear to be insufficiently timely in fragile states, and need to be strengthened. Greater reliance on formal and informal notifications is warranted. Outbreak reports should be more standardised and enable monitoring of surveillance systems' effectiveness.</p> http://www.conflictandhealth.com/content/5/1/13
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Checchi Francesco
Bruckner Catherine
spellingShingle Checchi Francesco
Bruckner Catherine
Detection of infectious disease outbreaks in twenty-two fragile states, 2000-2010: a systematic review
Conflict and Health
author_facet Checchi Francesco
Bruckner Catherine
author_sort Checchi Francesco
title Detection of infectious disease outbreaks in twenty-two fragile states, 2000-2010: a systematic review
title_short Detection of infectious disease outbreaks in twenty-two fragile states, 2000-2010: a systematic review
title_full Detection of infectious disease outbreaks in twenty-two fragile states, 2000-2010: a systematic review
title_fullStr Detection of infectious disease outbreaks in twenty-two fragile states, 2000-2010: a systematic review
title_full_unstemmed Detection of infectious disease outbreaks in twenty-two fragile states, 2000-2010: a systematic review
title_sort detection of infectious disease outbreaks in twenty-two fragile states, 2000-2010: a systematic review
publisher BMC
series Conflict and Health
issn 1752-1505
publishDate 2011-08-01
description <p>Abstract</p> <p>Fragile states are home to a sixth of the world's population, and their populations are particularly vulnerable to infectious disease outbreaks. Timely surveillance and control are essential to minimise the impact of these outbreaks, but little evidence is published about the effectiveness of existing surveillance systems. We did a systematic review of the circumstances (mode) of detection of outbreaks occurring in 22 fragile states in the decade 2000-2010 (i.e. all states consistently meeting fragility criteria during the timeframe of the review), as well as time lags from onset to detection of these outbreaks, and from detection to further events in their timeline. The aim of this review was to enhance the evidence base for implementing infectious disease surveillance in these complex, resource-constrained settings, and to assess the relative importance of different routes whereby outbreak detection occurs.</p> <p>We identified 61 reports concerning 38 outbreaks. Twenty of these were detected by existing surveillance systems, but 10 detections occurred following formal notifications by participating health facilities rather than data analysis. A further 15 outbreaks were detected by informal notifications, including rumours.</p> <p>There were long delays from onset to detection (median 29 days) and from detection to further events (investigation, confirmation, declaration, control). Existing surveillance systems yielded the shortest detection delays when linked to reduced barriers to health care and frequent analysis and reporting of incidence data.</p> <p>Epidemic surveillance and control appear to be insufficiently timely in fragile states, and need to be strengthened. Greater reliance on formal and informal notifications is warranted. Outbreak reports should be more standardised and enable monitoring of surveillance systems' effectiveness.</p>
url http://www.conflictandhealth.com/content/5/1/13
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