1 / 40

Responding to SARS

Responding to SARS. John Watson Health Protection Agency Communicable Disease Surveillance Centre, London. November 2002. Outbreak of pneumonic illness in Guangdong province of southern China. 11 February 2003. China declares outbreak of pneumonia in Guangdong province

nida
Télécharger la présentation

Responding to SARS

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Responding to SARS John Watson Health Protection Agency Communicable Disease Surveillance Centre, London

  2. November 2002 • Outbreak of pneumonic illness in Guangdong province of southern China

  3. 11 February 2003 • China declares outbreak of pneumonia in Guangdong province • 300 cases and 5 deaths

  4. 20 February 2003 • Chicken ‘flu (influenza A H5N1) in Hong Kong • Outbreak in a family linked to southern China • Two deaths among four ill • Two cases confirmed influenza virus infection

  5. 11 March 2003 • Hong Kong reports outbreak of “acute respiratory syndrome” among hospital workers

  6. 12 March 2003 • WHO reports to all countries the occurrence of outbreaks in Hong Kong and Hanoi (Vietnam) as well as earlier outbreak in China • WHO recommends isolation of cases and surveillance by national health authorities

  7. 13 March 2003 • Information prepared in UK • CMO cascade (to all doctors) activated and Eurosurveillance published • CDR publication delayed to next morning due to network problems

  8. 14 March 2003 • WHO reports outbreaks in Singapore and Taiwan • WHO worker ill in Hanoi • WHO seeking field experts • Aetiology still unknown

  9. 15 March 2003 • WHO declares Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome (SARS) a worldwide health threat • Cases in Canada, Indonesia, Thailand and Philippines • WHO guidance about travel to South-East Asia

  10. Sunday, 16 March 2003 • First UK-wide teleconference

  11. Clinical features • Incubation period 2-7 (?) days • Influenza-like illness • High fever • Cough, shortness of breath • Other systemic symptoms

  12. Clinical features • Recovery in many • Progression in some • pneumonia • acute respiratory distress syndrome • Death in 3-5% • No response to anti-bacterial or anti-viral agents

  13. Epidemiological features • Spread to close contacts • droplet spread or direct contact with body fluids • Infectious when severely ill • Explosive outbreaks • Metropole Hotel • International spread

  14. Global SARS situation – 13 May 2003 • Total cases – 7458 (deaths 573 – 7.7%) • Hong Kong – 1689 (23%) • Taiwan – 207 (3%) • China (mainland) – 5086 (68%) • Singapore – 205 (3%) • Vietnam – 63 (1%) • Canada – 143 (2%)

  15. Global SARS situation – 13 May 2003 • Total cases – 7458 (deaths 573 – 7.7%) • Hong Kong – 1689 (23%) • Taiwan – 207 (3%) • China (mainland) – 5086 (68%) • Singapore – 205 (3%) • Vietnam – 63 (1%) • Canada – 143 (2%)

  16. UK results to 14 May 2003 • Total calls 380 • 8 initial ‘probable’ cases • 4 other diagnoses (1 mycoplasma, 3 ‘flu A) • 4 current, all recovered • 159 initial ‘suspect’ cases • 63 (40%) recovered • 54 (34%) still ill • 42 (26%) other diagnoses • ‘not a case’ - 178

  17. Why is SARS so dangerous? • Lethal – 15 - 20% mortality in hosptialised patients • Spread via respiratory route • Capable of sudden amplification in hospitals and cities • Vulnerability of health care staff • Can spread quickly internationally • Not easily controlled cf other emerging infections

  18. Early response in UK • Surveillance system • Laboratory strategy and guidance • Guidance for health care professionals • Travel guidance • Public information

  19. WHO definitions for surveillance • Suspect • >38 C • Cough or other respiratory symptom • Affected area within previous 10 days • Probable • as above with evidence of changes on chest x-ray

  20. Early response in UK • Surveillance system • Laboratory strategy and guidance • Guidance for health care professionals • Travel guidance • Public information

  21. Summary management of a SARS case

  22. Early response in UK • Surveillance system • Laboratory strategy and guidance • Guidance for health care professionals • Travel guidance • Public information

  23. UK Case definitions for SARS Suspect LOW A person presenting after 1 Feb 2003 with sudden onset of: high fever (>38°C) And cough or difficulty breathing And travelled in the 10 days before onset of illness to an area in which there is more than 'limited' local transmission of SARS during the travel period. WHO website <http://www.who.int/csr/sarsareas/en/>)

  24. UK Case definitions for SARS Suspect HIGH A person presenting after 1 Feb 2003 with sudden onset of: high fever (>38°C) And cough or difficulty breathing And had close contact with a probable SARS case from an affected area in the 10 days before onset of symptoms

  25. UK Case definitions for SARS Probable case Either: A suspect (Low or High) case with: • chest x-ray findings of pneumonia and no response to standard antimicrobial treatment or • respiratory distress syndrome (RDS) or Death due to an unexplained respiratory illness with autopsy findings of RDS without identifiable cause in a person who travelled to an affected SARS area within 10 days of illness.

  26. Follow-up • Follow-up categories • Still ill • Recovered = afebrile for at least 48 hours AND cough, if present, resolving • Dead Follow-up forms faxed or emailed to CDSC 48 hours after the date of report ten days after the date of report and/or A final follow-up form once the patient is asymptomatic

  27. CDSC SARS Surveillance

More Related