After Ebola in West Africa--Unpredictable Risks, Preventable Epidemics.

WHO Ebola Response TeamORCID logo; Agua-Agum, JORCID logo; Allegranzi, BORCID logo; Ariyarajah, AORCID logo; Aylward, RBORCID logo; Blake, IMORCID logo; Barboza, PORCID logo; Bausch, DORCID logo; Brennan, RJORCID logo; Clement, PORCID logo; +40 more...Coffey, PORCID logo; Cori, AORCID logo; Donnelly, CAORCID logo; Dorigatti, IORCID logo; Drury, PORCID logo; Durski, KORCID logo; Dye, CORCID logo; Eckmanns, TORCID logo; Ferguson, NMORCID logo; Fraser, CORCID logo; Garcia, EORCID logo; Garske, TORCID logo; Gasasira, AORCID logo; Gurry, CORCID logo; Hamblion, EORCID logo; Hinsley, WORCID logo; Holden, RORCID logo; Holmes, DORCID logo; Hugonnet, SORCID logo; Jaramillo Gutierrez, GORCID logo; Jombart, TORCID logo; Kelley, EORCID logo; Santhana, RORCID logo; Mahmoud, NORCID logo; Mills, HLORCID logo; Mohamed, YORCID logo; Musa, EORCID logo; Naidoo, DORCID logo; Nedjati-Gilani, GORCID logo; Newton, EORCID logo; Norton, IORCID logo; Nouvellet, PORCID logo; Perkins, DORCID logo; Perkins, MORCID logo; Riley, SORCID logo; Schumacher, DORCID logo; Shah, AORCID logo; Tang, MORCID logo; Varsaneux, OORCID logo; Van Kerkhove, MDORCID logo and (2016) After Ebola in West Africa--Unpredictable Risks, Preventable Epidemics. NEW ENGLAND JOURNAL OF MEDICINE, 375 (6). pp. 587-596. ISSN 0028-4793 DOI: 10.1056/NEJMsr1513109
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Between December 2013 and April 2016, the largest epidemic of Ebola virus disease (EVD) to date generated more than 28,000 cases and more than 11,000 deaths in the large, mobile populations of Guinea, Liberia, and Sierra Leone. Tracking the rapid rise and slower decline of the West African epidemic has reinforced some common understandings about the epidemiology and control of EVD but has also generated new insights. Despite having more information about the geographic distribution of the disease, the risk of human infection from animals and from survivors of EVD remains unpredictable over a wide area of equatorial Africa. Until human exposure to infection can be anticipated or avoided, future outbreaks will have to be managed with the classic approach to EVD control - extensive surveillance, rapid detection and diagnosis, comprehensive tracing of contacts, prompt patient isolation, supportive clinical care, rigorous efforts to prevent and control infection, safe and dignified burial, and engagement of the community. Empirical and modeling studies conducted during the West African epidemic have shown that large epidemics of EVD are preventable - a rapid response can interrupt transmission and restrict the size of outbreaks, even in densely populated cities. The critical question now is how to ensure that populations and their health services are ready for the next outbreak, wherever it may occur. Health security across Africa and beyond depends on committing resources to both strengthen national health systems and sustain investment in the next generation of vaccines, drugs, and diagnostics.


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