1.Event-based surveillance in Papua New Guinea: strengthening an International Health Regulations (2005) core capacity
Dagina Rosheila ; Murhekar Manoj ; Rosewell Alexander ; Pavlin Boris
Western Pacific Surveillance and Response 2013;4(3):19-25
Under the International Health Regulations (2005), Member States are required to develop capacity in event-based surveillance (EBS). The Papua New Guinea National Department of Health established an EBS system during the influenza pandemic in August 2009. We review its performance from August 2009 to November 2012, sharing lessons that may be useful to other low-resource public health practitioners working in surveillance.
We examined the EBS system’s event reporting, event verification and response. Characteristics examined included type of event, source of information, timeliness, nature of response and outcome.
Sixty-one records were identified. The median delay between onset of the event and date of reporting was 10 days. The largest proportion of reports (39%) came from Provincial Health Offices, followed by direct reports from clinical staff (25%) and reports in the media (11%). Most (84%) of the events were substantiated to be true public health events, and 56% were investigated by the Provincial Health Office alone. A confirmed or probable etiology could not be determined in 69% of true events.
EBS is a simple strategy that forms a cornerstone of public health surveillance and response particularly in low-resource settings such as Papua New Guinea. There is a need to reinforce reporting pathways, improve timeliness of reporting, expand sources of information, improve feedback and improve diagnostic support capacity. For it to be successful, EBS should be closely tied to response.
2.Vibrio cholerae antimicrobial drug resistance, Papua New Guinea, 2009–2011
Murhekar Manoj ; Dutta Samir ; Ropa Berry ; Dagina Rosheila ; Posanai Enoch ; Rosewell Alexander
Western Pacific Surveillance and Response 2013;4(3):60-62
Cholera is an acute infectious disease caused by
3.The threat of chikungunya in Oceania
Paul Horwood ; Grace Bande ; Rosheila Dagina ; Laurent Guillaumot ; John Aaskov ; Boris Pavlin
Western Pacific Surveillance and Response 2013;4(2):18-25
The Oceania region, which includes Australia, New Zealand, Papua New Guinea and the islands of the tropical Pacific Ocean, has historically been free from chikungunya. However, the 2011 outbreak in New Caledonia and the ongoing outbreak in Papua New Guinea have highlighted the risk to other communities in Oceania where there are competent mosquito vectors and permissive social factors and environmental conditions. In this article we discuss the threat to this region that is posed by the recent evolution of the E1:A226V mutant strains of chikungunya virus (CHIKV).