Rotary - Ebola Virus Disease 2014 Update

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Ebola virus disease 2014 update: Opportunities and challenges Joseph M Reardon, MD North Durham Rotary With thanks to John Leander, MD, PhD; University of Arizona And S. Rizwan, MD; Madurai Medical College

Transcript of Rotary - Ebola Virus Disease 2014 Update

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Ebola virus disease2014 update:Opportunities and challenges

Joseph M Reardon, MDNorth Durham RotaryWith thanks to John Leander, MD, PhD; University of ArizonaAnd S. Rizwan, MD; Madurai Medical College

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• History• Pathophysiology of Ebola virus disease• Transmission• Epidemiology• Local Preparedness• Current Organizations in the International Response

• Future threats: Vaccine-resistant polio

AGENDA

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1976

Rizwan SA, VMCHRI

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1976

Rizwan SA, VMCHRI

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1976

Rizwan SA, VMCHRI

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Geographic distribution

• First outbreak occurred in Zaire (Congo) in 1976

• Followed by several outbreaks, all in Africa (except one in Philippines, Italy, USA)

• Latest on-going outbreak in west Africa started in March 2014 in Guinea

Rizwan SA, VMCHRI

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Natural History

• Natural host - Fruit bats of Pteropodidae family

• Reservoir – fruit bats• Sources – bush meat, Infected

humans, fomites• Incubation period – 2 to 21 days• Communicability – high, virus

isolated after 90 days of recovery• Case fatality – 50 to 90%

• Immunity – long term not proven, deceased patients failed to produce immune response

• No. of outbreaks – >30

Rizwan SA, VMCHRI

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Transmission cycle

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2014 Epidemic

• 2-year-old boy in Guéckédou, Guinea was first case

• Rapid spread to city• MarchLiberia• JulyNigeria

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“The Ebola epidemic ravaging parts of West Africa is the most severe

acute public health emergency seen in modern times.”

WHO, Sept 26, 2014

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Ebola in the United States

Africa United States0

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16000

Cumulative Ebola Cases as of 2 Nov 2014

Cumulative Ebola Cases as of 2 Nov 2014

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Ebola Precautions in the United States

CDC

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Personal Protective Equipment

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Treatment

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Action Plan: Preventing Ebola in the United States

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International Aid Organizations

Ministries of Health

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• Maintaining official statistics• Coordinating efforts

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CDC

• Coordination, data analysis• 283 Staff• Dozens of the 164 Epidemic Intelligence

Service Officers

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• 5,200 patients treated• 600 isolation beds• 263 international staff, 3084 local staff

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• Establishing several community treatment and isolation centers in Liberia

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• Operates a treatment center in Liberia

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• Primarily distributing equipment• Post-exposure mental health counseling• Some isolation centers

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• American Red Cross has deployed 169 delegates

• 7700 local volunteers• Primarily aimed at Ebola education

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• Staff are being trained• 2 partner organizations identified• Mobilizing community members

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• Involved with education• Planning to open a treatment center

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• “Although Rotary has limited opportunities to respond at a corporate level, our strength as an organization is firmly rooted in the grassroots response of Rotary clubs and Rotarians.”

ROTARY’S RESPONSE TO EBOLA

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ROTARY CLUB OF MONROVIA, LIBERIA

• Working directly with the Ministry of Health and Social Welfare

• Solicited funds to buy locally available items (ie fuel, per diem, medicine, mattresses, buckets, etc.) and most importantly: community awareness.

• Washing buckets and chlorine solution to communities.

• Reading and activity packets for primary school children at home (schools are closed).

• Also developing grants to support orphans, create ongoing local health sector scholarships, and restocking of hospital needs (also in cooperation with Medical Supplies Network).

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IDEAS.ROTARY.ORG

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Concerning outbreaks on the horizon…

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Vaccine-Resistant Poliomyelitis

“Robustness against serum neutralization of a poliovirus type 1 from a lethal epidemic of poliomyelitis in the Republic of Congo in 2010” • 45% mortality• Those who died were already vaccinated