Ebola virus disease preparedness team, World Health Organization, Juba, Republic of South Sudan.
National Ebola virus disease Incident Management Team Ministry of Health, Republic of South Sudan.
PLoS Negl Trop Dis. 2020 Nov 30;14(11):e0008872. doi: 10.1371/journal.pntd.0008872. eCollection 2020 Nov.
South Sudan implemented Ebola virus disease preparedness interventions aiming at preventing and rapidly containing any importation of the virus from the Democratic Republic of Congo starting from August 2018. One of these interventions was a surveillance system which included an Ebola alert management system. This study analyzed the performance of this system. A descriptive cross-sectional study of the Ebola virus disease alerts which were reported in South Sudan from August 2018 to November 2019 was conducted using both quantitative and qualitative methods. As of 30 November 2019, a total of 107 alerts had been detected in the country out of which 51 (47.7%) met the case definition and were investigated with blood samples collected for laboratory confirmation. Most (81%) of the investigated alerts were South Sudanese nationals. The alerts were identified by health workers (53.1%) at health facilities, at the community (20.4%) and by screeners at the points of entry (12.2%). Most of the investigated alerts were detected from the high-risk states of Gbudwe (46.9%), Jubek (16.3%) and Torit (10.2%). The investigated alerts commonly presented with fever, bleeding, headache and vomiting. The median timeliness for deployment of Rapid Response Team was less than one day and significantly different between the 6-month time periods (K-W = 7.7567; df = 2; p = 0.0024) from 2018 to 2019. Strengths of the alert management system included existence of a dedicated national alert hotline, case definition for alerts and rapid response teams while the weaknesses were occasional inability to access the alert toll-free hotline and lack of transport for deployment of the rapid response teams which often constrain quick response. This study demonstrates that the Ebola virus disease alert management system in South Sudan was fully functional despite the associated challenges and provides evidence to further improve Ebola preparedness in the country.
南苏丹自 2018 年 8 月以来实施了埃博拉病毒病防备干预措施,旨在预防和迅速控制从刚果民主共和国传入的任何病毒。这些干预措施之一是监测系统,其中包括埃博拉警报管理系统。本研究分析了该系统的性能。使用定量和定性方法对 2018 年 8 月至 2019 年 11 月期间在南苏丹报告的埃博拉病毒病警报进行了描述性横断面研究。截至 2019 年 11 月 30 日,该国共发现 107 起警报,其中 51 起(47.7%)符合病例定义,并采集血液样本进行实验室确认进行了调查。大多数(81%)被调查的警报都是南苏丹国民。警报是由卫生工作者(53.1%)在卫生机构、社区(20.4%)和入境点筛查人员(12.2%)发现的。大多数被调查的警报是在高危州的 Gbudwe(46.9%)、Jubek(16.3%)和 Torit(10.2%)发现的。被调查的警报通常表现为发热、出血、头痛和呕吐。快速反应小组的部署及时性中位数不到一天,2018 年至 2019 年期间 6 个月时间的差异有统计学意义(K-W=7.7567;df=2;p=0.0024)。警报管理系统的优势包括有专门的国家警报热线、警报和快速反应小组的病例定义,而弱点是偶尔无法访问警报免费热线,以及缺乏部署快速反应小组的交通工具,这往往限制了快速反应。本研究表明,南苏丹的埃博拉病毒病警报管理系统运作良好,尽管存在相关挑战,但为进一步改善该国的埃博拉防备提供了证据。