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Rapid Health Assessment Protocols for Emergencies
Chapter 4 - Outbreaks of viral haemorrhagic fever, including yellow fever
Purpose of assessment
The purpose of this rapid assessment is to:
- confirm that an epidemic or potential epidemic of
viral haemorrhagic fever (VHF) exists and estimate its geographical
distribution;
- estimate its health impact; and
- assess local response capacity and identify the most effective
control
measures.
Background
General characteristics
Viral haemorrhagic fevers (VHF) are caused by a number of
viruses, some associated with insects or rodents, which may infect humans. These
diseases cause special problems for public health services because of their
epidemic potential, high case-fatality rates and the unusual difficulties
arising in their treatment and prevention.
While the specific clinical profile of each viral illness may
vary, there are two prominent symptoms that may appear in all types of VHF
during the most critical stage of the illness:
- bleeding, with the risk of severe haemorrhage from
both cutaneous and internal sites; and - the development of shock, which may
be irreversible.
The existence of a specific virus in a community tends to
reflect the geographical distribution of its natural host. Nevertheless, human
and natural environments are changing rapidly so research should be considered
an integral part of emergency preparedness against these epidemics.
Several viral infections also have the potential for extensive
nosocomial spread (spread within a health care facility), especially when safe
barrier nursing procedures are not observed. Under these conditions,
case-fatality rates can often exceed 50% and may reach 80% for several days.
Table 3 lists the major VHFs that cause epidemics and shows
their distribution.
Table 3. Viral haemorrhagic fevers causing epidemics
|
VHF |
Distribution |
Natural host/vector | |
Lassa fever |
Central/West Africa |
rodents | |
Junin/Machupo/Guanarito/Sabia |
South America |
rodents | |
Ebola/Marburg |
Africa |
unknown | |
Crimean-Congo haemorrhagic fever (CCHF) |
Africa/Asia |
ticks | |
Rift Valley fever |
Africa |
mosquitos | |
Dengue haemorrhagic fever |
Africa/Americas/Pacific/western Asia/Australasia/Caribbean/India
|
mosquitos | |
Yellow fever |
Africa/South America |
mosquitos | |
Haemorrhagic fever with renal syndrome (HFRS) |
Asia/Europe |
rodents |
The special concerns of yellow fever
In Africa and South America, yellow fever has caused many
serious epidemics, with high attack rates and mortality. However, while the
clinical presentation of yellow fever may resemble other types of VHF, it is
unique with respect to emergency preparedness and containment. Unlike other
VHFs, timely vaccination against yellow fever, combined with vector control
measures, interrupts transmission and prevents unnecessary cases and deaths.
There are many examples of yellow fever epidemics that were
identified as such several months after the actual epidemic onset. The
consequences of this late detection (e.g. delayed initiation of control efforts)
underscore the need to consider yellow fever in a rapid assessment when an
outbreak of VHF is reported or rumoured.
An epidemic alert for an outbreak of VHF with yellow fever as a
possible cause should be given when one of the following occurs:
· one case is
confirmed in a community with abundant vector mosquitos;
· a single case of yellow fever
is diagnosed by serology or virus isolation, or suggested by histopathology;
· hospital reports show
increased incidence of fatal hepatitis, suspected cases of yellow fever and of
VHF.
Early warning procedures such as routine health surveillance and
rapid reporting from hospitals are essential for detecting VHF outbreaks at an
early stage.
The questions below should be addressed as part of these early
warning procedures:
· Where are the
high-risk areas for past and potential VHF and yellow fever epidemics? At-risk
populations? Based on past experience, when are the high-risk
seasons?
· What is the likely
health impact of an epidemic of VHF or yellow fever (number of cases,
hospitalizations, and deaths)?
· What early signs
would signal a VHF or yellow fever epidemic alert? Can or could they
be detected earlier through improved epidemic surveillance and
reporting?
· Does routine
health surveillance include rural areas, where VHF outbreaks frequently
occur?
When VHF outbreaks are reported, they receive heavy media
coverage, often in the context of the panic such outbreaks arouse in the local
medical services and communities affected. Rapid health assessments will provide
factual evidence on the existence and extent of an outbreak. This information
can be provided to the media so that the potentially affected population and the
medical authorities can make informed decisions.
In this way, the rapid assessment offers a valuable opportunity
to allay the communitys anxiety and to provide basic information on
protective measures to prevent the diseases further
spread.
Preparedness
Develop locally adapted working case definitions for VHFs and
yellow fever, as well as guidelines to help health workers at all levels
recognize suspicious trends and signal an epidemic alert.
The prompt diagnosis of a VHF outbreaks cause requires a
competent laboratorys analysis of a representative sample of specimens.
Epidemic preparedness should give this utmost priority, along with assessing the
capacity of national laboratories; identifying reference laboratories; and
ensuring methods of diagnostic specimen transport.
Most of the viruses causing VHF (excluding dengue haemorrhagic
fever) are classified as Biosafety Level 4 pathogens. This biohazard
requires analysis at special facilities that provide maximum containment.
Attempts to isolate the virus should be undertaken only at
approved high containment laboratories. Therefore, these should be identified in
advance and contacts established with the nearest specialist laboratory to
obtain details of necessary precautions for packing and transport of specimens.
Serology can be carried out in standard laboratories only if it
is possible to inactivate specimens and reagents.
The measures listed below should also be taken:
- identify in advance qualified local team members
skilled in assessing VHF outbreaks (e.g. an epidemiologist,
clinician/entomologist, virologist, and veterinarian);
- put in place advance provisions for obtaining rapid outside
specialist support if qualified personnel are not locally available;
- obtain advice from a virologist on the specimens needed,
precautions required for collection, the necessary equipment, and shipment
procedures (consider International Air Transport Association (IATA) shipping
restrictions);
- identify channels and means for rapid communication between
peripheral areas and subnational/central levels - satellite telephone and
facsimile may be required; and
- identify a knowledgeable individual to communicate with the
press and develop a strategy to deal effectively with their
inquiries.
Conducting the assessment
The rapid assessment consists of confirming an outbreak of VHF
and estimating its geographical distribution, assessing the impact on health,
and determining the existing response capacity and immediate needs.
Confirming an outbreak of VHF and estimating its geographical
distribution
Initial case definition
As for all potential epidemics, this is best determined in
advance, as part of emergency preparedness. Simple, viable case definitions
should be developed for suspect, probable, and confirmed cases of VHF.
Examples of case definitions for VHF are:
· Suspected
case: acute fever with either jaundice, or cutaneous and internal bleeding,
accompanied by shock; in the case of dengue the rash should also be mentioned.
· Probable case: a
suspected case with at least two of the following signs: severe myalgia and
headache, conjunctivitis, rash, shock, proteinuria, death, where the person has
had contact with a possible source of transmission.
· Confirmed case: a
suspected or probable case with one of the following: virus isolation from blood
or tissue; detection of viral antigen or genome in blood, tissue or other body
fluid; presence of specific IgM antibody in titre high enough to indicate recent
infection.
In a rapid assessment, it may be difficult to distinguish yellow
fever from other haemorrhagic illnesses or diseases such as malaria. However, to
maximize case detection at this early stage, it is often necessary to use a
broad case definition such as jaundice, fatal or non-fatal to
identify suspected cases.
Confirming the increase in the number of
cases (See Chapter 2)
Case-finding and estimating geographical
distribution (See Chapter 2)
It is important to recognize that there could be many
asymptomatic or mild cases who are hospitalized with a non-specific febrile
illness. To be thorough, VHF and yellow fever case-finding efforts should not be
limited to infectious wards but include other hospital departments and health
facilities.
Collection of specimens
Because the definitive diagnosis of a VHF can only be made by
serology or virus isolation, it is essential that appropriate specimens be
collected during the rapid assessment.
Key considerations in specimen collection are as follows:
· Essential
information should be included with specimens (locality, name of patient, age,
sex, date of sampling, date of disease onset, and summary of clinical and
epidemiological findings).
· All specimens should be
collected in sterile containers.
· All specimens must be
considered potentially infectious and dangerous. Therefore, stringent safety
precautions should be observed.
· For every patient, a specimen
of whole blood should be collected without anticoagulant for virus isolation or
antibody detection.
· Do not freeze whole blood or
liver specimens: separate sera if specimens are to be frozen.
· All sera and cerebrospinal
fluid (CSF) specimens should be frozen for preservation during transport. For
virus isolation, specifically, specimens should be stored ideally on liquid
nitrogen or dry ice.
· Specimens are best
hand-carried from peripheral areas to the central level.
· Use non-breakable containers
(plastic, screw-cap) with absorbent material to contain any leakage, and double
outer containers. Follow International Air Transport Association (IATA)
regulations for air transport of specimens.
The specimens required for laboratory analysis and confirmation
are as follows:
- whole blood from patients who have been sick less
than seven days (do not separate sera from blood clots unless laboratory workers
can be protected against infectious aerosols);
- convalescent sera from patients at least 14 days after onset
(sera should be carefully separated from blood clots);
- for suspect yellow fever cases, liver specimens should be
taken at postmortem with a biopsy needle (these should be divided in two - one
placed in 10% buffered formalin and the other treated in the same way as a whole
blood specimen - not frozen without anticoagulant);
- skin snips preserved in formalin from fatal cases of suspect
VHF.
To verify the clinical diagnosis and identify the causative
virus, it is advisable to transport specimens to WHO collaborating centres for
urgent analysis.
Assessing the impact on health
Collecting information on a representative sample of
cases
When the cause of a VHF outbreak is unknown, careful
interviewing and physical examination of suspect, probable, and confirmed cases
is extremely important.
These early clinical findings provide clues as to the type of
virus and source of infection.
As a minimum, gather information on:
- name, age, sex, residence, date of onset, and of
reporting; - signs and symptoms, severity of illness, treatment given, and
response to treatment; and - presence of risk factors, e.g. history of
contact.
Useful information on the mode of transmission can be gained by
investigating the contacts of identified index cases. It is also important to
ask about exposures to infected animal hosts (e.g. contact while slaughtering
livestock).
The definition of a primary or close
contact is one or more of the following:
- has shared the same place (for working or
travelling), the same room or meals, had occasional face-to-face contact during
the period of communicability of a severe, classical or mild form of the
disease;
- has given care, handled the patients belongings,
participated in autopsy or burial preparations without special protection; or
- has travelled from an area where VHF transmission is
endemic.
The definition of a possible contact is:
- was a close contact of a case during a period in
which she or he possibly was not yet contagious (e.g. persons hospitalized in
the same ward).
Whatever the method chosen, the characterization of the contact
should include a clarification on the index case: was he or she suspect,
probable or confirmed?
Analysing the information
The information should be analysed in terms of time, place, and
person (See Chapter 2).
Assess vectors present
One rapid assessment priority is to determine whether vectors
that may transmit VHF or yellow fever are present in the affected area. It is
not the purpose of a rapid assessment to carry out a detailed entomological
survey, but rather to ask the following questions.
· Are vectors
present in the affected area? If so, what are they? · Are they known to bite humans? · Are there breeding sites? If so, how
extensive?
The answers to these preliminary questions are critical to
deciding on the need for further entomological studies and control measures for
vectors and natural hosts.
Assess disease in other vertebrate hosts
· Are there
unexplained deaths in monkeys in the affected area? If so, where and when did
they occur?
· Are there unexplained deaths
or abortions in livestock? If so, where and when did they occur? (Particularly
relevant for Rift Valley fever.)
Assessing local response capacity and immediate needs
Local response capacity and immediate needs should be assessed
to determine the type and quantity of external support required.
Local epidemic surveillance
· Are there
sufficient trained personnel, vehicles, and communications support to maintain
adequate surveillance? Is outside technical help needed?
· Is there a need for animal
studies (e.g. sentinel herd surveillance) or further entomological
investigations?
Response capacity of local health services
· What steps have
local health officials taken to organize epidemic response? Is there a plan of
action, standardized reporting procedures, and trained staff?
· Are hospitals equipped to
carry out safe barrier nursing measures? (Check bed nets, gloves, disinfectants,
masks, and gowns.)
· What is the local cold chain
capacity? Trained vaccinators? Jet injectors? Vehicles? Stocks of syringes?
Yellow fever vaccine stocks in country?
· Do medical, nursing and
laboratory personnel need further training on case detection and safe patient
management?
· What links have been
established with key community members (e.g. for allaying panic in case of
outbreaks, for general health education and improved surveillance and case
detection)?
· What vector control equipment,
pesticides, and larvicides are available?
· Has a strategy been developed
for dealing with press inquiries?
Determine immediate needs
To determine immediate needs the following questions should be
addressed.
· Is there an
outbreak of VHF which has led or could lead to a large number of cases?
· If so, are external resources
needed to contain it?
If the answer to both questions is yes, then an
emergency response is
needed.
Presenting results
In presenting the results of your assessment, indicate the
following information:
· Is there an
outbreak of some type of VHF? · If so, how
many cases and deaths so far? · What is the
geographical distribution? · Does it appear
to be spreading? · What are the
trends? · What is the clinical
presentation? · Are signs and symptoms
indicative of any specific type of VHF? ·
Where should specimens be sent for rapid analysis? · Is the etiologic agent responsible for the outbreak
identified? · Have specimens been sent to
reference laboratories? · What are the
estimated geographical magnitude, size of population at risk and health impact
in numbers of projected cases and deaths?
Describe the immediate needs. Are outside resources (such as
drugs, equipment, other supplies, personnel, expert assistance, logistics,
funding)
needed?
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