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Matthew Rollosson, RN, MPH&TM, BSN
Nurse Epidemiologist
Tacoma-Pierce County Health Department
29 April 2015
Global Health:
Tropical Medicine
Tropical Medicine
Tropics
 Tropic of Cancer
 Tropic of Capricorn
CIA, 2013
Tropical Medicine
 Diseases that disproportionately affect the poor
 Infectious diseases
 Non-infectious diseases
 Cancer
 Chronic diseases
 Malnutrition
 Envenomations/intoxications
 Mental health
 Substance abuse
 Trauma
Neglected Tropical Diseases
 Bacteria
 Buruli ulcer
 Leprosy (Hansen's disease)
 Trachoma
 Yaws
 Protozoa
 Chagas disease
 Human African
trypanosomiasis (sleeping
sickness)
 Leishmaniasis
 Viruses
 Chikungunya
 Dengue
 Rabies
 Helminth (worms)
 Cysticercosis
 Dracunculiasis (Guinea
worm disease)
 Echinococcosis
 Fascioliasis
 Lymphatic filariasis
 Onchocerciasis (river
blindness)
 Schistosomiasis
 Soil-transmitted helminths
CDC, 2011; WHO, 2015
Neglected Tropical Diseases
CDC, 2011
Noncommunicable Diseases
 80% of deaths caused by noncommunicable
diseases are in developing countries
 Cardiovascular disease
 Heart disease
 Stroke
 Cancer
 Chronic respiratory diseases
 Diabetes
Koehlmoos et al., 2011
Trauma
 90% of deaths due to road traffic accidents
are in developing countries
 1.3 million deaths
 20 to 30 million people injured or disabled
 Occupational injuries
 “Export hazard”
 Dangerous, outdated equipment sent from
high income to low income countries
Koehlmoos et al., 2011
Urbanization
 70% of urban residents in developing
countries live in slums
 650 million people in Asia
 212 million in Africa
 Overcrowding
 Poor housing
 Hazardous locations
 Flooding
 Unsafe drinking water
 Unsanitary conditions
Utzinger & Keiser, 2006
Urbanization
 Increased risk of infectious diseases
 Acute respiratory diseases
 Diarrheal diseases
 HIV/AIDS
 Tuberculosis
 Vector-borne diseases
 Increased risks of chronic diseases
 Dietary changes
 Sedentary lifestyle
 Tobacco use
United States
 Diseases once
endemic in the U.S.:
 Hepatitis A
 Hookworm
 Malaria
 Measles
 Rubella
 Yellow fever
 Diseases frequently
imported to the U.S.:
 Chikungunya
 Dengue
 Hepatitis A
 Malaria
 Measles
Mosquito vectors in the U.S.
 Aedes aegypti, Ae. albopictus
 Chikungunya
 Dengue
 Eastern equine encephalitis
 West Nile virus
 Yellow fever
 Anopheles spp.
 Malaria
CDC, 2014; Zucker, 1996
Influenza A
 Zoonosis
 Birds are the reservoir
 Mammals
 Antigenic shift
 8-segmented genome
 Reassorts in coinfected cells
 Creates novel viruses
 No immunity in the human population
 Pandemic
Hayden, 2007; Treanor, 2009
Highly Pathogenic Avian Influenza
 Risk of reassortment with human influenza A
virus
 Novel virus with pandemic potential
 Culling exposed/infected flocks
 Economic loss
 Loss of high quality protein food
 Avian influenza A viruses in Washington State
 H5N1, H5N2, H5N8
DOH; Tiongco 2008
WHO, 2015
Measles
 Eliminated from the WHO Region of the
Americas in 2002
 Importation from countries with low measles
vaccine coverage
 Outbreaks in U.S. populations with low
measles vaccine coverage
 In the U.S., ~20% of people with measles
are hospitalized with complication
 145,700 measles deaths worldwide (2013)
 Eradicable
Measles in the U.S.
 Most importations are unvaccinated U.S.
citizens returning from travel to countries with
low immunization coverage
 January – August 2013:
 Half of measles importations from WHO
European Region
 January – May 2014:
 49% of importations from the Philippines
CDC 2013, 2014
Costs of measles outbreaks in the
U.S.
 2011:
 107 cases
 16 outbreaks
 Outbreak investigation:
 $4,091 - $10,228 per day
 Cost per case:
 $11,933 - $29,833
 Estimated public health expenditures:
 $2.7 million – $5.3 million
Ortega- Sanchez et al., 2014
Measles in Pierce County, WA
Malaria
 Transmitted by mosquitoes
 Roughly half of the world’s population lives in
areas where malaria is transmitted
 2013:
 198 million cases of malaria
 584,000 deaths
 Majority were children under 5 years of
age in sub-Saharan Africa
 Decreases in malaria morbidity and mortality
following control measures
Plasmodium falciparum transmission
Malaria Atlas Project
Socioeconomic impact of malaria
 Loss of household income
 Disability
 Increased health expenditures
 Macroeconomic losses
 Foreign investment
 Trade
 Tourism
 GDP for countries with intense malaria
transmission is less than one-fifth that of
countries without malaria
Sachs & Malaney, 2002
Demographic Transition
 “I have been asked dozens of times
if help for Africa would ultimately
backfire in an even greater
population explosion. Would greater
child survival rates not translate into
more adult hunger and suffering?”
Jeffery Sachs, The End of Poverty
Demographic Transition
 People have fewer children when
 Child mortality decreases
 Standards of living improve
 Contraception is available
Brauner-Otto et al., 2007;
Conley et al., 2007;
Greenwood & Sesharid,
2001; Newson et al., 2005;
World Bank, 2014
Under 5 mortality, fertility
Country
Deaths
per 1,000
live births
Total
births per
woman
Canada 5 1.6
France 4 2
United Kingdom 5 1.9
United States 7 1.9
Democratic Republic of
the Congo
119 5.9
Ethiopia 64 4.5
Guinea 101 4.9
Liberia 71 4.8
Sierra Leone 161 4.7
WHO; World Bank
U.S. Demographic Transition
Data from U.S. Census Bureau 1999,
U.S. Department of Health and Human Services 2012
Under 5 mortality
UNICEF 2012
Ebola Virus Disease
 Preferred over “Ebola hemorrhagic fever”
 Most people with EVD do not have
hemorrhagic symptoms
 Disseminated intravascular coagulation
 Higher risk for bleeding
 Massive fluid loss due to vomiting and
diarrhea
 Death is usually due to dehydration and
electrolyte disturbances
Bausch et al., 2007; Blumberg et al., 2014;
Geisbert, 2014; Hartman, 2013
Transmission
 Direct contact with blood or body fluids of a symptomatic
person
 Skin
 Cuts, abrasion
 Mucous membranes
 Parenteral
 Reusing unsterilized needles
 Accidental needle sticks
 Funeral ceremonies
 Respiratory droplets?
 Not airborne
 Not effectively transmitted by inanimate objects
Ebola Virus Disease
 Easily mistaken for other diseases
 Health care personnel at risk for infection
 Outbreaks frequently associated with
transmission in health care facilities
- Hepatitis - Shigellosis
- Malaria - Typhoid fever
- Meningococcemia - Typhus
- Plague - Yellow fever
Health Workers
 Frequently infected
 Illness not
recognized as
EVD
 Lack of
appropriate PPE
 Fewer health care
workers available
 Death
 Flee out of fear of
infection
Ebola epidemics, 1976 - 2013
CDC 2014
Timeline
 West African Ebola epidemic traced to a 2-year-
old child in Guinea who died from the disease
December 6, 2013
 First outbreak of EVD in West Africa
 March 10, 2014: World Health Organization
(WHO) notified of an outbreak of an unknown
infectious disease characterized by fever,
vomiting, and diarrhea in Guinea
 Zaïre ebolavirus identified in blood from patients
who were hospitalized with the disease
Baize et al., 2014
Timeline
 …modest further intervention efforts
at that point could have achieved
control.”
 WHO Ebola Response Team (2014)
 Epidemic spreads to
 Liberia in March
 Sierra Leone in May
 Nigeria in July
Timeline
 August 8, 2014: WHO declared the Ebola
epidemic in West Africa a Public Health
Emergency of International Concern
Cases Deaths
Guinea 495 367
Liberia 554 294
Nigeria 13 2
Sierra Leone 717 298
Totals 1,779 961
WHO, 2014
Timeline
 By the end of August, the total numbers of EVD
cases and deaths exceeded that of all previous
Ebola epidemics combined
CDC, 2015
Maforki Ebola Treatment Unit
Port Loko, Sierra Leone
 100 bed capacity
 44 confirmed
 56 suspect
Maforki Ebola Treatment Unit
Maforki Ebola Treatment Unit
Admission
Suspect ward
Confirmed ward
Immediate concerns
 Infection control
 Doffing
 Chlorine
 Patient care
 Oral rehydration
solution not at bedside
 Staff avoided contact
with patients
 Patient records
 Census
 Laboratory results
 Medication
administration
Personal protective equipment
 WHO recommends:
 Face shield or
goggles
 Fluid-resistant
medical/surgical
mask
 Double gloves
 Disposable
gown/coverall
 Head cover
 Waterproof apron
 Waterproof boots
WHO, 2014
Partners in Health
Disinfection
 Ebolaviruses
 Lipid envelope
 Derived from host cell
 Destroyed by
 Alcohol
 Chlorine
 Heat
 Detergents
 Soap
 UV light
Zero to 60 in four weeks
Stigmatization
 Survivors
 Loss of employment, family, home, property
 Harassed
 Victims of violence
 Health workers
 Loss of employment, family, home, property
 Harassed
 Unnecessary quarantine
Davtyan et al., 2014; De Roo et al., 1998;
Hewlett & Hewlett, 2005; Hewlett & Amola, 2003
Number of cases of EVD in contacts of
health workers returning to the U.S.: 0
Current case count:
CDC, 2015
Long-term consequences
 Interruption of health care services
 Immunizations
 Outbreaks of vaccine-preventable diseases
 Could result in additional 2,000 to 16,000 measles deaths
Takahashi et al., 2015
 Malaria control
 Estimated10,900 malaria deaths
Walker et al., 2015
 Prenatal, obstetric, pediatric care
 Economic
 Unemployment
 Trade interrupted
 Education
 School closures
 Teen pregnancy
Dumbaya, 2015
Health Worker Migration
 Nursing shortage in the U.S.
 Nurses aggressively recruited from other countries
 Remittences from nurses working abroad contribute
to economies of countries of origin
 Create shortages in countries of origin
 “Brain drain”
 Philippines
 Exporting nurses since the 1950s
 Medical doctors retrain as nurses to work in the U.S.
 NCLEX testing centers:
 Australia, Canada, England, Hong Kong, India, Japan,
Mexico, Philippines, Puerto Rico, Taiwan
Aiken, 2007; Bach, 2003; Brush & Sochalski 2007;
Buchan et al., 2003; Kiringia et al., 2006; Marchal & Kegels 2003
Questions?
 http://fullyvaccinated.blogspot.com
References
 Aiken, L. H. (2007). U.S. nurse labor market dynamics are key to global nurse
sufficiency. Health Service Research, 42(3p2), 1299-1320.
 Bach, S. (2003). International migration of health workers: labour and social
issues (Working Paper 209). International Labour Office: Geneva.
 Baize, S., Pannetier, D., Oestereich, L., Rieger, T., Koivogui, L., Magassouba, N.,
et al. (Emergence of Zaire Ebola virus disease in Guinea. New England Journal
of Medicine, 371(15),1418-1425. doi:10.1056/NEJMoa1404505.
 Bausch, D. G., Towner, J. S., Dowell, S. F., Kaducu, F., Lukwiya, M., Sanchez, A.,
et al. (2007). Assessment of the risk of Ebola virus transmission from bodily fluids
and fomites. Journal of Infectious Diseases, 196(Supple. 2), S142-S147.
 Blumberg, L., Enria, D., & Bausch, D. G. (2014). Viral hemorrhagic fevers. In J.
Farrar, P. J. Hotez, T. Junghanss, G. Kang, D. Lalloo, & N. J. White (Eds.)
Manson's tropical diseases, 23rd Ed. [Electronic version]. Elsevier.
 Brauner-Otto, S., Axinn, W., & Ghimire, D. (2007). The spread of health services
and fertility transition. Population Studies Center Research Report 07-619.
http://www.psc.isr.umich.edu/pubs/pdf/rr07-619.pdf.
 Brush, B. L., & Sochalski, J. (2007). International nurse migration: lessons from
the Philippines. Policy, Politics, & Nursing Practice, 8(1), 37-46.
References
 Buchan, J., Parkin, T., & Sochalski, J. (2003). International nurse mobility: trends
and policy implications (WHO/EIP/OSD/2003.3). World Health Organization:
Geneva.
 Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. (2011). Neglected tropical diseases.
http://www.cdc.gov/globalhealth/ntd/diseases/index.html.
 Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. (2013). Measles – United States,
January 1 – August 24, 2013. Morbidity and Mortality Weekly Report, 62(36),
741-743. http://www.cdc.gov/mmwr/preview/mmwrhtml/mm6236a2.htm.
 Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. (2014). Dengue homepage.
http://www.cdc.gov/dengue/entomologyEcology/index.html.
 Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. (October 3, 2014). Ebola virus
disease outbreak – Nigeria, July-September, 2014. Morbidity and Mortality
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http://www.cdc.gov/mmwr/preview/mmwrhtml/mm6339a5.htm.
 Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. (2014). Measles – United States,
January 1 – May 23, 2014. Morbidity and Mortality Weekly Report, 63(22), 496-
499. http://www.cdc.gov/mmwr/preview/mmwrhtml/mm6322a4.htm.
 Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. (2015). Outbreaks chronology:
Ebola virus disease.
http://www.cdc.gov/vhf/ebola/outbreaks/history/chronology.html.
References
 Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. (2015). 2014 Ebola outbreak in West Africa –
cumulative reported cases in Guinea, Liberia, and Sierra Leone.
http://www.cdc.gov/vhf/ebola/csv/graph1-cumulative-reported-cases-all.csv.
 Conley, D., McCord, G. C., & Sachs, J. D. (2007). Africa's lagging demographic transition:
evidence from exogenous impacts of malaria ecology and agricultural technology. National
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http://www.nber.org/papers/w12892.
 Davtyan, M., Brown, B., & Folayan, M. O. (2014). Addressing Ebola-related stigma: lessons
learned from HIV/AIDS. Global Health Action, 7(26058).
http://dx.doi.org/10.3402/gha.v7.26058.
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among survivors of the 1995 Ebola epidemic in Kikwit, Democratic Republic of Congo: their
feelings and experiences. Tropical Medicine and International Health, 3(11), 883-885.
 Dumbaya, C. (January 29, 2015). Sierra Leone's First Lady: 'Ebola has increased teenage
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increased-teenage-pregnancy-rates.
 Geisbert, T. W. (2014). Marburg and Ebola hemorrhagic fevers (Filoviruses). In J. E. Bennett,
R. Dolin, & M. J. Blaser (Eds.). Mandell, Douglas, and Bennett's principles and practice of
infectious diseases, 8th Ed. [Electronic version]. Elsevier.
 Greenwood, J. & Sesharid, A. (2001). The U.S. demographic transition. AEA Papers and
Proceedings, 92(2), 153-159. http://www.econ.wisc.edu/~aseshadr/publication_pdf/usdt.pdf.
References
 Hartman, A. L. (2013). Ebola and Marburg virus infections. In, A. J. Magill, D. R.
Hill, T. Solomon, & E. T. Ryan (Eds.) Hunter's tropical medicine, 9th Ed.
[Electronic version]. Elsevier.
 Hewlett, B. L. & Hewlett, B. S. (2005). Providing care and facing death: nursing
during Ebola outbreaks in Central Africa. Journal of Transcultural Nursing, 16(4),
289-297.
 Hewlett, B. S. & Amola, R. P. (2003). Cultural contexts of Ebola in northern
Uganda. Emerging Infectious Diseases, 9(10), 1242-1248.
 Hayden, F. G. (2007). Influenza. In Goldman, L., & Ausiello, D. (Eds.) Cecil
medicine, (23rd Ed.). [Electronic version]. Elsevier.
 Kiringia, J. M., Gbary, A. R., Muthuri, L. K., Nyoni, J., & Seddoh, A. (2006). The
cost of health professionals’ brain drain in Kenya. BMC Health Services
Research, 6(89), doi:10.1186/1472-6963-6-89.
 Koehlmoos, T. P., Anwar, D., & Cravioto, A. (2011). Global health: chronic
diseases and other emergent health issues in global health. Infectious Disease
Clinics of North America, 25(3), doi:10.1016.j.idc.2011.05.008.
 Marchal, B., & Kegels, G. (2003). Health workforce imbalances in times of
globalization: brain drain or professional mobility. International Journal of Health
Planning and Management, 18(S1), S89-S101.
References
 Newson, L., Postmes, T., Lea, S. E. G., & Webley, P. (2005). Why are modern families small?
Toward an evolutionary and cultural explanation for the demographic transition. Personality
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 Ortega-Sanchez, I. R., Vijayaraghavan, M., Barskey, A. E., & Wallace, G. S. (2014). The
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 Sachs, J., & Malaney, P. (2002). The economic and social burden of malaria. Nature,
415(6872), 680-685.
 Takahashi, S., Metcalf, C. J. E., Ferrari, M. J., Moss, W. J., Truelove, S. A., Tatem, A. J.,et al.
(2015). Reduced vaccination and the risk of measles and other childhood diseases. Science,
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 Tiongco, M. (2008). Costs and Benefits of HPAI Prevention and Control Measures: A
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Global health

  • 1. Matthew Rollosson, RN, MPH&TM, BSN Nurse Epidemiologist Tacoma-Pierce County Health Department 29 April 2015 Global Health: Tropical Medicine
  • 3. Tropics  Tropic of Cancer  Tropic of Capricorn CIA, 2013
  • 4. Tropical Medicine  Diseases that disproportionately affect the poor  Infectious diseases  Non-infectious diseases  Cancer  Chronic diseases  Malnutrition  Envenomations/intoxications  Mental health  Substance abuse  Trauma
  • 5. Neglected Tropical Diseases  Bacteria  Buruli ulcer  Leprosy (Hansen's disease)  Trachoma  Yaws  Protozoa  Chagas disease  Human African trypanosomiasis (sleeping sickness)  Leishmaniasis  Viruses  Chikungunya  Dengue  Rabies  Helminth (worms)  Cysticercosis  Dracunculiasis (Guinea worm disease)  Echinococcosis  Fascioliasis  Lymphatic filariasis  Onchocerciasis (river blindness)  Schistosomiasis  Soil-transmitted helminths CDC, 2011; WHO, 2015
  • 7. Noncommunicable Diseases  80% of deaths caused by noncommunicable diseases are in developing countries  Cardiovascular disease  Heart disease  Stroke  Cancer  Chronic respiratory diseases  Diabetes Koehlmoos et al., 2011
  • 8. Trauma  90% of deaths due to road traffic accidents are in developing countries  1.3 million deaths  20 to 30 million people injured or disabled  Occupational injuries  “Export hazard”  Dangerous, outdated equipment sent from high income to low income countries Koehlmoos et al., 2011
  • 9.
  • 10. Urbanization  70% of urban residents in developing countries live in slums  650 million people in Asia  212 million in Africa  Overcrowding  Poor housing  Hazardous locations  Flooding  Unsafe drinking water  Unsanitary conditions Utzinger & Keiser, 2006
  • 11. Urbanization  Increased risk of infectious diseases  Acute respiratory diseases  Diarrheal diseases  HIV/AIDS  Tuberculosis  Vector-borne diseases  Increased risks of chronic diseases  Dietary changes  Sedentary lifestyle  Tobacco use
  • 12. United States  Diseases once endemic in the U.S.:  Hepatitis A  Hookworm  Malaria  Measles  Rubella  Yellow fever  Diseases frequently imported to the U.S.:  Chikungunya  Dengue  Hepatitis A  Malaria  Measles
  • 13. Mosquito vectors in the U.S.  Aedes aegypti, Ae. albopictus  Chikungunya  Dengue  Eastern equine encephalitis  West Nile virus  Yellow fever  Anopheles spp.  Malaria CDC, 2014; Zucker, 1996
  • 14. Influenza A  Zoonosis  Birds are the reservoir  Mammals  Antigenic shift  8-segmented genome  Reassorts in coinfected cells  Creates novel viruses  No immunity in the human population  Pandemic Hayden, 2007; Treanor, 2009
  • 15. Highly Pathogenic Avian Influenza  Risk of reassortment with human influenza A virus  Novel virus with pandemic potential  Culling exposed/infected flocks  Economic loss  Loss of high quality protein food  Avian influenza A viruses in Washington State  H5N1, H5N2, H5N8 DOH; Tiongco 2008
  • 17. Measles  Eliminated from the WHO Region of the Americas in 2002  Importation from countries with low measles vaccine coverage  Outbreaks in U.S. populations with low measles vaccine coverage  In the U.S., ~20% of people with measles are hospitalized with complication  145,700 measles deaths worldwide (2013)  Eradicable
  • 18. Measles in the U.S.  Most importations are unvaccinated U.S. citizens returning from travel to countries with low immunization coverage  January – August 2013:  Half of measles importations from WHO European Region  January – May 2014:  49% of importations from the Philippines CDC 2013, 2014
  • 19. Costs of measles outbreaks in the U.S.  2011:  107 cases  16 outbreaks  Outbreak investigation:  $4,091 - $10,228 per day  Cost per case:  $11,933 - $29,833  Estimated public health expenditures:  $2.7 million – $5.3 million Ortega- Sanchez et al., 2014
  • 20. Measles in Pierce County, WA
  • 21. Malaria  Transmitted by mosquitoes  Roughly half of the world’s population lives in areas where malaria is transmitted  2013:  198 million cases of malaria  584,000 deaths  Majority were children under 5 years of age in sub-Saharan Africa  Decreases in malaria morbidity and mortality following control measures
  • 23. Socioeconomic impact of malaria  Loss of household income  Disability  Increased health expenditures  Macroeconomic losses  Foreign investment  Trade  Tourism  GDP for countries with intense malaria transmission is less than one-fifth that of countries without malaria Sachs & Malaney, 2002
  • 24. Demographic Transition  “I have been asked dozens of times if help for Africa would ultimately backfire in an even greater population explosion. Would greater child survival rates not translate into more adult hunger and suffering?” Jeffery Sachs, The End of Poverty
  • 25. Demographic Transition  People have fewer children when  Child mortality decreases  Standards of living improve  Contraception is available Brauner-Otto et al., 2007; Conley et al., 2007; Greenwood & Sesharid, 2001; Newson et al., 2005; World Bank, 2014
  • 26. Under 5 mortality, fertility Country Deaths per 1,000 live births Total births per woman Canada 5 1.6 France 4 2 United Kingdom 5 1.9 United States 7 1.9 Democratic Republic of the Congo 119 5.9 Ethiopia 64 4.5 Guinea 101 4.9 Liberia 71 4.8 Sierra Leone 161 4.7 WHO; World Bank
  • 27. U.S. Demographic Transition Data from U.S. Census Bureau 1999, U.S. Department of Health and Human Services 2012
  • 29.
  • 30. Ebola Virus Disease  Preferred over “Ebola hemorrhagic fever”  Most people with EVD do not have hemorrhagic symptoms  Disseminated intravascular coagulation  Higher risk for bleeding  Massive fluid loss due to vomiting and diarrhea  Death is usually due to dehydration and electrolyte disturbances Bausch et al., 2007; Blumberg et al., 2014; Geisbert, 2014; Hartman, 2013
  • 31. Transmission  Direct contact with blood or body fluids of a symptomatic person  Skin  Cuts, abrasion  Mucous membranes  Parenteral  Reusing unsterilized needles  Accidental needle sticks  Funeral ceremonies  Respiratory droplets?  Not airborne  Not effectively transmitted by inanimate objects
  • 32. Ebola Virus Disease  Easily mistaken for other diseases  Health care personnel at risk for infection  Outbreaks frequently associated with transmission in health care facilities - Hepatitis - Shigellosis - Malaria - Typhoid fever - Meningococcemia - Typhus - Plague - Yellow fever
  • 33. Health Workers  Frequently infected  Illness not recognized as EVD  Lack of appropriate PPE  Fewer health care workers available  Death  Flee out of fear of infection
  • 34. Ebola epidemics, 1976 - 2013 CDC 2014
  • 35. Timeline  West African Ebola epidemic traced to a 2-year- old child in Guinea who died from the disease December 6, 2013  First outbreak of EVD in West Africa  March 10, 2014: World Health Organization (WHO) notified of an outbreak of an unknown infectious disease characterized by fever, vomiting, and diarrhea in Guinea  Zaïre ebolavirus identified in blood from patients who were hospitalized with the disease Baize et al., 2014
  • 36. Timeline  …modest further intervention efforts at that point could have achieved control.”  WHO Ebola Response Team (2014)  Epidemic spreads to  Liberia in March  Sierra Leone in May  Nigeria in July
  • 37. Timeline  August 8, 2014: WHO declared the Ebola epidemic in West Africa a Public Health Emergency of International Concern Cases Deaths Guinea 495 367 Liberia 554 294 Nigeria 13 2 Sierra Leone 717 298 Totals 1,779 961 WHO, 2014
  • 38. Timeline  By the end of August, the total numbers of EVD cases and deaths exceeded that of all previous Ebola epidemics combined CDC, 2015
  • 39. Maforki Ebola Treatment Unit Port Loko, Sierra Leone  100 bed capacity  44 confirmed  56 suspect
  • 45. Immediate concerns  Infection control  Doffing  Chlorine  Patient care  Oral rehydration solution not at bedside  Staff avoided contact with patients  Patient records  Census  Laboratory results  Medication administration
  • 46. Personal protective equipment  WHO recommends:  Face shield or goggles  Fluid-resistant medical/surgical mask  Double gloves  Disposable gown/coverall  Head cover  Waterproof apron  Waterproof boots WHO, 2014 Partners in Health
  • 47. Disinfection  Ebolaviruses  Lipid envelope  Derived from host cell  Destroyed by  Alcohol  Chlorine  Heat  Detergents  Soap  UV light
  • 48. Zero to 60 in four weeks
  • 49. Stigmatization  Survivors  Loss of employment, family, home, property  Harassed  Victims of violence  Health workers  Loss of employment, family, home, property  Harassed  Unnecessary quarantine Davtyan et al., 2014; De Roo et al., 1998; Hewlett & Hewlett, 2005; Hewlett & Amola, 2003
  • 50. Number of cases of EVD in contacts of health workers returning to the U.S.: 0
  • 52.
  • 53.
  • 54. Long-term consequences  Interruption of health care services  Immunizations  Outbreaks of vaccine-preventable diseases  Could result in additional 2,000 to 16,000 measles deaths Takahashi et al., 2015  Malaria control  Estimated10,900 malaria deaths Walker et al., 2015  Prenatal, obstetric, pediatric care  Economic  Unemployment  Trade interrupted  Education  School closures  Teen pregnancy Dumbaya, 2015
  • 55. Health Worker Migration  Nursing shortage in the U.S.  Nurses aggressively recruited from other countries  Remittences from nurses working abroad contribute to economies of countries of origin  Create shortages in countries of origin  “Brain drain”  Philippines  Exporting nurses since the 1950s  Medical doctors retrain as nurses to work in the U.S.  NCLEX testing centers:  Australia, Canada, England, Hong Kong, India, Japan, Mexico, Philippines, Puerto Rico, Taiwan Aiken, 2007; Bach, 2003; Brush & Sochalski 2007; Buchan et al., 2003; Kiringia et al., 2006; Marchal & Kegels 2003
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