2006–2007 East Africa Rift Valley fever outbreak

East Africa had a regional outbreak of Rift Valley fever in late 2006 that affected Kenya, Somalia, and Tanzania. During outbreak, 1062 people were infected with Rift Valley fever and 394 people died between December 2006 and December 2007.[2] Rift Valley fever (RVF) is caused by a phlebovirus in the Bunyavirales order which is transmitted by mosquito bite and contact with infected animal blood;[3] it mainly infects livestock that come into infectious contact with a viral reservoir but human beings can also be infected.[4] The outbreak began after a heavy El Niño rain season across East Africa left greater than usual breeding ground for Aedes aegypti mosquitos,[5][6] with particularly heavy rainfall over eastern Kenya, central Tanzania, and southern Somalia.[1] While most people infected with the virus experience a relatively mild, flu-like illness without hospitalization, around 8% will develop a severe illness that can include eye disease, encephalitis, hemorrhagic fever and death.[3] During this outbreak, of the 1,062 hospitalized, laboratory-confirmed RVF cases (via anti-RVF ImG) assays, 37% died.

2006-2007 East African Rift Valley fever outbreak
Pathogen strainRift Valley fever
LocationKenya, Somalia, Tanzania
Confirmed cases1064
Recovered670
Deaths
394
Boran cattle in Kapiti, Kenya. Butchering livestock transmitted the virus.[1]

Epidemic

Marshlands west of Lake Baringo were flooded, contributing to populations of mosquitos that could spread RVF.[7]

Kenya

Unusually heavy rains in Kenya's eastern and coastal regions caused widespread flooding in October 2006 and provided extensive breeding grounds for mosquitos capable of transmitting Rift Valley fever. On 30 November 2006 a man identified as the RVF index case began to show symptoms in Kenya's Garissa County, and he checked into a hospital the next day.[5] By mid-December, the Ministry of Health had received reports of deaths from an illness featuring fever and generalized bleeding.[5] Mild cases had likely gone undetected for weeks before the region's mosquito populations climbed after one of the area's heaviest recorded rain seasons.[8] 11 deaths from RVF were reported in Garissa by December 20.[5] Cases of began to cluster in Garissa and Baringo counties areas that had been having high livestock mortality and morbidity rates,[4] which attracted the Kenya Ministry of Health's attention.

The WHO alerted the Global Outbreak and Response Network (GOARN) on December 22 and, in response to a January 2 request for help, sent an 11-member team from GOARNS partners to assist the Ministry of Health in addition regional, provincial governments.[9]

The outbreak peaked on December 27, when Garissa's authorities issued a ban on slaughtering livestock. Other county's began to follow suit with their own bans on the slaughtering of animals, wary of transmission from slaughtered animals.[5] The Baringo district experienced a total of 169 cases of RVF. A ban on the slaughtering of animals was imposed by the Kenyan Ministry of Health.[3]

Somalia

Heavy rainstorms over southern Somalia in December brought about and influx of mosquitos that quickly spread the disease among domestic herds.[1] By late December, 3 cases had been confirmed in Lower Juba and dozens of other cases were suspected across Somalia's southern regions.[9] On 20 February 2007, 51 deaths were reported in Somalia.[2]

Tanzania

Cases of RVF were first reported in livestock on 18 January 2007, with the first human case being confirmed in the Arusha region in mid-February. [10] By mid-March, new clusters of the disease were detected in the Dodoma and Morogoro regions.[10] By 3 May 2007, 264 cases and 109 deaths had been confirmed by authorities.[2]

International response and research

In Kenya the CDC Atlanta-Special Pathogens Branch began training staff for the Ministry of Livestock and Fisheries Development in Polymerase Chain Reaction (PCR) testing, sending them a PCR testing machine and reagents for detecting RVF in samples.[6] The United Nations Emergency Coordination group send funding and equipment to Tanzania, while the WHO sent teams to train Tanzania's clinicians in patient care and diagnostic testing.[10]

Virologists collected over 296,000 mosquitos and tested over 72,000 for Rift Valley Fever via reverse transcription polymerase chain reaction, with positive results from mosquitos in the Aedes, Anopheles, Culex, and Masonia species. The virus was also observed for the first time to be infecting Ae. pembaensis, Cx. univitattus, and Cx. bitaeniorhynchus mosquitos.[7] Most human cases were the result of viraemic exposure to animal tissue.[9]

Aftermath

The last case of RVF was confirmed in the Rift Valley Province and died in the Baringo District on 9 March 2007.[9] At least 394 hospital confirmed cases of RVF were ultimately fatal. The outbreak highlighted the necessity of monitoring livestock for RVF before disease can become widespread enough in herds to significantly spread to humans. Even though animals in Baringo County had shown signs of disease since December 2006, the first human case was not reported until 25 January 2007.[4] The CDC in partnership with the University of Edinburgh began establishing surveillance teams to monitor emerging pneumonias, diarrheal disease, and febrile illnesses West Kenya's domestic animal herds, with the goal of such increased surveillance being to detect future outbreaks in animals before they reach humans.[6]

References

  1. "Rift Valley Fever could spread with movement of animals from East Africa" (PDF). FAO.org. December 2007. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2020-03-25. Retrieved 2020-03-25.
  2. "Rift Valley fever". www.who.int. Retrieved 2020-03-25.
  3. "Rift Valley Fever (RVF)" (PDF). www.CDC.gov. Retrieved 20 June 2019.
  4. Munyua, Peninah; Murithi, Rees; Wainwright, Sherrilyn; Githinji, Jane; Hightower, Allen; Mutonga, David; Macharia, Joseph; Ithondeka, Peter; Breiman, Rober (5 August 2010). "Rift Valley Fever Outbreak in Livestock in Kenya, 2006–2007" (PDF). The American Journal of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene. 83 (2_Suppl): 58–64. doi:10.4269/ajtmh.2010.09-0292. PMC 2913503. PMID 20682907.
  5. "Rift Valley Fever Outbreak --- Kenya, November 2006--January 2007". www.cdc.gov. 31 January 2007. Retrieved 2019-06-23.
  6. Breiman, Robert; Njenga, Kariuki; Cleaveland, Sarah; Sharif, SK; Murithi, Mbabu; King, Lonnie (2008). "Lessons from the 2006–2007 Rift Valley fever outbreak in East Africa: implications for prevention of emerging infectious diseases". Future Virology. 8 (5): 411–417. doi:10.2217/17460794.3.5.411 via Research Gate.
  7. Sang, Rosemary (2010). "Rift Valley Fever Virus Epidemic in Kenya, 2006/2007: The Entomologic Investigations" (PDF). The American Journal of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene. 83 (2 Suppl): 29. doi:10.4269/ajtmh.2010.09-0319. PMC 2913497. PMID 20682903.
  8. "Floods Raise Water Levels on Lake Victoria". earthobservatory.nasa.gov. 2007-01-24. Retrieved 2019-06-23.
  9. "Weekly Epidemiological Record, No. 20: Outbreaks of Rift Valley fever in Kenya, Somalia and United Republic of Tanzania, December 2006–April 2007" (PDF). Weekly Epidemiological Record. 82: 168–180. 18 May 2007 via World Health Organization.
  10. "WHO | Rift Valley Fever in the United Republic of Tanzania". WHO. Archived from the original on October 21, 2014. Retrieved 2020-03-25.
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