World Health Organisation, Regional Office for Africa, Brazzaville, Congo.
World Health Organisation, Inter-Country Support Team for Western Africa, Ouagadougou, Burkina Faso.
Pan Afr Med J. 2021 Jul 8;39:192. doi: 10.11604/pamj.2021.39.192.29491. eCollection 2021.
following the declaration of the COVID-19 pandemic, many countries imposed restrictions on public gatherings, health workers were repurposed for COVID-19 response, and public demand for preventive health services declined due to fear of getting COVID-19 in health care settings. These factors led to the disruption in health service delivery, including childhood immunization, in the first months of the pandemic. Measles surveillance supported with laboratory confirmation, is implemented in the African Region as part of the strategies towards attaining measles elimination. World Health Organisation developed guidelines to assist countries to continue to safely provide essential health services including immunization and the surveillance of vaccine preventable diseases during the pandemic.
we analysed the measles case-based surveillance and laboratory databases for the years 2014 to 2020, to determine the impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on measles surveillance, comparing the performance in 2020 against the preceding years.
the weekly reporting of suspected measles cases declined starting in April 2020. Twelve countries had more than 50% decline in both the number of reported cases as well as in the number of specimens collected in 2020, as compared to the mean for the years 2014-2018. In 2020, only 30% of the specimens from suspected measles cases arrived at the national laboratory within 3 days of collection. At Regional level, 86% of the districts reported suspected measles cases in 2020, while the non-measles febrile rash illness rate was 2.1 per 100,000 population, which was the lowest rate documented since 2014. Only 11 countries met the targets for the two principal surveillance performance indicators in 2020 as compared to an average of 21 countries in the years 2014-2019.
the overall quality of measles surveillance has declined during the COVID pandemic in many countries. Countries should implement immediate and proactive measures to revitalise active surveillance for measles and monitor the quality of surveillance. We recommend that countries consider implementing specimen collection and testing methods that can facilitate timely confirmation of suspected measles cases in remote communities and areas with transportation challenges.
随着 COVID-19 大流行的宣布,许多国家对公众集会实施了限制,卫生工作者被重新用于应对 COVID-19,由于担心在医疗保健环境中感染 COVID-19,公众对预防保健服务的需求下降。这些因素导致大流行的头几个月,包括儿童免疫接种在内的卫生服务提供出现中断。作为实现麻疹消除策略的一部分,非洲区域正在实施有实验室确认的麻疹监测。世界卫生组织制定了指南,以协助各国在大流行期间继续安全地提供基本卫生服务,包括免疫接种和疫苗可预防疾病的监测。
我们分析了 2014 年至 2020 年的基于病例的麻疹监测和实验室数据库,以确定 COVID-19 大流行对麻疹监测的影响,将 2020 年的表现与前几年进行比较。
自 2020 年 4 月以来,每周报告的疑似麻疹病例开始减少。与 2014-2018 年的平均值相比,12 个国家报告的病例数和采集的标本数均下降了 50%以上。2020 年,只有 30%的疑似麻疹病例标本在采集后 3 天内送达国家实验室。在区域一级,2020 年 86%的地区报告了疑似麻疹病例,而非麻疹发热皮疹发病率为每 10 万人 2.1 例,这是自 2014 年以来记录的最低发病率。与 2014-2019 年期间平均有 21 个国家相比,2020 年只有 11 个国家达到了两个主要监测绩效指标的目标。
在许多国家,麻疹监测的整体质量在 COVID 大流行期间下降。各国应立即采取积极主动的措施,振兴麻疹主动监测,并监测监测质量。我们建议各国考虑实施标本采集和检测方法,以便在偏远社区和交通不便地区及时确认疑似麻疹病例。