Department of Paediatrics, University of Oxford, Oxford, UK.
BMC Public Health. 2013 Jun 24;13:607. doi: 10.1186/1471-2458-13-607.
The increasing frequency and intensity of dengue outbreaks in endemic and non-endemic countries requires a rational, evidence based response. To this end, we aimed to collate the experiences of a number of affected countries, identify strengths and limitations in dengue surveillance, outbreak preparedness, detection and response and contribute towards the development of a model contingency plan adaptable to country needs.
The study was undertaken in five Latin American (Brazil, Colombia, Dominican Republic, Mexico, Peru) and five in Asian countries (Indonesia, Malaysia, Maldives, Sri Lanka, Vietnam). A mixed-methods approach was used which included document analysis, key informant interviews, focus-group discussions, secondary data analysis and consensus building by an international dengue expert meeting organised by the World Health Organization, Special Program for Research and Training in Tropical Diseases (WHO-TDR).
Country information on dengue is based on compulsory notification and reporting ("passive surveillance"), with laboratory confirmation (in all participating Latin American countries and some Asian countries) or by using a clinical syndromic definition. Seven countries additionally had sentinel sites with active dengue reporting, some also had virological surveillance. Six had agreed a formal definition of a dengue outbreak separate to seasonal variation in case numbers. Countries collected data on a range of warning signs that may identify outbreaks early, but none had developed a systematic approach to identifying and responding to the early stages of an outbreak. Outbreak response plans varied in quality, particularly regarding the early response. The surge capacity of hospitals with recent dengue outbreaks varied; those that could mobilise additional staff, beds, laboratory support and resources coped best in comparison to those improvising a coping strategy during the outbreak. Hospital outbreak management plans were present in 9/22 participating hospitals in Latin-America and 8/20 participating hospitals in Asia.
Considerable variation between countries was observed with regard to surveillance, outbreak detection, and response. Through discussion at the expert meeting, suggestions were made for the development of a more standardised approach in the form of a model contingency plan, with agreed outbreak definitions and country-specific risk assessment schemes to initiate early response activities according to the outbreak phase. This would also allow greater cross-country sharing of ideas.
在流行地区和非流行地区,登革热疫情的发生频率和强度都在不断增加,这需要采取合理的、基于证据的应对措施。为此,我们旨在汇集多个受影响国家的经验,确定登革热监测、疫情准备、检测和应对方面的优势和不足,并为制定适合各国需求的应急计划模型做出贡献。
该研究在五个拉丁美洲国家(巴西、哥伦比亚、多米尼加共和国、墨西哥、秘鲁)和五个亚洲国家(印度尼西亚、马来西亚、马尔代夫、斯里兰卡、越南)进行。采用了一种混合方法,包括文件分析、关键知情人访谈、焦点小组讨论、二次数据分析以及世界卫生组织(世卫组织)热带病研究和培训特别规划署组织的一次国际登革热专家会议达成的共识。
各国的登革热信息基于强制性报告(“被动监测”),实验室确认(所有参与的拉丁美洲国家和一些亚洲国家)或采用临床综合征定义。7 个国家还有主动登革热报告的哨点,一些国家还有病毒学监测。6 个国家已商定与季节性病例数变化分开的登革热疫情正式定义。各国收集了一系列预警信号的数据,这些信号可能有助于及早发现疫情,但没有制定系统的方法来识别和应对疫情的早期阶段。疫情应对计划的质量存在差异,特别是在早期应对方面。有近期登革热疫情的医院的应急能力各不相同;与那些在疫情期间临时制定应对策略的医院相比,那些能够调动额外人员、床位、实验室支持和资源的医院应对得最好。22 个参与拉丁美洲国家的医院中有 9 个和 20 个参与亚洲国家的医院中有 8 个制定了医院疫情管理计划。
各国在监测、疫情检测和应对方面存在相当大的差异。通过专家会议的讨论,提出了制定更标准化方法的建议,包括制定模型应急计划、商定疫情定义和针对特定国家的风险评估方案,以便根据疫情阶段启动早期应对活动。这也将允许各国之间更广泛地交流想法。