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CHALLENGES IN COMMUNICABLE DISEASES JOHORE HEALTH CONFERENCE 2015 LOKMAN HAKIM S, MD, DAP&E, MScPH, PhD, FA MM, FAMS, FASc Ministry of Health Malaysia 2015-2035: Three Domains of Health Challenges High rates of avertable infectious, child, and maternal deaths Demographic change and shift in GBD towards NCDs and injuries Impoverishing medical expenses, unproducti ve cost increases Cost agenda Unfinished agenda Emerging agenda Infectious diseases continue to post great challenges to health • Profound impact on human history – Influenced course of wars – Determined fates of nations – Affected civilisation • Economic development and technology advancement leading to demographic transition • Epidemiologic transition incomplete, unfolding at different rates • Emerging and re-emerging infections coupled with new challenges – – – – Hospital acquired infections and the “Super Bug” Drug resistance Pandemics Health security and bioterrorism Communicable Diseases • Defined as – “any condition which is transmitted directly or indirectly to a person from an infected person or animal through the agency of an intermediate animal, host, or vector, or through the inanimate environment.” • Transmission is facilitated by the following: – More frequent human contact due to • Increase in the volume and means of transportation (affordable international air travel), • globalization (increased trade and contact). – Microbial adaptation and change. – Breakdown of public health capacity at various levels. – Change in human demographics and behavior. – Economic development and land use patterns. GLOBAL DISTRIBUTION OF EMERGING & RE-EMERGING DISEASES (1996-2004) • H1N1 • H7N9 • EBOLA • MERS-COV Source: Morens et al. 2004. The challenge of emerging and re-emerging infectious diseases. Emerg Infect Dis. 430: 242-249 Global Burden of Communicable Disease 2005 2015 Burden of Disease Burden of Disease CD 26% CD 30% Others 70% Others 74% 6 Leading causes of global deaths from infectious diseases (Fauci AS et al, N Engl J Med 2012, 366: 454-461) Respiratory infections Diarrheal diseases HIV/AIDS Tubercolosis Malaria Meningitis Pertussis Measles Hepatitis B Other infectious diseases 0 0.5 1 1.5 2 2.5 3 No. of Deaths (millions) 3.5 4 4.5 5 Economic burden • The epidemic of BSE, UK : USD 30 billion. • SARS outbreak Hong Kong/Global: range from USD 8 billion to 24 billion, • Plague in Surat, India (1994), USD 1.5 billion • Avian influenza outbreak, Hong Kong (1997), estimated to cost hundreds of millions of euros in lost poultry production, commerce and tourism. • Nipah outbreaks, Malaysia (1998/1999): USD 97 million for direct compensation for the culled 1.1 million pigs (total estimate USD500 million) Malaysia dengue notification 2001-2015 Vector-borne disease transmission dynamics and targets for control and elimination Host MALARIA Agent (parasite) Host Environment Vector (Anopheles) Agent (virus) DENGUE Vector (Aedes) Unique characteristics of infectious diseases • Extraordinary adaptability – Replication and mutation capacity • Closely dependent on the nature and complexity of human behavior – Reflect who we are, what we do, how we live and interact – Acquired as a result of our lifestyle • Ease of transportation, ease of spread • Environmental degradation and climate change • Explosive potential Epid-Curve of the Pandemic A(H1N1) 2009 No. of Cases Number of Lab-Confirmed Influenza A(H1N1) Cases, Malaysia, 2009 - 2010 3500 MALAYSIA 3,136 (as of 31/12/2010) 3000 2500 2000 15 May 2009: 1st confirmed case Mid Year Population, 2010 Total no. of confirmed cases Total no. of death Mortality Rate (per 100,000 pop) 28,908,800 15,792 95 0.33 November 2009: Pandemic vaccination strategies initiated 1500 1000 21 June 2009: Community transmission confirmed 500 352 0 17 19 21 23 25 27 29 31 33 35 37 39 41 43 45 47 49 51 1 3 5 7 9 11 13 15 17 19 21 23 25 27 29 31 33 35 37 39 41 43 45 47 49 51 10 July 2009: Mitigation Phase initiated 2009 2010 Epid Week Specific challenges Migration and Health Land use changes, Cl imate Change and Health Infectious diseases and Health Security Migration The Global Picture Migration The Regional Picture But who are these people? • Challenge: No internationally adopted definition for most terms • Why do we care about definition? – To better understand the great diversity among migrants. – Limit contradictory or misleading information Legal vs illegal Foreigners Economic Migrants Refugees Migrant workers – Achieve comparability of migration statistics among countries – Evidence-based , tailor-made policy synthesis Formal vs informal 19 Migration & public health concerns : Communicable Diseases – Mobile people interact with and potentially affect and adopt the health profile of all communities along their migration route. • – The cost to societies: • • • • Outbreak of disease (Health) Trade Political relationships Financial position in a global economy • Travel in affected regions. Temperatures are rising rapidly, following increases in CO2 emissions and concentrations Climate Change and Communicable Diseases • Climate may affect: – Spatial distribution of outbreaks: where? – Timing of disease outbreaks: when? – Frequency of disease outbreaks: how often? – Intensity or severity of outbreaks: how bad? • Via effects on – Pathogens: if free-living or outside of host – Hosts: e.g, immunity – Vectors: e.g. mosquitoes, ticks etc – Dynamics: e.g. contact rates – Indirect effects: effects on other disease drivers Malaysia weekly dengue case notification 2001-2015 Number of dengue reported cases in the Americas from 2000 to 2007. Shepard DS et al. (2011). Am. J. Trop. Med. Hyg; 84(2): 200-207. Annual economic burden of dengue in the Americas from 2000 to 2007 (in 2010 US$). Shepard DS et al. (2011). Am. J. Trop. Med. Hyg; 84(2): 200-207. Aggregate values of dengue episodes and economic burden by year for 12 countries in SEA (2001–2010). Shepard DS et al. 2013. PloS Negl Trop Dis; 7(2):e2055. doi:10.1371/journal.pntd.0002055 Use of multiple data sources to estimate the economic cost of dengue illness in Malaysia. Shepard DS et al (2012). Am. J. Trop. Med. Hyg; 87(5), 796-805 • Adjusted estimate of total dengue cases • Economic burden of USD56 million per year. • Overall economic burden would be higher if costs associated with prevention and control, dengue surveillance and long-term sequelae of dengue were included. Changing human-animal interface: Impact on zoonotic malaria in Malaysia (2014) Peninsular 2014 Sabah 2014 Sarawak 2014 P. falciparum P. vivax P. malariae Mixed P. knowlesi Penisular 2015 Sabah 2015 Sarawak 2015 P. falciparum P. vivax P. malariae Mixed P. knowlesi GLOBAL & NATIONAL HEALTH SECURITY: Bancroftian filariasis Leishmaniasis Exotic zoonoses including avian influenza, H7N9 Polio Mutlidrug resistance malaria Mutlidrug resistance TB Mutlidrug resistance malaria Cholera Mutlidrug resistance TB Mutlidrug resistance TB Avian influenza H5N1 Mutlidrug resistance TB Managing infectious diseases threats • Epidemiological surveillance through indicator (mandatory & administrative notification) and syndromic surveillance • Role of health intelligence • Real time electronic communication on outbreaks need to be developed • Networking of laboratories – National and Regional Public Health Laboratories – Clinical laboratories – hospitals and private laboratories, IMR – Others- DVM, Chemistry Labs • Early warning and response system – CPRC, IHR focal points and WHO & GOARN response structure • Better integration and cooperation across various government ministries and agencies Health systems and infectious diseases • Health systems play an important role. • Failure to response to emerging challenges may affects communicable disease program delivery system:– Constraints not due to lack of technical guidance or expertise but rather the shortcomings of health systems • Surveillance systems not in place / not monitored / not evaluated thus not detecting ALERT WARNING trends and signals • Multi sources of information not gathered to make a meaningful and appropriate policy decision • Current Rabies outbreak a case study The Threats Continue • Populations grow and move … Microbes adapt … Changing climates … Increasing global interconnectedness … WHO Briefing Notes: Pandemic (H1N1) 2009 “…. The 2009 influenza pandemic has spread internationally with unprecedented speed. In past pandemics, influenza viruses have needed more than six months to spread as widely as the new H1N1 virus has spread in less than six weeks ….” WHO , Geneva (16 July 2009) Thank you [email protected] 33