Kapaya Fred, Keita Mory, Sodjinou Vincent Dossou, Nanyunja Miriam, Mpairwe Allan, Daniel Ebenezer Obi, Akpan Godwin, Mlanda Tamayi, O-Tipo Shikanga, Abianuru Amarachi Tikal, Mamadu Ibrahim, Masina John, Ladu Alice Igale, Dratibi Fred Athanasius, Ramadan Otim Patrick Cossy, Braka Fiona, Koua Etien Luc, Barboza Philippe, Chamla Dick, Gueye Abdou Salam
Emergency Preparedness and Response, WHO Regional Office for Africa, Nairobi, Nairobi, Kenya
Emergency Preparedness and Response, WHO Regional Office for Africa, Brazzaville, Congo.
BMJ Glob Health. 2025 Jan 22;10(1):e016168. doi: 10.1136/bmjgh-2024-016168.
High-burden cholera outbreaks, spreading beyond the traditional cholera-endemic countries, have been reported since 2021 in the WHO African region. Member states in the region have committed to the global goal of cholera elimination by 2030. To track progress towards this goal, WHO-African countries adopted a regional cholera prevention and control framework in 2018. This study reports on 27 countries' 5-year achievements in implementing the cholera regional framework for cholera prevention, and control. Data collected through a web-based self-assessment tool were analysed and visualised through Power BI. Data were provided by national teams of experts on cholera based on the milestones of the framework. Countries' specific progress and regional progress were calculated. The overall regional progress was 53%, ranging from 19% in Mauritania to 76% in Ethiopia. Out of the 27 countries, 3 had made good progress while 14 had fair and 10 had insufficient progress. At the regional level, 4 milestones were on track, 7 were fair and 10 had insufficient progress. Cholera hot spot mapping had the highest score at 85%, while development of investment cases for cholera control scored the lowest at 14%. Although appreciable progress was noted in some milestones, the progress against critical milestones, including for water, sanitation and hygiene, that form the bedrock of cholera control, was insufficient. Effective implementation of the cholera prevention and control framework anchored on strong government commitment and ownership is essential to curb the current trend of cholera outbreaks and improve the likelihood of cholera elimination by 2030 in Africa.
自2021年以来,世卫组织非洲区域报告了高负担霍乱疫情,且疫情已蔓延至传统霍乱流行国家之外。该区域的成员国已承诺实现到2030年消除霍乱的全球目标。为跟踪实现这一目标的进展情况,世卫组织非洲国家于2018年通过了一项区域霍乱预防和控制框架。本研究报告了27个国家在实施霍乱区域预防和控制框架方面的5年成就。通过基于网络的自我评估工具收集的数据通过Power BI进行了分析和可视化处理。数据由各国霍乱专家团队根据框架的里程碑提供。计算了各国的具体进展和区域进展。区域总体进展为53%,从毛里塔尼亚的19%到埃塞俄比亚的76%不等。在这27个国家中,3个国家取得了良好进展,14个国家进展一般,10个国家进展不足。在区域层面,4个里程碑进展顺利,7个进展一般,10个进展不足。霍乱热点地图绘制得分最高,为85%,而霍乱控制投资案例的制定得分最低,为14%。尽管在一些里程碑方面取得了显著进展,但在构成霍乱控制基石的关键里程碑方面,包括水、环境卫生和个人卫生方面的进展不足。以强有力的政府承诺和主导权为基础,有效实施霍乱预防和控制框架对于遏制当前霍乱疫情趋势以及提高2030年在非洲消除霍乱的可能性至关重要。