Are we prepared for emerging and re-emerging diseases? Experience and lessons from epidemics that occurred in Tanzania during the last five decades
This paper reviews preparedness for containing and controlling emerging and re-emerging diseases drawing lessons from disease events that occurred in animal and human populations in the last five decades (1961-2011). A comprehensive analysis based on retrieval and analysis of grey and published lite...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Tanzania journal of health research 2014-06, Vol.13 (5) |
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Format: | Artikel |
Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | This paper reviews preparedness for containing and controlling emerging
and re-emerging diseases drawing lessons from disease events that
occurred in animal and human populations in the last five decades
(1961-2011). A comprehensive analysis based on retrieval and analysis
of grey and published literature as well as reported cases was carried
out to document type and trend of occurrence of emerging and
re-emerging infectious diseases in different parts of Tanzania.
Overall, the majority of diseases reported in the country were viral in
nature followed by bacterial diseases. The trend for the occurrence
shows a number of new emerging diseases as well as re-occurrence of old
diseases in both animal (domestic and wild) and human populations. In
humans, the major disease epidemics reported in the last five decades
include cholera, influenza A H1N1, plague and rubella. In animals, the
major epidemic diseases reported were Contagious Bovine
Pleuropneumonia, Contagious Caprine Pleuropneumonia, Peste des petits
ruminants and Giraffe Ear and Skin Diseases. Some epidemics have been
reported in both human and animal populations including Rift Valley
fever and anthrax. The emergence of the 'fit-for purpose'
approaches and technologies such as the discipline of One Health, use
of participatory epidemiology and disease surveillance and mobile
technologies offers opportunity for optimal use of limited resources to
improve early detection, diagnosis and response to disease events and
consequently reduced impact of such diseases in animal and human
populations. |
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ISSN: | 1821-6404 |