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São Tomé and Príncipe - Dengue fever outbreak 2022-2024

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  • São Tomé and Príncipe - Dengue fever outbreak 2022-2024

    WEEKLY BULLETIN ON OUTBREAKS
    AND OTHER EMERGENCIES

    Week 21: 16 – 22 May 2022
    Data as reported by: 17:00; 22 May 2022

    ...

    Dengue fever São Tomé and Príncipe

    103 cases
    0 Death

    EVENT DESCRIPTION

    The Minister of Health of São Tomé and Príncipe (STP) officially
    declared an outbreak of dengue fever on 4 May 2022, becoming
    the first reported dengue fever outbreak in the country. An alert was
    initially notified from the clinical management team at a hospital
    in the capital city of São Tomé on 11 April 2022. This was after a
    27-year-old male with symptoms suggestive of dengue infection
    presented at the facility eight days after arriving from Guadeloupe
    Island in the Caribbean which is endemic for dengue. He was tested
    but was not confirmed as an acute case of dengue but rather found
    positive for IgG antibodies suggesting prior infection within recent
    weeks.

    Nevertheless, the suspected case triggered the Epidemiological
    Surveillance Department to mobilize a multidisciplinary
    investigation team in collaboration with the National Endemic
    Center to investigate the case, personal contacts, and identify
    mosquito vectors and their breeding sites at the case’s home.
    From 18 April to 17 May 2022, 103 cases and no deaths have been
    confirmed via rapid diagnostic test (RDT) from five health districts
    including Água Grande (90, 87.4%); Mézochi (7, 6.8%); Lobata (4,
    3.9%); Cantagalo (1, 1.0%); and Autonomous Region of Príncipe
    (RAP) (1, 1.0%). The attack rate of Água Grande is by far the largest
    at 10.7 cases per 10 000 inhabitants. The most affected age groups
    are: 10-19 years (5.9 cases per 10 000), 30-39 years (7.3 cases per
    10 000), 40-49 years (5.1 cases per 10 000) and 50-59 years (6.1
    cases per 10 000). The most frequent clinical signs are fever (97,
    94%), headache (78, 76%) and myalgia (64, 62%).

    All cases have been confirmed positive by RDT, however a total
    of 30 samples were sent to the Institute of Hygiene and Tropical
    Medicine of the New University of Lisbon (IHMT – NOVA) in
    Portugal for further testing and were received on 29 April. RDT
    SD Bioline Dengue Duo NS1/IgM/IgG combo was used to confirm
    the diagnosis of dengue. Results from IHMT-NOVA revealed 20
    NS1 positive samples (67% positivity rate), indicating a diagnosis
    of acute dengue infection. The 20 NS1 positive samples were
    then tested further by real time polymerase chain reaction and
    six samples were confirmed positive with dengue virus serotype
    3 (DENV-3) as the predominant serotype. Preliminary results also
    suggest the possibility of other serotypes present within the batch
    of samples.

    According to preliminary epidemiological and clinical reports, the
    index case was identified as having clinically compatible symptoms
    of dengue fever starting 11 April 2022 and had a recent history of
    travel to European and Asian countries though was unrelated to the
    initially detected case for this outbreak. The index case’s infection
    was ultimately deemed to be an autochthonous case and the
    possibility of importation has been ruled out. Available information
    indicates that this case acquired the disease in São Tomé or in the
    RAP.

    The country’s rainy season generally lasts 9 months from September
    to May, but from December 2021 to early March 2022, the country
    experienced torrential rains of great intensity and long duration
    causing floods. Rains are expected to continue until June this year
    and have already accumulated stagnant water providing favourable
    conditions for mosquito breeding sites. Flooding has also caused
    issues for waste and sanitation management activities in the
    country and therefore conditions are prevalent for transmission
    of other potential diseases as well as malnutrition as a result of
    damaged agricultural crops causing food insecurity.

    PUBLIC HEALTH ACTIONS

    Coordination meetings are held weekly by the Ministry of
    Health to discuss technical aspects of the outbreak;

    A national dengue response plan has been developed, validated
    and disseminated;

    Epidemiological investigations and active case detections have
    been conducted;

    Entomological investigations have been carried out to identify
    breeding sites and conduct fumigation and source reduction
    measures in limited affected localities;

    External experts to strengthen laboratory capacity will soon
    be deployed to STP, and potentially other experts for case
    management, risk communication, and entomology/vector
    control.

    SITUATION INTERPRETATION

    The first officially declared dengue fever outbreak has been reported in STP. The magnitude of the dengue outbreak in the country may be largely underestimated considering the limitations of diagnostic capacity, high asymptomatic rates, limited intensive health care resources, and an untested surveillance system for dengue outbreaks. The ongoing rainy season and recent flooding in the past few months have led to favourable environmental conditions to transmit the disease and has also weakened the country’s sanitation, hygiene, and infrastructural systems which may contribute to more infectious disease and malnutrition due to the loss of agricultural crops by floods. Rains are expected to continue until June this year, and this calls for boosting of preparedness and response measures in the country.



    This Weekly Bulletin focuses on public health emergencies occurring in the WHO African Region. The WHO Health Emergencies Programme is currently monitoring 155 events in the region. This week’s articles cover: Wild Poliovirus type1 in Mozambique Ebola Virus Disease in the Democratic Republic of the Congo COVID-19 across the WHO African region Dengue Fever in Sao Tome and Principe


  • #2
    WEEKLY BULLETIN ON OUTBREAKS
    AND OTHER EMERGENCIES

    Week 29: 11 - 17 July 2022
    Data as reported by: 17:00; 17 July 2022

    ...

    Dengue fever São Tomé and Príncipe

    854 cases
    1 Death
    0.1% CFR


    EVENT DESCRIPTION

    From 15 April to 12 July 2022, 854 cases and 1 death (CFR
    0.1%) have been reported in São Tomé and Príncipe (STP). All
    health districts have reported cases with Água Grande (614,
    71.8%) being the most affected. The other health districts have
    reported the following: Mézochi (102, 11.9%); Lobata (72, 8.4%);
    Cantagalo (37, 4.3%); Lemba (14, 1.6%), Caue (9, 1.0%), and
    Autonomous Region of Príncipe (6, 0.7%).

    The attack rate of Água Grande is by far the largest at 72.8 cases
    per 10 000 inhabitants. The attack rates by age groups are: 0-9
    year (21.6 cases per 10 000), 10-19 years (37.2 cases per 10
    000), 20-29 years (43.3 cases per 10 000), 30-39 years (52.6
    cases per 10 000), 40-49 years (43.8 cases per 10 000) and
    50-59 years (52.9 cases per 10 000) and those more than 60
    years (47.6 cases per 10 000). The most frequent clinical signs
    are fever (777, 91%), headache (625, 73%), myalgia (260, 30%),
    and weakness (136, 16%).

    In total, 2 189 cases have been suspected for dengue and were
    tested by the National Reference Laboratory. All 854 confirmed
    cases had positive IgM/NS1 results. There have been a total of
    102 hospitalizations among confirmed cases, however, only one
    death has been recorded. Another 829 people have been recorded
    as recovered from the disease.

    Suspected cases were first reported on 11 April 2022, but there is
    clinical evidence of probable cases prior to that date. The Minister
    of Health of São Tomé and Príncipe nevertheless officially declared
    an outbreak of dengue on 4 May 2022, which is the first reported
    dengue fever outbreak in the country.

    The building of entomological capacity has been one of the
    focuses in the response to the outbreak. Thirty-five national
    entomological colleagues were trained and henceforth carry
    out more rigorous work to prevent dengue in the country.
    The national entomological colleagues along with the support
    of international entomological experts who were deployed
    temporarily have conducted various entomological surveys in
    each district. According to the results of the surveys conducted
    in May 2022, and compared to international rankings, the country
    was concluded to be a high-risk area for dengue transmission
    since risk indices associated with the classification were met.
    The surveys have allowed for developed a more robust
    evidencebased response to the outbreak.

    STP has a tropical and humid climate with a characteristic rainy
    season generally lasting 9 months from September to May. In
    December 2021 to early March 2022, the country experienced
    torrential rains of high intensity causing flooding and poor
    sanitation conditions where people reside. These conditions
    have provided a favourable environment for the proliferation of
    mosquitoes, vectors of communicable diseases such as Malaria
    and Dengue fever.

    PUBLIC HEALTH ACTIONS

    Coordination meetings are held weekly by the Ministry of
    Health to discuss technical aspects of the outbreak;

    A national dengue response plan has been developed,
    validated and disseminated;

    Epidemiological investigations and active case detections
    have been conducted;

    An international clinical management expert was deployed
    with the aim to improve hospital management of cases;

    An international risk communications expert was deployed
    with the aim to improve public health engagement for
    dengue fever in the country and communication efforts in
    the community are ongoing using various methods;

    30 journalists were trained on risk communication and
    community engagement that took place from 6-8 July 2022;

    Entomological investigations have been carried out to
    identify breeding sites and conduct fumigation and source
    reduction measures in all districts;

    35 local-level entomologists were trained on the ecology of
    the Aedes mosquito species and entomological surveillance;

    Further entomological campaigns are being planned such as
    a large-scale one for Agua Grande district for the destruction
    of breeding sites and integrated vector management
    approaches in the Bobo Forro market.

    SITUATION INTERPRETATION

    The dengue fever in STP has continued throughout the country and has reached all health seven districts. Response efforts have been
    strengthened by the support of international dengue experts including case management, entomological and risk communication
    experts have been deployed and as a result national capacity has increased for responding to the outbreak. The epidemiological trends
    in the past few weeks seem to be improving, however, more time is needed to assess the transmission situation.

    https://apps.who.int/iris/bitstream/...=1&isAllowed=y

    Comment


    • #3
      WEEKLY BULLETIN ON OUTBREAKS
      AND OTHER EMERGENCIES

      Week 35: 22 - 28 August 2022
      Data as reported by: 17:00; 28 August 2022

      ...
      All events currently being monitored by WHO AFRO
      ...

      Sao Tome And Principe Dengue Grade 2

      Date notified to WCO 11-Apr-22
      Start of reporting period 15-Apr-2022
      End of reporting period 21-Aug-22

      Total cases 972
      Cases Confirmed 972
      Deaths 3
      CFR 0.3%


      Sao Tome and Principe is experiencing its first ever documented dengue outbreak. From 15 April-21 August 2022, a total of 972 cases and 3 deaths (CFR 0.3%) have been confirmed via RDT from: Água Grande (675, 69.4%), Mézôchi (135, 13.9%), Lobata (85, 8.7%), Cantagalo (40, 4.1%), Lemba (16, 1.6%), Caué (9, 0.9%), and RAP (12, 1.2%). During week 33 (ending 21 August), there were 28 new cases registered in the country. Água Grande's attack rate is by far the highest (80.1 per 10 000 inhabitants). Those aged 50-59 years are experiencing the highest attack rate at 61.1 cases per 10 000. The 3 main clinical signs are fever (890, 92%), headache (726, 75%) and myalgia (310, 32%).

      Comment


      • #4
        Source: https://reliefweb.int/report/sao-tom...ef-application

        Sao Tome &Principe: Worsening Dengue outbreak: DREF Application
        Format Situation Report
        Source IFRC
        Posted 19 Oct 2022
        Originally published 19 Oct 2022

        What is expected to happen?

        Since ending March 2022, Sao Tome & Principe (STP) has recorded cases of fever that have been severe with respect to frequency and clinical characteristics. On 11 April 2022, the laboratory of the central hospital reported a suspected case of dengue fever to clinical officials, triggering as such implementation of epidemiological and entomological surveillance protocols. On the same day, the Ayres Central Hospital in Menezes reported a positive case of dengue fever to officials at the Epidemiological Surveillance Department (DVE in Portuguese). The reported case was a 27-year-old Sao Tomean, whose place of residence is Portugal and works on the island of Guadeloupe. He reportedly arrived on leave with his family on 26 March 2022. He started having symptoms (fever, headaches, and joint pain) on 4 April 2022...

        Comment


        • #5
          WEEKLY BULLETIN ON OUTBREAKS
          AND OTHER EMERGENCIES
          Week 16: 15 - 21 April 2024
          Data as reported by: 17:00; 21 April 2024

          ...
          Republic of São
          Tomé and Príncipe


          Dengue Fever

          18 917 Cases
          11 Deaths
          0.1% CFR


          EVENT DESCRIPTION

          Since April 2022, São Tomé and Príncipe has been
          experiencing a Dengue fever outbreak, with cases
          reported nationwide in all seven health districts.
          The index case was a 39-year-old male living in Boa
          Morte, Água Grande district. He had onset symptoms,
          including a fever, intense lower back pain, headaches,
          retro-orbital pain, and myalgia sensations on 12 April
          2022, and tested positive on 15 April 2022.

          During epidemiological week 16 (ending 21 April 2024),
          three new cases were recorded only in Água Grande
          district, with no deaths.

          As of 21 April 2024, a cumulative total of 18 917
          suspected cases, including 1 249 confirmed cases,
          have been reported in all health districts, with Água
          Grande district having the highest number of cases (852
          cases, 68.2%), followed by Mézochi (185 cases, 14.8%),
          Lobata (104 cases, 8.3%), Cantagalo (49 cases, 3.9%),
          Caué (23 cases, 1.9%), Lembá (22 cases, 1.8%), and
          Autonomous Region of PríncipeP (14 cases, 1.1%).
          Of the 1 249 confirmed cases, 148 (11.8%) were
          hospitalized, of which 39 (26.4%) presented with
          haemorrhagic signs. A total of 1 225 cases have
          recovered, and 11 deaths have been recorded so far.
          The four main clinical signs among reported cases are
          fever (1 160 cases, 93.0%), headaches (982 cases,
          79.0%), myalgia (516 cases, 41.0%), and asthenia (178
          cases, 14.0%).

          Cumulatively, 19 127 RDTs were performed by reference
          laboratories (18 917 suspected cases, 210 controls),
          with 1 249 IgM positive cases.

          PUBLIC HEALTH ACTIONS

          Surveillance activities, including investigation and
          active case search at the community level, are
          ongoing to control the spread of the outbreak
          Healthcare workers from Central Hospital AM provide
          medical care and clinical follow-up for Dengue
          cases.

          Community-based surveillance for Dengue fever
          cases has been intensified for detection and
          reporting, and collected samples are being tested
          in laboratories

          Dissemination of information about dengue fever and
          prevention strategies has been reinforced across the
          community and country.

          Develop and disseminate weekly epidemiological
          bulletins and monthly situation reports on Dengue
          to inform all stakeholders about the outbreak.

          Risk communication and community
          engagement efforts have been strengthened
          through distribution of new brochures and a
          video titled “Fighting Dengue Every Day!” to
          raise awareness about Dengue prevention and
          control in the districts. Activities promoting the
          use of mosquito nets and the destruction of
          larval breeding sites are also being promoted.

          SITUATION INTERPRETATION

          Intense and prolonged heavy rains have caused
          flooding and landslides in Sao Tome and Principe.
          This has resulted in highly unsanitary conditions in
          most residential areas, creating favorable conditions
          for the proliferation of mosquitoes and vectors of
          infectious diseases such as Dengue. The protracted
          Dengue fever outbreak requires existing public health
          activities to be intensified and maintained. The Ministry
          of Health and its partners should continue to assist in
          increasing epidemiological and vector surveillance,
          laboratory capabilities, case management, and risk
          communication.

          This Weekly Bulletin focuses on public health emergencies occurring in the WHO African region. This week’s articles cover: Cholera in Zimbabwe Dengue in Sao Tome and Principe Cholera in Burundi

          Comment

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