7 results
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2. Cholera vaccines: WHO position paper – August 2017
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Adult ,Endemic Diseases ,Immunization Programs ,Developed Countries ,Cholera Vaccines ,Guidelines as Topic ,HIV Infections ,World Health Organization ,Mass Vaccination ,Disease Outbreaks ,Cholera ,Child, Preschool ,Population Surveillance ,Humans ,Pregnant Women ,Child ,Developing Countries ,Vibrio cholerae - Published
- 2017
3. Impacts of Historical Pandemics on India: Through the Lens of 20th Century Hindi Literature
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Prachi Priyanka
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historical pandemics ,20th centrury hindi literature ,pandemic literature ,epidemics in india ,cholera ,smallpox ,plague ,influenza ,Social Sciences - Abstract
India has been swept by pandemics of plague, influenza, smallpox, cholera and other diseases. The scale and impact of these events was often cataclysmic and writers offered a glimpse into the everyday life of ordinary people who lost their lives and livelihoods and suffered the angst and trauma of mental, physical and emotional loss. This paper focuses on the devastation caused by pandemics especially in the Ganges deltaic plains of India. Through selected texts of 20th century Hindi writers – Munshi Premchand, Phanishwar Nath Renu, Suryakant Tripathi Nirala, Bhagwan Das, Harishankar Parsai, Pandey Bechan Sharma – this paper aims to bring forth the suffering and struggles against violence, social injustices and public health crises in India during waves of epidemics and pandemics when millions died as they tried to combat the rampant diseases.
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
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4. ENTRE LE SILENCE ÉPIDÉMIQUE ET LE BRUIT DES BULLDOZERS. LE CHOLÉRA AU TEMPS DE L'ÉMERGENCE ÉCONOMIQUE EN CÔTE D'IVOIRE.
- Author
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HEYERDAHL, LEONARDO W.
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CHOLERA ,EPIDEMICS ,NEIGHBORHOODS ,HEART ,NONCITIZENS ,BIOSURVEILLANCE - Abstract
Copyright of Politique Africaine is the property of Karthala Editions Diffusion and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2022
5. Cholera public health surveillance in the Republic of Cameroon-opportunities and challenges
- Author
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Moise Chi Ngwa, Song Liang, Leonard Mbam Mbam, Arabi Mouhaman, Andrew Teboh, Kaousseri Brekmo, Onana Mevoula, and John Glenn Morris Jr
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cholera ,integrated disease surveillance response strategy ,surveillance ,cameroon ,Medicine - Abstract
INTRODUCTION: in Cameroon, cholera has periodically resurfaced since it was first reported in 1971. In 2003, Cameroon adapted the integrated disease surveillance and response (IDSR) strategy to strengthen surveillance in the country. This study was an in-depth description and assessment of the structure, core and support functions, and attributes of the current cholera surveillance system in Cameroon. It also discussed its strengths and challenges with hope that lessons learned could improve the system in Cameroon and in other countries in Africa implementing the IDSR strategy. METHODS: semi-structured key informant interviews, peer reviewed articles, and government record review were conducted in the Far North and Centre Regions of Cameroon. We used the matrix and conceptual framework from the World Health Organization (WHO) and Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, WHO Regional Office for Africa Technical Guidelines to frame the study. Site visits included the WHO country office, the ministry of public health (MoPH), two Regional Public Health Delegations (RPHDs), eight health districts (HDs) and health facilities (HFs) including two labs. RESULTS: cholera surveillance is passive but turns active during outbreaks and follows a hierarchical structure. Cholera data are collected at HFs and sent to HDs where data are compiled and sent to the RPHD in paper format. RPHDs de-identify, digitalize, and send the data to the MoPH via internet and from there to the WHO. The case definition was officially changed in 2010 but the outdated definition was still in use in 2013. Nationally, there are 3 laboratories that have the ability to confirm cholera cases; the lack of laboratory capacity at HFs hampers case and outbreak confirmation. The absence of structured data analysis at the RPHD, HD, and HF further compounds the situation, making the goal of IDSR of data analysis and rapid response at the HD very challenging. Feedback is strongest at the central level (MoPH) and non-existent at the levels below it, with only minimal training and supervision of staff. In 2012, mobile phone coverage expanded to all 183 HDs and to HFs in 2014 in the Far North and North Regions. The phones improved immediate reporting and outbreak control. Further, the creation of cholera command and control centers, and introduction of laptops at all RPHDs are major strengths in the surveillance system. Completeness and timeliness of reporting varied considerably among levels.
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- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
6. Feasibility and acceptability of oral cholera vaccine mass vaccination campaign in response to an outbreakand floods in Malawi
- Author
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Kelias Phiri Msyamboza, Maurice Mebang'ombe, Hannah Hausi, Alexander Chijuwa, Veronica Nkukumila, Hudson Wenji Kubwalo, Sachin Desai, Lorenzo Pezzoli, and Dominique Legros
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cholera ,oral cholera vaccine ,sub-saharan africa ,malawi ,Medicine - Abstract
INTRODUCTION: despite some improvement in provision of safe drinking water, proper sanitation and hygiene promotion, cholera still remains a major public health problem in Malawi with outbreaks occurring almost every year since 1998. In response to 2014/2015 cholera outbreak, ministry of health and partners made a decision to assess the feasibility and acceptability of conducting a mass oral cholera vaccine (OCV) as an additional public health measure. This paper highlights the burden of the 2014/15 cholera outbreak, successes and challenges of OCV campaign conducted in March and April 2015. METHODS: this was a documentation of the first OCV campaign conducted in Malawi. The campaign targeted over 160,000 people aged one year or more living in 19 camps of people internally displaced by floods and their surrounding communities in Nsanje district. It was a reactive campaign as additional measure to improved water, sanitation and hygiene in response to the laboratory confirmed cholera outbreak. RESULTS: during the first round of the OCV campaign conducted from 30 March to 4 April 2015, a total of 156,592 (97.6%) people out of 160,482 target population received OCV. During the second round (20 to 25 April 2015), a total of 137,629 (85.8%) people received OCV. Of these, 108,247 (67.6%) people received their second dose while 29,382 (18.3%) were their first dose. Of the 134,836 people with known gender and sex who received 1 or 2 doses, 54.4% were females and over half (55.4%) were children under the age of 15 years. Among 108,237 people who received 2 doses (fully immunized), 54.4% were females and 51.9% were children under 15 years of age. No severe adverse event following immunization was reported. The main reason for non-vaccination or failure to take the 2 doses was absence during the period of the campaign. CONCLUSION: this documentation has demonstrated that it was feasible, acceptable by the community to conduct a large-scale mass OCV campaign in Malawi within five weeks. Of 320,000 OCV doses received, Malawi managed to administer at least 294,221 (91.9%) of the doses. OCV could therefore be considered to be introduced as additional measure in cholera hot spot areas in Malawi.
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- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
7. Repousser les limites de l’acculturation médicale : La médecine navale française au chevet d’un orient méditerranéen forcément insalubre (Première moitié du xixe siècle)
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Benoît Pouget
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médecine navale ,Orient ,Political science ,cholera ,anthropology ,General Medicine ,Humanities ,épidémie ,naval medicine ,choléra ,epidemics ,anthropologie - Abstract
Dans cet article, il s’agit de proposer une réflexion portant sur la confrontation des médecins de la marine française aux risques épidémiques en Orient (en particulier le choléra) et alors que la France tente de peser à nouveau après 1815 dans les affaires méditerranéennes. Les forces navales sont à la fois considérées comme des acteurs essentiels d’une police sanitaire des mers tout autant que vecteurs potentiels de maladies contagieuses. En prenant appui sur cette aporie, et en soulignant les contingences propres aux formes d’organisations et aux missions des forces navales, l’intention de ce travail est de voir comment les médecins de la marine font face à ces épidémies rencontrées chez cet « Autre » méditerranéen, dans la diversité confessionnelle et culturelle de ce que ce terme peut recouvrir. Sujets de fascination autant que d’aversion, ces « autres » méditerranéens sont autant d’âmes à éclairer des lumières de la médecine occidentale que des réservoirs de savoirs et de pratiques empiriques dans une période d’interrogation quant à la nature des maladies épidémiques et aux moyens curatifs à leur opposer. This article presents a reflection on French Navy doctors’ encounter with epidemic risks in the Orient (in particular with cholera) in the post-1815 period when France was attempting to regain influence in Mediterranean affairs. The Navy was perceived both as an essential actor in the sanitary policing of the seas, and as potential vectors of contagious diseases. Working from this contradiction, and bearing in mind the specificities of the Navy’s organization and missions, this paper explores the way that Navy doctors dealt with the epidemics encountered in these “other” Mediterranean regions with all their religious and cultural diversity. Both fascinating and repulsive, “Others” were seen as souls in need of enlightenment by the lights of Western medicine, but also as reservoirs of knowledge and empirical practices in a period of questioning about the nature of epidemic diseases and the curative means to oppose them.
- Published
- 2019
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