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Rapid Health Assessment Protocols for Emergencies
Chapter 5 - Outbreaks of acute diarrhoeal disease
Purpose of assessment
The purpose of this rapid health assessment is to:
- confirm that an epidemic of acute diarrhoeal
disease exists and estimate its geographical distribution;
- estimate its health impact; and
- assess existing response capacity and identify the most
effective control measures to minimize the outbreaks ill
effects.
Background
In many places, diarrhoeal diseases are endemic with seasonal
peaks. However, when serious outbreaks of acute diarrhoeal disease occur, the
common cause is either:
- Shigella dysenteriae type 1 (Sd1), which
causes bacillary dysentery, or
- Vibrio cholerae serogroup 01 or 0139, which causes
cholera.
Shigella dysenteriae type 1 (Sd1)
This is the most virulent of the four serogroups of shigellae,
and is often resistant to most of the common antimicrobials. The illness caused
by Sd1 often includes abdominal cramps, fever, and rectal pain. Less frequent
complications with Sd1 include sepsis, seizures, renal failure, and
haemolytic/uraemic syndrome. The organism is highly infectious, and readily
transmitted by direct person-to-person contact as well as by food and water.
Shigella dysentery type 1 always should be considered as a
possible cause of the outbreak when there is an unusual increase in the weekly
number of cases of bloody diarrhoea or deaths from bloody diarrhoea.
Vibrio cholerae 01 and 0139
Cholera has spread widely since 1961 and now affects at least 98
countries.
Most people infected have no symptoms or only mild diarrhoea.
However, those with a severe case of the disease can die within hours of onset
from fluid/electrolyte loss through profuse diarrhoea and, to a lesser extent,
vomiting. Although high death rates can occur when treatment is unavailable,
case fatality can be reduced to below 1% with proper facilities and care. The
organism is spread almost exclusively by ingestion of food or water contaminated
directly or indirectly by faeces or vomit from infected individuals.
A cholera outbreak should be suspected if either or both of the
following occur:
- a patient older than five years develops severe
dehydration or dies from acute watery diarrhoea;
- there is a sudden increase in the daily number of patients
with acute watery diarrhoea, especially patients who pass the rice
water stools typical of
cholera.
Conducting the assessment
The rapid assessment consists of confirming an outbreak of acute
diarrhoeal disease, assessing the impact on health, the existing response
capacity, and additional immediate needs.
The assessment team should be equipped with specimen containers
and sufficient transport media (such as Cary-Blair) for collecting specimens to
analyse at the closest competent laboratory.
Confirming an outbreak of acute diarrhoeal disease
Confirming the clinical diagnosis and collection of
specimens
This can be carried out by examining a number of cases.
Confirming the outbreak and implementing control measures should not await
laboratory results. However, for both dysentery and cholera, reliable laboratory
techniques are essential for confirming the clinical diagnosis and determining
antimicrobial sensitivities.
Initial case definition
As in all rapid epidemic assessments, this is an important first
step for guiding early field investigations and identifying cases. Standard case
definitions for suspected cases of acute diarrhoeal disease are:
· In an area where
the disease is not known to be present, a patient aged five years or more
develops severe dehydration or dies from acute watery diarrhoea.
· In an area where there is a
cholera epidemic, a patient aged five years or more develops acute watery
diarrhoea, with or without vomiting,1
1 For management of cases of
acute water/diarrhoea in an area where there is a cholera epidemic, cholera
should be suspected in all patients aged two years or more. However, the
inclusion of all cases of acute watery diarrhoea in the two- to four-year age
group in the reporting of cholera greatly reduces the specificity of
reporting.
· A case of cholera
is confirmed when Vibrio cholerae O1 or O139 is isolated from any patient
with diarrhoea.
· Bacillary dysentery is
confirmed by evidence of acute onset of bloody diarrhoea with visible blood in
the stool.
Assessing the impact on health
Case-finding and estimating geographical
distribution
In endemic areas, cases of cholera and bacillary dysentery occur
every year, usually with seasonal peaks. Therefore, it is extremely important
for the rapid assessment to determine whether there are significantly more cases
than should be expected.
Active case-finding is needed to determine the size of the
outbreak, based on the initial case definitions. Cholera and bacillary dysentery
can be distinguished by their clinical presentations (see p. 38).
Collecting information on a representative sample of
cases
Focus on what is already known about patterns of spread for both
bacillary dysentery and cholera to identify possible sources of the outbreak and
means of spread. The case-fatality ratio should be calculated and used to assess
the adequacy of patient management.
The case-fatality ratio should be <1% for cholera, and from
1% to 10% during epidemics of Sd1.
· Cholera:
Because spread can occur by contaminated food and water, or more rarely by
person-to-person contact in overcrowded conditions, ask questions about possible
types of exposure.
· Bacillary dysentery:
Because spread can occur through contaminated food or water or direct
person-to-person transmission, ask questions to determine how spread is
occurring.
Analysing the information
Time: When did the cases occur? Is their number
increasing? Did many people become ill at the same time at the outbreaks
beginning?
· Draw a simple
graph to show the number of cases reported per day so far.
· If the diarrhoeal disease
outbreak has affected a wide area, construct simple graphs for the different
areas affected, showing the number of cases reported per day.
Place: Where have cases occurred? Is the outbreak
spreading? How is it spreading?
· Map cases
geographically, by date of onset.
Use maps that identify water sources, settlements, health
facilities and major transport routes. If they are not available, sketch a rough
map including this information. This helps to identify at-risk areas and their
relation to road and rail links and existing health facilities, which are
important for organizing a rapid response.
Person: Which groups are at greatest risk (e.g. age,
occupations)? How many cases are there so far, or could there be in the future?
· Calculate overall
attack rates. · Calculate age-specific and
sex-specific attack rates. · Estimate the
number of cases in the future.
In past epidemics, attack rates for clinical cholera have been
about 0.2%. However, in a severe epidemic the attack rate has been as high as
1%. In order to calculate supply needs for the first weeks, a bacillary
dysentery attack rate of 2% can be assumed. Information on the treatment of
cholera and dysentery is contained in Box 1.
Assessing local response capacity and immediate needs
The following questions are guidelines for assessing the local
response capacity and determining the need for outside resources.
Response capacity of local health services
· What steps have
local health officials taken to organize the epidemic response? Is there a plan
of action, standardized reporting procedures, and trained staff?
· Are guidelines for management
prepared and followed? What is the case-fatality ratio?
· Are all supplies for treatment
readily available (oral rehydration salts (ORS), antibiotics, intravenous (IV)
fluids, soap, and chlorine)?
· What links have been
established with key community leaders (e.g. to facilitate health education,
improve case detection, and protect water sources)?
· Are health facilities
accessible to the affected populations? Are temporary treatment centres needed?
· Are there sufficient trained
health workers to treat cases properly?
· Are resources being diverted
to ineffective control measures, such as trade or travel
restrictions?
Local epidemiological surveillance
· Are there
sufficient trained personnel, vehicles, laboratory and communications support to
maintain surveillance? Is outside help needed?
· Are more extensive field
investigations needed?
· Can surveillance of diarrhoea
cases and environmental sources (particularly sewage, using Moore swabs) be
maintained until Vibrio cholerae 01 or 0139 is no longer isolated from
people and the environment in non-endemic
areas?
Presenting results
In presenting the results of the assessment, indicate the
following information.
· Whether there is
an outbreak of acute diarrhoeal disease. · If
the clinical diagnosis is confirmed by laboratory tests. · The number of cases and deaths so far. · The geographical distribution of the cases. · The size of the population at risk. · If the outbreak is spreading and where. · Whether antimicrobial sensitivities have been
assessed. · Whether emergency plans for
epidemic control have been implemented. ·
Whether national and international reporting is occurring. · How satisfactory the case management is.
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Box 1. Treatment of cholera and dysentery
Cholera
The mainstay of treatment is ORS or - in severe cases -
intravenous fluids until oral fluids can be taken. Antimicrobial treatment will
shorten the duration of illness, decrease excretion of vibrios and reduce fluid
loss - but is not essential for successful treatment and should be reserved for
severe cases only.
Epidemic dysentery (Sd1)
Selection of appropriate antimicrobials should be based on
laboratory results of resistance patterns. |
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