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1.
International Journal of Infectious Diseases ; 116:S98, 2022.
Article in English | EMBASE | ID: covidwho-1734446

ABSTRACT

Purpose: Despite its critical role in containing outbreaks, the efficacy of contact tracing (CT), measured as the sensitivity of case detection, remains an elusive metric. We estimated the sensitivity of CT by applying unilist capture-recapture methods on data from the 2018-2020 outbreak of Ebola virus disease in the Democratic Republic of Congo. Methods & Materials: We applied different distributional assumptions to the zero-truncated count data to estimate the number of unobserved cases with a) any contacts and b) infected contacts, to compute CT sensitivity. Geometric distributions were the best fitting models. Results: Our results indicate that CT efforts identified almost all (n=792, 99%) of the cases with any contacts, but only half (n=207, 48%) of the cases with infected contacts, suggesting that CT efforts performed well at identifying contacts during the listing stage, but performed poorly during the contact follow-up stage. Conclusion: This novel approach can be applied to assess the effectiveness of CT. Importantly, the approach described is disease-agnostic, and can be extended to assess the sensitivity of CT for any disease, including COVID-19, for which CT has been identified as a crucial component of the response activities.

2.
Pan African Medical Journal ; 35(2):1-3, 2020.
Article in English | EMBASE | ID: covidwho-706343

ABSTRACT

Concerns have been expressed about the view point of WHO AFRO concerning research for health in the African Region. WHO AFRO considers research a critical component in the improvement of health in the Africa region. Ensuring the effectiveness of our strategies, policies and programmes requires evidence. In the context of the ongoing COVID-19 outbreak, WHO research interests cover key areas of the response. The WHO AFRO consider research as critical in our efforts at protecting people against health emergencies and pandemics like the COVID-19 and ensuring universal access to proven interventions. In view of this, the WHO has taken steps to strengthen capacity for research in the region. The results of these efforts may take time to manifest but will surely do as we persist in our drive, with support from our partners.

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