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Quarterly Summary Report Fourth Quarter – 2012 (Oct – Dec) Volume 3; Issue Number 4; 2012 Communicable Diseases Bulletin 800 555 www.haad.ae Foreword We all know how hard it is to graduate as a medical doctor, and how challenging is your life to continue in this field. Nevertheless, we love challenges and difficult paths, and we are always ready to do the best to reach there; simply because we believe it is worth it! Yes, it is really a wonderful job to save lives and help people and this is basically what we do as physicians. However, have we ever seen the actual impact we do in the real life? Yes, much of what we do does save lives and help others, but there are some unintentional harms that we need to be very cautious about, such as our antibiotic prescribing practices. Antimicrobial resistance is an increasingly growing problem everywhere and truly became one of the most important public health challenges of our today’s life. Sadly, we as physicians stand as one of the main reasons behind this problem. Our reckless prescribing behavior, despite all alarming calls by the health community, causes uncontrolled escalation of antibiotic resistance, with continuous emergence of new resistant bacterial strains that used to be easily treated in the near past. The list of resistant strains is growing and many of them are acquired as healthcare associated infections (HAI); they cause difficult to treat illnesses, with several unfavorable consequences including long-term disabilities and death. Moreover, they lead to long hospitalizations, and the costs on the health care systems are terribly tremendous. We seriously need to work together at all levels of health care, to stop this medical practice problem, and prevent its associated infections, towards a better confront of antimicrobial resistance. Dr. Farida Al Hosani, Manager Communicable Diseases Department Health Authority – Abu Dhabi Tel: 02 4193208 Fax: 02 4496966 Email: [email protected] Page 2 Quarterly Summary Report: 4th Quarter - 2012 Table of Contents Item Content I Foreword 2 II Table of contents 3 III Notified illnesses in Abu Dhabi Emirate by region (Quarter 4, 2012) 4 IV Notified illnesses in Abu Dhabi Emirate by age & gender (Q4, 2012) 5 V Monthly trends for selected notified diseases in Abu Dhabi Emirate (Q1-Q4/2012 Vs 2010 and 2011) 6 VI Visa screening applicants in Abu Dhabi Emirate (Q4 /2012) 7 VII Topic of the volume: Foodborne illnesses and HAAD efforts 8-11 VIII Sharing Reports: Reported infectious diseases – 2012 End of Year Selected Figures! 12-14 IX Activities 15-18 X Flash news 19-20 XI The volume “Flash- on-an-Illness”: Influenza 21-22 Quarterly Summary Report: 4th Quarter - 2012 Page Page 3 Table 1: Notified Illnesses in Abu Dhabi Emirate by Region (Quarter 4, 2012) Cases Abu Dhabi Eastern Western Region Region Cumulative in Abu Dhabi Emirate ( Q1-Q4 ) Quarter 4 Q1 Q2 2012 Q3 Q4 Year Total 2012 2011 2010 AFP * 5 0 1 7 6 2 6 21 14 11 Brucellosis 12 3 1 20 58 41 16 135 73 52 Chickenpox 880 187 59 2791 4635 1 0 0 0 1 5 1 7 9 11 130 108 15 253 374 267 253 1147 667 561 Haemophilus influenzae invasive 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 23 14 Hepatitis A 75 25 2 53 51 73 102 279 138 193 Hepatitis B 136 43 1 131 194 160 180 665 655 711 Hepatitis C 113 26 3 107 169 109 142 527 559 668 Influenza 80 76 10 79 31 20 166 296 238 248 Malaria * ¶ 286 233 78 265 692 1160 597 2714 2760 1415 Measles * 31 3 1 14 2 5 35 56 55 50 Meningitis (bacterial) 8 0 0 9 11 12 8 40 31 39 Meningitis (viral) 16 0 0 6 14 16 16 52 38 36 Mumps 33 15 6 37 69 38 54 198 194 221 Pertussis 3 0 0 9 27 14 3 53 39 73 Rubella * 6 0 0 2 6 4 6 18 43 22 Scabies 176 60 1 195 176 151 237 759 585 654 Shigellosis 5 1 0 7 9 10 6 32 41 51 Tetanus 1 0 0 1 0 0 1 2 3 1 Tuberculosis (Pulmonary) * 44 23 9 89 93 92 76 350 452 450 Tuberculosis (Extra-Pulmonary) 26 7 3 43 55 57 36 191 180 175 Typhoid /Paratyphoid 61 10 3 130 129 110 74 443 394 347 Other diseases 307 63 24 327 373 316 394 1410 1342 968 Total 2435 883 217 4575 7175 3979 3535 19264 20281 14400 Grand total including ruled out notifications 2714 955 266 4889 7522 4371 3935 20717 21373 14949 Cholera Foodborne illnesses ** 1317 1126 9869 11748 7429 Illnesses covered by national control programs (only confirmed cases and cases that cannot be ruled out are included in the table) Refers to Foodborne illnesses other than those reported separately in the list of notified diseases (See page 6 and 10 for further clarifications on the apparent increase during 2012) All notified malaria cases are “imported” Reported Haemophilus influenzae cases during last two years were not meeting the case definition of the invasive type. Indicates increase or decrease in number of notified cases during the 4th quarter of 2012 compared to previous quarters Indicates increase or decrease in numbers of notified cases over Q1-Q4 2012 compared to the cumulative over previous two years Close to 20% decrease in cases of chickenpox in 2012 (Vs.2011) is a good achievement that can be attributed to the introduction of Varicella vaccine. A confirmed outbreak of measles occurred in Abu Dhabi Region during December 2012 – January 2013 (interventions taken, and outbreak contained) Page 4 Quarterly Summary Report: 4th Quarter - 2012 Table 2: Notified Illnesses in Abu Dhabi Emirate by Age & Gender (Q4, 2012) Cases Total 1 AFP 23 3 1 1 1 1 6 4 24 143 148 135 141 31 84 69 199 18 83 3 6 1 3 13 16 3 21 1 3 423 11 17 33 44 15 23 8 15 9 32 8 19 3 9 3 3 0 1 90 163 253 0 0 0 51 51 102 2 56 124 180 1 Haemophilus influenzae 15 Hepatitis A 13 29 Hepatitis B 26 3 7 3 4 1 1 1 7 6 28 47 14 39 5 19 2 10 1 1 7 28 6 33 8 27 8 16 5 2 35 107 142 3 27 12 8 12 6 11 1 3 3 3 83 83 166 141 11 213 2 130 1 58 1 23 1 1 22 575 597 9 26 35 3 5 8 5 11 16 25 29 54 1 2 3 4 2 6 56 181 237 1 5 6 0 1 1 27 49 76 11 25 36 22 52 74 166 228 394 Hepatitis C Influenza 7 11 17 Malaria Measles 1 Meningitis bacterial 1 Meningitis viral 4 Mumps 1 7 4 Rubella 1 Scabies 1 17 9 11 5 5 3 4 3 8 5 8 1 6 2 Pertussis 2 5 8 1 1 1 1 2 2 10 2 2 6 7 1 1 1 1 1 2 2 1 3 1 5 8 12 1 Shigellosis 1 18 9 1 38 11 1 1 1 56 11 32 5 1 20 1 1 1 7 1 1 1 Tetanus 0 Tuberculosis (Pulmonary) Tuberculosis (Extra-Pulmonary) 3 1 2 1 1 703 1126 1 1 Cholera Foodborne Illness 3 1 1 Brucellosis Chickenpox 1 0 11 7 12 22 2 12 0 4 0 1 6 3 13 4 4 1 2 2 3 0 1 1 Typhoid /Paratyphoid Fever 1 1 5 3 2 6 1 6 10 25 3 7 Other Diseases 6 5 46 44 20 24 13 18 52 56 20 46 0 15 1 Total 58 73 274 298 244 276 96 341 250 728 101 425 40 197 18 85 16 15 1097 2438 3535 4 8 17 3 3935 * The highlighted cells (with red numbers) indicate the age/gender categories that had the largest numbers of reported cases for the given illness. The grand total for Quarter 4 after including all ruled out notifications. Quarterly Summary Report: 4th Quarter - 2012 Page 5 Monthly Trends for Selected Notified Diseases in Abu Dhabi Emirate (Q1-Q4/2012 Vs 2010 and 2011) The number of reported cases increased during the last quarter of 2012. However, those cases were not linked (only eight patients had history of contact with other cases). More than two thirds had travel history. The risk was not specified in quarter of the cases. About 30% of all Q 4 cases got hospitalized. There is a remarkable decline in number of reported cases over the last quarter of 2012. Additionally, more than three quarters of them were not confirmed by culture. Travel history was reported in only 34% of those cases (almost all confirmed cases had a travel history). Hepatitis A 70 Typhoid/Paratyphoid 2011 80 2012 50 Number of notified cases Number of notified cases 2010 60 40 30 20 10 2010 70 2011 60 2012 50 40 30 20 10 0 Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct 0 Nov Dec Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun MONTH The trend over the three years shows increase in reported cases during the first and last quarters of each year. Such increase was even more prominent during the last quarter of 2012, but it is believed that the actual number of cases is even more (it is one of the most under-reported illnesses). Find more figures about influenza in page 22. Influenza Sep Oct Nov 450 2011 2012 80 60 40 20 2010 400 2011 350 2012 300 250 200 150 100 50 0 Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov These two figures make it clear that most of the apparent increase in reported foodborne illnesses during 2012 was due to rotavirus infections that are not necessarily foodborne. Notified Foodborne illnesses due to Rotavirus infection 2010 2011 2012 100 80 60 40 20 Causes of these foodborne illnesses during 2012: Foodborne illnesses (after excluding Rotavirus cases) 100 2010 2011 2012 90 Number of notified cases Number of notified cases 120 80 70 60 50 40 30 Salmonella 156 Adenovirus 16 Campylobacter 3 Unspecified 463 20 10 Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Dec MONTH MONTH 0 Dec Malaria 500 2010 100 0 Aug Malaria keeps almost the same picture like last year, however all cases are imported that mostly develop after being back from home countries. A new geographic information system (GIS) is going to be implemented shortly by HAAD for more vigilant surveillance of breeding sites. Number of notified cases Number of notified cases 120 Jul MONTH Sep Oct Nov Dec 0 Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun MONTH Jul MONTH Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec Note: HAAD surveillance officers investigate individual cases, assess for outbreaks, and take action whenever indicated. Page 6 Quarterly Summary Report: 4th Quarter - 2012 Visa Screening in Abu Dhabi Emirate (Q1-Q4-2012) Visa screening is mandatory for all expatriates applying for work and/or residence in Abu Dhabi Emirate. It consists mainly of screening for Human Immunodeficiency Virus (HIV), pulmonary tuberculosis, and leprosy. Screening for Hepatitis B and syphilis are limited to a few occupational categories. HAAD Visa Screening Standard is available at http://www.haad.ae/HAAD/LinkClick.aspx?fileticket=DDCVCmde9R0%3d&tabid=819 Around quarter a million people or more apply for visa medical screening every three months in Abu Dhabi Emirate. During the fourth quarter of 2012, a total of 271,499 applicants were screened in all HAAD-licensed Screening Centers (a total of ten centers in the three regions of Abu Dhabi). No. of Applicants 300000 288915 New Renew Total 279722 900 271499 245033 250000 800 No. of Applicants/ 100,000 350000 Prevalence per 100,1000 visa screening applicant in Abu Dhabi Emirate, 2012 * Visa screening applicants in Abu Dhabi Emirate, 2012 200000 150000 100000 Overall New Renew 700 600 500 400 300 200 50000 ph ili s ro sy Sy er cu Tu b Quarter Le p B Q4 He Q3 HI Q2 V 0 Q1 pt iti s 0 lo sis 100 Disease The table below shows the number and prevalence of positive cases among new and renewal visa applicants during the fourth quarter of 2012. HIV Number Prevalence * Overall Prevalence Hepatitis B Tuberculosis Leprosy Syphilis*** New Renew New Renew New Renew New 38 5 150 8 119 42 0 0 205 0 27.8 3.7 530 42.6 87.0 31.2 0 0 723.8 0 15.8 335.3 59.3 Renew 0 New Renew 435 * Prevalence: In the Prevalence bar chart and the table above, the term prevalence refers to the number of positive cases per 100,000 visa screened applicants. For Hepatitis B and Syphilis: it applies to tested occupational categories (a total of 47126 in quarter 4, and 194097 during the whole year of 2012). For TB: it refers to active TB cases Quarterly Summary Report: 4th Quarter - 2012 Page 7 TOPIC OF THE VOLUME Foodborne illnesses and HAAD efforts! Background Foodborne illnesses are a well-known public health problem that occurs in all countries; from most to least developed ones. However, the lack of reliable data makes it difficult to estimate the burden of foodborne illnesses worldwide. This is mainly due to the different definitions used in various studies, most diarrheal illnesses are not reported to public health authorities, and only few illnesses can be definitely linked to food. The WHO estimated that there are about two billion cases of diarrheal disease worldwide and around 1.8 million die annually from diarrheal diseases. A great proportion of these cases are attributed to contamination of food and drinking water. The WHO is currently working on initiating a Global Strategy for the surveillance of foodborne diseases by urging member states to set up laboratory-based surveillance systems that cover outbreaks and sporadic cases, and to monitor contamination of food by chemicals and microorganisms. The United Arab Emirates, with its main health bodies including the Health Authority of Abu Dhabi (HAAD), are not far away from those international efforts, and HAAD is currently working intensively on enabling the establishment of a national public health reference lab, that can effectively serve in better diagnosis and reporting of many illnesses including the foodborne ones. Foodborne illnesses – The common missed outbreaks! Too often, outbreaks of foodborne illnesses go unrecognized or unreported. This is due to many factors including the fact that most people who fall sick do not seek medical care because the symptoms are usually mild and self-limited; specific diagnostic tests are usually not available and/or not easy to perform; and only a small number of those who get diagnosed are reported. Therefore, reported foodborne illnesses are literally the tip of the iceberg for actual cases in the community. The below two figures show the situations of underreporting and usual scenarios for such cases, which can further explain why foodborne illnesses are generally underestimated and specification of causative pathogens are usually not reached. Usual Scenairo Timeline for Foodborne illnesses Reported Cases Confirmed Lab tests for organisms Ingesting contaminated food Specimen obtained People seek care Stool sample collection Hours -7 Days - Seeks medical care in 1-5 days - The health facility might do testing in 1-5 days Becoming sick Possible identification of pathogen in 1-3 days People become ill The cause gets specified Infection in the Population This indicates that public health efforts are continually needed to enhance both testing and reporting of those illnesses, so that health bodies and related stakeholders can take proper and timely intervention. Page 8 Quarterly Summary Report: 4th Quarter - 2012 Foodborne illnesses, Food poisoning, Gastroenteritis -The Definitions Dilemma! According to WHO, foodborne illnesses (FBI) can be defined as diseases that are commonly transmitted through food. They comprise a broad group of illnesses caused by microbial pathogens, parasites, chemical contaminants, and biotoxins. A foodborne illness is therefore an infection or intoxication that results from eating food contaminated with microorganisms or their toxins. It also includes allergic reactions and other conditions where food acts as a carrier of the allergen. While not all gastroenteritis is foodborne, and not all foodborne diseases cause gastroenteritis, food poisoning is a foodborne illness that is caused by the ingestion of preformed toxins. A variety of methods have been used to ascertain the proportion of illnesses caused by foodborne agents using a syndromic case definition of gastrointestinal disease and/or pathogen specific causes likely to be attributable to food consumption. Therefore, ascertaining the burden of those diseases is usually not straightforward and should always be interpreted with caution. Gastroenteritis is the most frequent clinical syndrome that can be attributed to a wide range of microorganisms, including bacteria, viruses, and parasites. The following are the most common pathogens that cause foodborne illnesses: • Bacteria: Salmonella, Campylobacter jejuni, Clostridium perfringens, and E.coli. • Viruses: Enterovirus, Hepatitis A, Hepatitis E, Norovirus, and Rotavirus. • Parasites: Platyhelminthes (Taenia saginata, Taenia solium) , Nematode(Ascaris lumbricoides,) and Protozoa (Entamoeba histolytica, Giardia lamblia). According to the US Center for Diseases Control and Prevention (CDC), more than 250 known diseases can be transmitted through food. Unknown or undiscovered agents have been estimated to cause 81% of all food-borne illnesses and related hospitalizations. Viral infections make around one third of cases of food poisoning in developed countries. Important Foodborne Outbreaks in the World! The below table shows the world largest outbreaks that occurred over the last five years, with the causative organisms, number of infected people, and deaths. Year Event 2008 Canadian listeriosis outbreak in cold cuts 2008 United States salmonellosis outbreak in peanuts 2011 Germany E. coli O104:H4 outbreak 2011 United States listeriosis outbreak in cantaloupes Agent Vehicle infected Death Listeria Cold cuts > 50 22 Salmonella Peanuts > 200 9 > 4300 52 146 30 E. coli O104:H4 Fenugreek sprouts Listeria Cantaloupe Figures from Abu Dhabi The list of reportable infectious diseases includes many infections in which food can be a vehicle of transmission. Those illnesses are either appearing in the list as separate reportable disease entities (like typhoid/paratyphoid fever, brucellosis, hepatitis A, shigellosis, and other), or reported under the category of “Foodborne illness” with requesting specification of the pathogen in the blank space next to it. During 2012, the total notifications received under the category of foodborne illnesses in Abu Dhabi Emirate were 1147 cases (compared to 667 cases in 2011). However, the apparent large increase is due to rotavirus infections that have been reported under this group. This can be misleading, since a good proportion of rotavirus infections are not necessarily foodborne. However, reported foodborne illnesses in the two years after excluding rotavirus, are comparable (527 and 638 cases in 2011 and 2012 respectively). Quarterly Summary Report: 4th Quarter - 2012 Page 9 Foodborne/Food poisoning incidents On average, about ten outbreaks of food poisoning incidents are reported per year in the Emirate of Abu Dhabi. During 2012, the following 14 incidents of medium to large food poisoning outbreaks have been identified; nine of them were reported from Abu Dhabi region, four from the western region, and one from the Eastern Region (smaller incidents of 3 or less clustered cases have not been included here). Of those listed in the table, the smallest incidents involved five family members who developed food poisoning after eating from the same restaurant; and the largest one involved 113 laborers living in the same camp. All cases and outbreaks were reported to ADFCA, who investigated the suspected food and premises, took a corrective action as needed, and provided HAAD with a feedback report. No Month No. of Cases/No. reported Stool results Abu Dhabi Region 1 January 12 students /12 No stool samples tested (developed after going in a trip and eating from a fast meal restaurant, reported by the school nurse but did not go to hospital-mild cases) 2 February 20 labors/2 Stool culture Negative for 2 cases (only 2 cases were reported) 3 February 25 labors/25 4 April 10 labors/2 5 May 11 students/10 6 July 22 labors/10 7 August 9 family members/4 Stool culture positive for Salmonella species group E 8 August 50 hotel staff/3 3 cases tested, 1 grew Salmonella enterica, 1 had negative stool culture, 1 had negative stool culture but had E.histolytica trophozoites in routine stool analysis 9 December 113 labors/39 Stool culture Negative Stool culture Negative Stool culture Negative (developed after going in a trip) Stool culture Negative Negative stool cultures -25 cases tested Eastern Region 1 Stool culture positive for Salmonella species group B November 5 households/5 Western Region No stool samples tested 1 January 8 labors/8 2 April 14 labors/5 3 July 37 people/5 4 July 19 labors/19 No stool samples tested Stool cultures Negative Stool cultures Negative HAAD Communicable Disease Department is making it a top priority for this year to improve the capacity and infrastructure for outbreak response management by all health bodies in the Emirate of Abu Dhabi (this is for all illnesses including the foodborne ones). 400 Notifications received under the category of "Foodborne illness" 450 350 Number of cases 250 200 150 100 350 Nationals 300 Expatriate 250 200 150 100 0 Page 10 Am cifi ed r sp e cte Un py lo ba vi ru no ne m Ca el la Ad Sa lm on vi ru ta Ro Causative pathogens eb ia sls Gi Ty ar ph di oi as d/ ls Pa ra ty ph oi Br d uc el lo sis E. co He li pa tit is Sh A ig Ca el lo m sis ph lo ba ct er Ch ol er a 50 0 s 50 s Number of cases 400 Nationals Expatriate Western Region 300 Foodborne illnesses that are notified as separate disease entities Infectiuos Disease Quarterly Summary Report: 4th Quarter - 2012 The role of physicians in investigating the causative organisms is crucial, and all care should be taken to do that. Foodborne illnesses – HAAD Requirements! HAAD classified Foodborne illness as a “Category A” reportable disease! Requiring immediate reporting! The primary goal of this reporting requirement is the prompt identification of any unusual clusters of the disease that have possibly been developed by ingesting a contaminated food. Isolation of the pathogen from the suspected food specimens would usually need to be done within 72 hours; therefore immediate reporting will allow the Food Control Authority to do necessary investigation and testing on time, hence preventing bigger outbreaks in the community. Reporting of foodborne illnesses should not be undervalued at all. Although in most of the cases the illness is mild, some illnesses can be very serious, requiring hospitalization, and might cause long-term disability and even death. HAAD Efforts to Improve Actions Investigation of foodborne illnesses and related outbreaks requires a multidisciplinary approach where all stakeholders need to get involved and take their roles to ensure timely control and prevention. Once a foodborne illness is reported to the Health Authority of Abu Dhabi, the surveillance team starts performing a case-based epidemiological investigation to identify the source of infection, risk factors, and possible epi-linkage among cases, especially when there is clustering by time or place. HAAD immediately reports any suspected foodborne illness or incident to Abu Dhabi Food Control Authority (ADFCA) to investigate the suspected food. ADFCA team goes on a field visit to the implicated place to take food specimens and inspect the food establishment. This helps in identifying the source of infection and take appropriate preventive measures to avoid repeated occurrence of such incident in the future. More vigorous actions might be taken by ADFCA, which may include a warning letter or even closing the food establishment if those violations were recurring ones. Health care providers report Foodborne illnesses to HAAD (e-notification/phone) Abu Dhabi Food Control Authority (ADFCA) Automated reporting from HAAD to ADFCA will start soon! Do Not Delay notification of Foodborne illnesses This may result in deterioration of food specimens! Quarterly Summary Report: 4th Quarter - 2012 Page 11 Sharing Reports: Reported infectious diseases –2012 End of Year Selected Figures! Chickenpox by Age group in Abu Dhabi Emirate (2011-2012) 2011 IR*100,000 Frequency 2012 IR*100,000 Age group Frequency 0-4 3708 2485.8 2719 1690.6 5-9 3088 2440.7 2744 2139.1 10-14 769 764.0 657 646.9 15-19 303 340.8 238 259.0 20-24 916 368.6 775 298.9 25-29 1342 308.9 1176 254.7 30-34 792 220.9 740 195.0 35-39 455 169.4 426 155.1 40-44 214 104.7 202 96.1 45-49 89 66.1 88 63.4 50-54 40 40.4 55 55.4 55-59 19 32.2 27 42.9 60-64 12 49.1 10 37.5 65-69 1 9.9 5 43.4 70-74 1 15.5 2 28.9 75+ 2 58.4 0.0 0.0 Total 11751 506.3 9864 407.2 Good news! The impact of introducing the varicella vaccine started to be seen: The incident rate of chickenpox has declined from 506 per 100,000 in 2011 to 407 per 100,000 in 2012. However, a natural secular change can also be a reason for that, therefore we may need a few more years for such effect to be more clear. A decrease of 20% from last year! Note: This is a real time data, so figures abstracted at different points of time can show small difference Disease Childhood Diseases (<15 years) Abu Dhabi 2011-2012 Frequency 2011 Rate*100,000 Frequency 2012 Rate*100,000 Chickenpox 7565 325.9 6120 252.6 Hepatitis A 82 3.5 194 8.0 Hepatitis B 8 0.3 4 0.2 Influenza 115 5.0 145 6.0 Measles 27 1.2 46 1.9 Mumps 128 5.5 116 4.8 Pertussis 39 1.7 53 2.2 Rubella 8 0.3 5 0.2 Tuberculosis (Pulmonary) 6 0.3 7 0.3 Page 12 Quarterly Summary Report: 4th Quarter - 2012 Viral Hepatitis incident Rate in Abu Dhabi Emirate (2011-2012) 35.0 27.4 Cases / 100.000 30.0 2011 2012 25.0 21.3 17.9 20.0 15.0 12.7 11.6 10.0 5.9 5.0 0.0 Hepatisi A Hepatisi B Hepatisi C Type Overall, there is an increase in rate of reported hepatitis cases from 36.5/100,000 in 2011 to 60.4/100,000 in 2012 (an increase of about 65 %). This needs further investigation to understand whether this is due to better detection and reporting, or it indicates a real increase in acute or newly detected cases. It should be note that, this figure includes both suspected and confirmed cases It is interesting to find that the rate of reported Hepatitis B cases across ages has a totally different profile among nationals and expatriates. The rate among expatriates increases almost steadily with an increase in age; while among nationals the rate increases largely after the age of 20 years and continue to show a relatively high rate among other age groups. Knowing that in UAE, Hepatitis B vaccine was first introduced in Oct 1991, can explain such age profile among nationals. Hepatitis B Incident Rate among Expatriates by Age in Abu Dhabi Emirate (2011-2012) Hepatitis B Incident Rate among Nationals by Age in Abu Dhabi Emirate (2011-2012) 2011 140.0 140.0 2012 120.0 Cases / 100.000 100.0 2012 80.0 60.0 40.0 100.0 80.0 60.0 40.0 20.0 20.0 0.0 0.0 0-4 5-9 10-14 15-19 20-24 25-29 30-34 35-39 40-44 45-49 50-54 55-59 60-64 65-69 40-74 75+ Cases / 100.000 2011 120.0 0-4 5-9 10-14 15-19 20-24 25-29 30-34 35-39 40-44 45-49 50-54 55-59 60-64 65-69 40-74 40.0 Age Group Age Group Reported Infectious Diseases in Abu Dhabi Emirate, 2012 by Gender, Nationality, and Region Relative % and (Rate/100,000) By Gender Females Males By Nationality Nationals Expatriates By Region Abu Dhabi Region Western Region Eastern Region 11% 27% 33% (1185) (930) 67% (744) (1149) 25% (1067) 73% 64% (694) (711) Quarterly Summary Report: 4th Quarter - 2012 Page 13 2500 Females Notification rates of Influenza cases by age and gender Abu Dhabi, 2012 250.0 Males Females 150.0 40-74 65-69 60-64 55-59 50-54 45-49 40-44 35-39 30-34 0.0 25-29 0 20-24 50.0 15-19 500 5-9 100.0 10-14 1000 0-4 This should remind us of the importance of flu vaccine for the elderly to avoid complications. 0-4 5-9 10-14 15-19 20-24 25-29 30-34 35-39 40-44 45-49 50-54 55-59 60-64 65-69 40-74 75-79 85+ Cases/100,000 1500 All these rates come in line with the age-specific rates in other places Age in years Age in years Notification rates of Hepatitis A Cases by age and gender Abu Dhabi, 2012 90.0 80.0 Females 300.0 Notification Rates of Pulmonary TB Cases by age and gender Abu Dhabi, 2012 Males Females Males 250.0 70.0 60.0 Cases/100,000 50.0 40.0 30.0 200.0 150.0 100.0 20.0 50.0 10.0 55-59 50-54 45-49 40-44 35-39 30-34 25-29 20-24 15-19 10-14 5-9 0-4 0.0 0.0 0-4 15-19 20-24 25-29 30-34 35-39 40-44 45-49 50-54 55-59 60-64 65-69 40-74 75-79 80-84 85+ Cases/100,000 Males 200.0 2000 Cases/100,000 As shown in page 12, we started to see a decline in reported cases (mostly among the age group 0-4 (the vaccine introduced in 2011). Notification rates of Chickenpox cases by age and gender Abu Dhabi, 2012 Age in years Age in years Top ten notified illnesses in Abu Dhabi 2012, by relative percentages out of total notifications Influenza 1.60% Amebiasis 2.10% Tuberculosis (Pulmonary) 2.10% Hepatitis C Unspecified 2.30% Typhoid/ Paratyphoid Fever 2.30% Hepatitis B Unspecified 2.70% Scabies Foodbornw Illness Malaria 51.10% Page 14 3.90% 5.90% 14.10% Chickenpox Quarterly Summary Report: 4th Quarter - 2012 Activities The Communicable Diseases Department at HAAD conducted several trainings during the fourth quarter of 2012; these included: 1) Outbreak Management Training Workshop In collaboration with the Omani Ministry of Health, HAAD Communicable Diseases Department conducted a four-day training course on outbreak management, during the period Oct 21-24 2012. The course aimed to develop skills and capacity amongst HAAD staff and other stakeholders that are involved in outbreak situations, through a specially structured field-oriented program. A total of 35 participants attended the course; these included staff from HAAD, UAE Ministry of Health, Dubai Health Authority, SEHA health facilities, Zayed Military Hospitals, private health sector, Abu Dhabi Food Control Authority (ADFCA), and the National Crisis and Emergency Management Authority (NCEMA). The participants were trained in all aspects of outbreak management, to enable them put into practice the right methods elaborated in the course modules. Various techniques of training were used, including presentations, case studies, role play, exercises, demonstration, and interaction among participants. 2) Cold Chain Training Workshops for School Nurses: HAAD Communicable Disease Department conducted three training workshops for school health nurses in the Emirate of Abu Dhabi. The workshops were held during the last third of December in the regions of Abu Dhabi (Al Ain -23rd December 2012, Western Region -25th December 2012, and Abu Dhabi Region - 26th December 2012). The aim of the training workshops was to increase the awareness of school nurses on the subject of cold chain and its importance, cold chain monitoring devices, vaccine refrigerators and storage temperatures, and icepacks conditioning. A total of 170 school nurses attended the workshop in Abu Dhabi, 140 in Al Ain, and 47 in the western region. Quarterly Summary Report: 4th Quarter - 2012 Page 15 3) HIV Workshop with Stakeholders The Health Authority – Abu Dhabi (HAAD), in coordination with the Red Crescent and Ministry of Health, conducted in December 17 2012 a workshop on HIV/AIDS, to discuss with the strategic partners the implementation of the National HIV Program and the main challenges facing it. The workshop; named “Human Immunodeficiency Virus - Roles and Challenges”, indicated that all parties need to work together in raising community awareness about HIV/AIDS, combating the misconceptions about the disease, encouraging voluntary testing for HIV, establishing social support groups to provide proper counseling and advising to people living with HIV, and protecting the rights of infected people as mentioned in the Ministerial Decree No. 29 for the year 2010. The workshop has also shared the UAE Red Crescent experience of raising awareness through the so called (Y-peer program) in which a group of youth volunteers commit to educate their peers through a number of recreational activities, with the aim of raising awareness on many health-related issues including prevention of AIDS and other sexually transmitted diseases. 4) On-site Training on E-Infectious Diseases Notifications and Programs On Dec 2012, a team of the Communicable Diseases Department made a field visit to Delma Hospital in Delma Island at the Western Region. The visit included on-site training for the staff, on the electronic notification of infectious diseases, and the importance of complying with HAAD requirements on a number of disease control programs. A special focus was given to the implementation of the TB Control Program and its reporting mechanisms, along with HAAD DOT Standard to control this challenging disease. The training has also emphasized on the importance of the Acute Flaccid Paralysis (AFP) surveillance, and the necessity of abiding by the WHO requirements of reporting suspected AFP cases and the active search for doubtful ones, which is the milestone of the Polio Eradication Program worldwide, to ensure maintaining the Polio-free status in UAE especially that two areas in a nearby countries are still endemic with polio. Page 16 Quarterly Summary Report: 4th Quarter - 2012 Communicable Diseases Department activities 2012 − in pictures! Outbreak management Course - Dr. Farida Al Hosani closure speech HAAD and stakeholders discuss implementation of HIV program Series of meetings to implement TB DOT program in Abu Dhabi Premarital screening scientific program for service providers Mobile vaccination campaigns in Primary Healthcare Centers A field visit with Malaria Elimination group to explain UAE experience Quarterly Summary Report: 4th Quarter - 2012 Page 17 Active surveillance and field visits by the team Active surveillance and field visits by the team Active surveillance and field visits by the team Communicable Diseases Officers conducting investigations for received notifications Discussing HIV law and suggested work on obstacles With stakeholders for better outbreak response capacity Page 18 Quarterly Summary Report: 4th Quarter - 2012 Flash News HAAD Alert Circular on Coronavirus: In the 30th of Dec. 2012, the Health Authority of Abu Dhabi issued alert circular to all healthcare facilities in the Emirate of Abu Dhabi, to raise awareness about an unusual type of coronavirus that has been isolated (last WHO report indicates a total of 14 confirmed cases globally, including eight deaths; updated Mar 6, 2013) . HAAD circular required health professionals in Abu Dhabi to immediately report any case that fits the case definition. The case definition and the process to follow for a suspected coronavirus infection were both attached to the circular. Healthcare facilities were also asked, in the same circular, to report any case admitted to the ICU and that fits the case definition of novel coronavirus infection to HAAD Operation Center immediately by phone (024193666) or by email [email protected]. The circular is available at: http://www.haad.ae/haad/tabid/183/Default.aspx (dated 30 Dec 2012). Release of HAAD Standard for Thiqa List of Preventive Interventions: Consistent with HAAD’s vision for World-class quality healthcare including health protection and promotion, HAAD approved the revised HAAD Standard for Thiqa List of Preventive Interventions Version 1.2. This standard ensures alignment with HAAD clinical care standards concerning preventive interventions such as immunizations and screening (for both communicable and non-communicable health conditions), and includes references to the respective standards. This standard applies to all HAAD licensed healthcare providers wishing to provide services in support of the Thiqa preventive interventions, and as consistent with DAMAN’s network arrangements (effective from January 2013). The standard and full list of covered services is available at http://www.haad.ae/haad/tabid/819/Default.aspx (dated Jan 2013). New version! HAAD Childhood and Young Adult Immunization Standard HAAD Communicable Diseases Department has just issued the new standard for Childhood and Young Adult Immunization - version 0.9, to establish the requirements for recommended safe immunization practices. The standard includes HAAD Immunization schedule and additional vaccines for special purposes like Travel and Haj vaccines. It details the requirements for vaccine handling and management service, vaccine administration, required healthcare professionals training, immunization for groups with special health needs, and management, monitoring and reporting of adverse events following immunization to ensure the quality and safety of the immunization services in the Emirate of Abu Dhabi. In addition, the standard includes the duty to report and submit immunization data to HAAD electronic Immunization Information System (IIS), and explains the type of requested data with emphasizing on the importance of data accuracy and validation. Reporting immunization data would be very crucial to understand and detect immunization gaps, and ensure improvement in immunization coverage. The new standard is available at http://www.haad.ae/haad/tabid/819/Default.aspx (dated Jan 2013). Updated HAAD Standard for DOT Program HAAD has revised Version 0.9 of its standard for Directly Observed Treatment (DOT) of patients with tuberculosis. The revision took into consideration lessons learnt during implementation of Version 0.9, and feedback from stakeholders. The new version requires mandatory compliance with the requirements of the standard, provides a detailed payment mechanism, and includes the Patient Consent Form in Arabic. The standard is available at http://www.haad.ae/haad/tabid/819/Default.aspx (dated Nov 2012) Quarterly Summary Report: 4th Quarter - 2012 Page 19 New CDC iPad application “Solve the Outbreak”! The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) has very recently announced the release of a new iPad app that lets users assume the role of a disease outbreak investigator by navigating three fictional outbreaks based on real-life events. According to the CDC Director Dr. Tom Frieden, this application shows the challenges of solving outbreaks and how CDC outbreak investigators work on the front lines and fly at a moment notice to investigate mysterious outbreaks, and to save lives and protect people. In the game, participants become familiar with health tips, definitions and information about epidemiology. Users earn points and can post their results on Facebook and Twitter to challenge other participants. The application is available in the iTunes store at: https://itunes.apple.com/US/app/id592485067 . Hepatitis B infection despite vaccination as infants Infection with hepatitis B virus (HBV) is a global health concern even with the universal vaccination success against the virus in infants. The World Health Organization (WHO) estimates two billion individuals worldwide have HBV infection, with 360 million are chronic carriers of the hepatitis B surface antigen (HBsAg). A recent research on 8,733 senior high school students, who were assessed for hepatitis B surface antigen (HBsAg) and antibodies to HBsAg (anti-HBs), reveals that a significant number of adolescents lose their protection from HBV infection, despite having received a complete vaccination series as infants. The study found that teens with high-risk mothers (those positive for HBeAg) and teens whose immune system fails to remember a previous viral exposure (immunological memory) are behind HBV reinfection. Among students who did not receive HBIG, recipients of 1 to 2 doses of HBV vaccine were about three folds more likely to have HBsAg than those who received four doses of the vaccine. Among HBIG recipients, the HBsAg-positive rate was significantly higher in subjects with maternal hepatitis B e antigen (HBeAg) positivity and who received HBIG off-schedule (HEPATOLOGY Jan 2013; published earlier at 10.1002/hep.25988). New CDC Alerts and Guides - for two growing Antibiotic-Resistant Bacteria! • Carbapenem-resistant Enterobacteriaceae (CRE): Enterobacteriaceae are a family of bacteria that normally live in water, soil, and the human gut (Klebsiella and Escherichia coli are examples of these bacteria). CRE are Enterobacteriaceae that have developed high levels of resistance to antibiotics, including last-resort antibiotics called carbapenems; resulting in untreatable or difficult-to-treat multidrug-resistant organisms. • Multi-drug resistant Neisseria gonorrhoeae: is a growing public health threat in many areas. The CDC indicated several steps that are to be taken by public health bodies and their partners, to delay the emergence of cephalosporin-resistant strains, decrease the public health consequences of expanded resistance, and prevent a return to the era of untreatable gonorrhea. To all microbiologists, infection control professionals, and public health bodies! Page 20 CDC Alert and Guideline on CDC recommendations on Carbapenem-resistant Enterobacteriaceae The growing Multidrug-Resistant Gonorrhea www.bt.cdc.gov/HAN/han00341.asp http://www.cdc.gov/mmwr/pdf/wk/mm6206.pdf Quarterly Summary Report: 4th Quarter - 2012 The volume “Flash- on-an-Illness”: Influenza Illness and cause: Influenza is a contagious respiratory illness caused by influenza viruses that infect the nose, throat, and lungs. It can cause mild to severe illness, and at times can cause complications and may lead to death. Infectivity: Influenza viruses spread primarily by direct person to person transmission through large-particle droplets when infected people cough, sneeze or talk, and their sprayed droplets land in the mouths or noses of people who are nearby (at one meter distance or less). A person can also be infected by touching contaminated objects and then touching his mouth, eyes, or nose. Airborne transmission via small-particle residue of evaporated droplets that might remain suspended in the air for long periods of time is thought to be possible, although supporting data are limited. The incubation period is 1—4 days. Most healthy adults can infect others beginning 1 day before and up to 10 days after onset of symptoms; generally infectivity decreases rapidly by 3-5 days. Young children might shed the virus several days before illness onset and for more days after, and severely immunocompromised people can shed virus for weeks or months. Clinical picture: Influenza mostly cause mild illness, do not need medical care or antiviral drugs, and recover in less than two weeks. Symptoms and signs include fever, chills, cough, sore throat, runny or stuffy nose, body aches, headaches, fatigue, and sometimes vomiting and diarrhea especially in children. Some people are at high risk of developing influenza complications (old people, young children, pregnant women, and people with certain health conditions); these mainly include pneumonia, bronchitis, sinusitis, and otitis media. Influenza may also cause chronic health problems to become worse. Diagnosis: Rapid influenza diagnostic tests (RIDTs) are immunoassays that can identify the presence of influenza A and B viral nucleoprotein antigens in respiratory specimens, and display the result as positive or negative in 15 minutes or less. However, RIDTs have limited sensitivity and negative results should be interpreted with caution (i.e. possibly false negative). Some RIDTs distinguish between influenza A or B virus, but do not provide information on influenza A virus subtype. When needed, respiratory specimens should be collected from ill persons (whether positive or negative by RIDT) and sent to a public health laboratory for more accurate influenza testing. The reference standards for laboratory confirmation of influenza virus infection are reverse transcription-polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR) or viral culture. This is usually recommended when there is a need to confirm or rule out influenza diagnosis, or when there is a history of recent exposure to pigs, birds, or other animals, where novel influenza A virus infection is possible. Treatment: Influenza antiviral drugs can be used to treat or to prevent influenza. The two medications Zanamivir and Oseltamivir are the most recommended for currently circulating influenza strains. The best way to prevent the flu is by getting the influenza vaccine each year. Occurrence: The global burden of seasonal influenza is estimated to approximates 600 million cases per year; 3 million cases of severe illness and up to half million deaths annually. Influenza viruses are continuously changing antigenically. As of the end of January 2013, a report by FluNet (a global tool for influenza virological surveillance, which uses data from National Influenza Centres”NICs” of the WHO Global Influenza Surveillance and Response System “GISRS” and other national influenza reference laboratories from 96 countries, areas or territories), it has been mentioned that close to 80,000 specimens have recently been tested. More than 20,000 were positive for influenza viruses (82% influenza A and close to 18% influenza B). Of the influenza A viruses, about 32% were influenza A (H1N1) pdm09, and 68% were influenza A (H3N2). Of the B viruses, about 90% belong to the B-Yamagata lineage and 10% to the B-Victoria lineage. Below figures show the epidemiology of influenza in Abu Dhabi Emirate based on reported cases during 2012. Quarterly Summary Report: 4th Quarter - 2012 Page 21 >MC"&%0'(*'[*)B"%*b/X' #(*;<BA';&%*-'/*-'/C%X 0@%.M)M.'M*.M-%*.%'/&%' /E/MB/$B%'M*'@/C%'7'/*-'36' ! Figures on &%0@%.;ME%BA' ! Influenza- 162' :,P'`@'4,%;".''A$&"&' 122' :,%;".'3456"47$'-4'(=6'S+$=-'TU-1$2"'=*' >"E-,4'GNJG'' :,%;".'3456"47$'-4'(=6'S+$=-'TU-1$2"'=*'8,42+'$4.' >"E-,4'GNJG' 62' ?$"'F</$M' N/0;%&*'J%CM(*' O%0;%&*'J%CM(*' 3G1' :6U="1',@'4,%;".'A$&"&' monthly trend and age-specific incidence are available in page 6 and 14 respectively 6_=?'&=#$#DC!#>!*@>$%'@d;!=@!A-%!8B;-=!6&=.;<'G!0120g! 362' 97' 322' 62' 2' 3G' ?$"'F</$M' ?$"'F</$M' N?^KNJ!'J%CM(*' I%0;%&*'J%CM(*' 52' 42' 12' 32' 2' N/0;%&*'J%CM(*'O%0;%&*'J%CM(*' =/*' >%$':/&'?@&'#/A'c"*' ="B' ?"C'0%@'D.;'!(E'F%.' >"E-,4' 8,42+' ! :,%;".'3456"47$'-4'(=6'S+$=-'TU-1$2"'=*' (.U-&&-,4V'GNJG' :,%;".'3456"47$'-4'(=6'S+$=-'TU-1$2"'=*'2*#"&V' GNJG' [*a"%*b/'?' [*a"%*b/'R' !(;'K%0;%-' ?-#Md%-' !(;'?-#Md%-' 11\' GG]' 48\' K[]' ' 74\' /$(";'M;'W%0@%.M/BBA'<MC<' &M0]'C&("@0YL' !!!!!! :,%;".'3456"47$'!J:J''-4'(=6'S+$=-'TU-1$2"'V'GNJG' B4aKKF' These large figures of admitted influenza cases indicate the K<%0%'B/&C%')MC"&%0'()' importance of the /-#M;;%-'M*)B"%*b/'./0%0' yearly influenza M*-M./;%';<%'M#@(&;/*.%'()' vaccine, and the role all health profession;<%'A%/&BA'M*)B"%*b/' als shall play in E/..M*%U'/*-';<%'&(B%'/BB' educating people <%/B;<'@&()%00M(*/B0'0</BB' about it (especially high@B/A'M*'%-"./;M*C'@%(@B%' risk groups). !!!!! :,%;".'!J:J'-456"47$'-4'(=6'S+$=-'TU-1$2"' =*'$.U-&&-,4V'GNJG' !(;' /-#Md%-' G\' ^"0@%.;%-' 11\' S(*,&#%-' 89\' ?-#Md%-' G3\' ! D#&*h!Y!Q-2.0%-R&7!%*B*%>!&#!%*F#%&*<!=:B8$*:V)!C:I$#!:I9'!N-H-C!! Q-2.0%-R&!PDWD!%*B*%>!&#!1)>*>!%*F#%&*<!)>!L.D.@!#%!%*F#%&*<!)>!=:B8$*:V)!1)>*>!&')&!GA!>$G>*R$*:&! &*>&=:6!1#:B=%?*<!&#!G*!L.D.C! Quarterly Summary Report: 4th Quarter - 2012 Page 22 ! ! ,.!4!5 ) 6 * ! Editorial Board - Dr. Farida Al Hosani (Manager, Communicable Diseases Department, HAAD) - Dr. Mariam Al Mulla (Senior Officer, Communicable Diseases Department, HAAD) - Dr. Ahmed Abdulla (Senior Officer, Communicable Diseases Department, HAAD) - Dr. Badreyya Al Shehhi (Senior Officer Vaccines, Communicable Diseases Department, HAAD) - Dr. Kamal Jaafar (Senior Regional Officer, Communicable Diseases Department, HAAD) - Dr. Ahmed Khudhair (Senior Regional Officer, Communicable Diseases Department, HAAD) - Dr. Lamees Abu Haliqa (Senior Regional Officer, Communicable Diseases Department, HAAD) - Dr. Bashir Aden (Senior Officer, Surveillance Section, HAAD) - Dr. Ghada Yahia (Senior Regional Officer, Communicable Diseases Section, HAAD) Scientific Board - Dr. Iain Blair (Associate Professor, Community Medicine, UAEU) - Prof. Tibor Pal (Professor, Department of Medical Microbiology, UAEU) - Dr. Agnes Sonnevend (Assistant Professor, Department of Medical Microbiology, UAEU) - Dr. Ahmed Al Suwaidi (Consultant Pediatric Infectious Diseases, Assistant Professor, UAEU) - Dr. Rayhan Hashmey (Consultant Infectious Diseases, Tawam Hospital) - Dr. Bashir Aden (Senior Officer, Surveillance Section, HAAD) - Dr. Jamal Al Mutawa (Manager, External Services Department, HAAD) We are glad to invite your participation in this bulletin, please contact: Dr. Ghada Yahia Communicable Diseases Department Health Authority – Abu Dhabi Tel: 03 7041130 Fax: 03 7679556 Email: [email protected] Quarterly Summary Report: 4th Quarter - 2012 Page 23