Title of article :
An Evaluation of an Early Warning Alert and Response Network (EWARN) in Darfur, Sudan
Author/Authors :
MOROF, DIANE F. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, International Emergency and Refugee Health Branch, USA , ABOU-ZEID, ALAA Cairo University - Faculty of Medicine - Department of Public Health, Egypt , BRENNAN, MUIREANN Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, International Emergency and Refugee Health Branch, USA
From page :
209
To page :
217
Abstract :
Objective: To conduct a field-based evaluation of an Early Warning Alert and Response Network (EWARN) in Darfur, Sudan. Methods: Using adapted surveillance evaluation guidelines, evaluators reviewed EWARN documents and conducted semi-structured indepth interviews and group discussions with key informantsat national, state, and local levels. Evaluators conducted visits at 18 purposively sampled clinics in all Darfur states. Observers examined morbidity reporting, laboratory functions, and disease controland nutrition data. Qualitative and quantitative analysis identified common themes and examinedkey variable frequencies. Results: All clinicians described EWARN as useful; most indicated that its primary usefulness was early outbreak detection. Between January and October 2009, there were a total of 30 alerts with 10 confirmed outbreaks, 16 negative results, and four results with pending laboratory tests. Of the 26 alerts with investigation results, 10 were confirmed (positive predictive value [PPV] = 38%). The sensitivity of the outbreak detection system could not be determined on the basis of available data. Lack of clarity and variations in the application of case definitions and laboratory testing led to differences in reporting of specific conditions and rendered trend data less reliable. Collecting data on nonepidemicprone diseases at every site was burdensome. Few deaths were reported at the clinic level. Conclusions: EWARN is a useful system for outbreak detection. Refining, standardizing, and increasing training frequency on case definitions, expanding laboratory capacity, and focusing data collection on epidemicprone diseases would greatly improve the system s outbreak and surveillance ca-pacity. Mortality reporting from outpatient clinic data should be eliminated.
Keywords :
Darfur , Early warning system , Communicable diseases , Surveillance , Sudan
Journal title :
The Medical Journal of Cairo University
Journal title :
The Medical Journal of Cairo University
Record number :
2540858
Link To Document :
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