Conducting public health surveillance in areas of armed conflict and restricted population access: a qualitative case study of polio surveillance in conflict-affected areas of Borno State, Nigeria

被引:0
|
作者
Eric Wiesen
Raymond Dankoli
Melton Musa
Jeff Higgins
Joseph Forbi
Jibrin Idris
Ndadilnasiya Waziri
Oladapo Ogunbodede
Kabiru Mohammed
Omotayo Bolu
Gatei WaNganda
Usman Adamu
Eve Pinsker
机构
[1] US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention,
[2] World Health Organization,undefined
[3] National Stop Transmission of Polio,undefined
[4] National Primary Health Care Development Agency,undefined
[5] University of Illinois at Chicago,undefined
来源
关键词
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
This study examined the impact of armed conflict on public health surveillance systems, the limitations of traditional surveillance in this context, and innovative strategies to overcome these limitations. A qualitative case study was conducted to examine the factors affecting the functioning of poliovirus surveillance in conflict-affected areas of Borno state, Nigeria using semi-structured interviews of a purposeful sample of participants. The main inhibitors of surveillance were inaccessibility, the destroyed health infrastructure, and the destroyed communication network. These three challenges created a situation in which the traditional polio surveillance system could not function. Three strategies to overcome these challenges were viewed by respondents as the most impactful. First, local community informants were recruited to conduct surveillance for acute flaccid paralysis in children in the inaccessible areas. Second, the informants engaged in local-level negotiation with the insurgency groups to bring children with paralysis to accessible areas for investigation and sample collection. Third, GIS technology was used to track the places reached for surveillance and vaccination and to estimate the size and location of the inaccessible population. A modified monitoring system tracked tailored indicators including the number of places reached for surveillance and the number of acute flaccid paralysis cases detected and investigated, and utilized GIS technology to map the reach of the program. The surveillance strategies used in Borno were successful in increasing surveillance sensitivity in an area of protracted conflict and inaccessibility. This approach and some of the specific strategies may be useful in other areas of armed conflict.
引用
收藏
相关论文
共 14 条
  • [1] Conducting public health surveillance in areas of armed conflict and restricted population access: a qualitative case study of polio surveillance in conflict-affected areas of Borno State, Nigeria
    Wiesen, Eric
    Dankoli, Raymond
    Musa, Melton
    Higgins, Jeff
    Forbi, Joseph
    Idris, Jibrin
    Waziri, Ndadilnasiya
    Ogunbodede, Oladapo
    Mohammed, Kabiru
    Bolu, Omotayo
    WaNganda, Gatei
    Adamu, Usman
    Pinsker, Eve
    CONFLICT AND HEALTH, 2022, 16 (01)
  • [2] Expanding polio surveillance reach beyond vaccination reach in Borno State, Nigeria: The contribution of community informants from insecure areas engaged to conduct polio surveillance in security compromised areas, 2018-2019
    Mohammed, Abede Momoh
    Musa, Audu
    Etapelong, Sume Gerald
    Bolori, Mohammed Tahir
    Salanga, Dankoli Raymond
    Ndahi, Danladi
    Meleh, Sule
    Kunle, Ijaya
    Shettima, Aliyu
    Mohammed, Kabiru
    Siyaka, Salawu Musa
    Manu, Idris Jibrin
    Ilesanmi, Oluwatosin
    Adamu, Usman S.
    Shuaib, Faisal
    Tesfaye, Erbeto
    Braka, Fiona
    Mulombo, Walter Kazadi
    VACCINE, 2024, 42 (04) : 770 - 776
  • [3] Community engagement and integrated health and polio immunisation campaigns in conflict-affected areas of Pakistan: a cluster randomised controlled trial
    Habib, Muhammad Atif
    Soofi, Sajid
    Cousens, Simon
    Anwar, Saeed
    ul Haque, Najib
    Ahmed, Imran
    Ali, Noshad
    Tahir, Rehman
    Bhutta, Zulfiqar A.
    LANCET GLOBAL HEALTH, 2017, 5 (06): : E593 - E603
  • [4] Mobile outreach health services for mothers and children in conflict-affected and remote areas: a population-based study from Afghanistan
    Edmond, Karen
    Yousufi, Khaksar
    Naziri, Malalai
    Higgins-Steele, Ariel
    Qadir, Abdul Qadir
    Sadat, Sayed Masoud
    Bellows, Alexandra L.
    Smith, Emily
    ARCHIVES OF DISEASE IN CHILDHOOD, 2020, 105 (01) : 18 - 25
  • [5] Testing Self-Determination Theory in Conflict-Affected Areas: A Case Study of Yemeni EFL Students
    Ali, Jamal Kaid Mohammed
    INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF ENGLISH LINGUISTICS, 2019, 9 (04) : 366 - 375
  • [6] The Politics of Critical Action Research in Conflict-Affected Areas in the Global South: The Case of Reproductive Health in Mindanao, Philippines
    Bishop, Danielle
    INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF QUALITATIVE METHODS, 2010, 9 (04): : 338 - 338
  • [7] Mental health and psychosocial problems among conflict-affected children in Kachin State, Myanmar: a qualitative study
    Catherine Lee
    Amanda J. Nguyen
    Tara Russell
    Yasmina Aules
    Paul Bolton
    Conflict and Health, 12
  • [8] Mental health and psychosocial problems among conflict-affected children in Kachin State, Myanmar: a qualitative study
    Lee, Catherine
    Nguyen, Amanda J.
    Russell, Tara
    Aules, Yasmina
    Bolton, Paul
    CONFLICT AND HEALTH, 2018, 12
  • [9] Impact of conflict on maternal and child health service delivery - how and how not: a country case study of conflict affected areas of Pakistan
    Das, Jai K.
    Padhani, Zahra Ali
    Jabeen, Sultana
    Rizvi, Arjumand
    Ansari, Uzair
    Fatima, Malika
    Akbar, Ghulam
    Ahmed, Wardah
    Bhutta, Zulfiqar A.
    CONFLICT AND HEALTH, 2020, 14 (01)
  • [10] Impact of conflict on maternal and child health service delivery – how and how not: a country case study of conflict affected areas of Pakistan
    Jai K. Das
    Zahra Ali Padhani
    Sultana Jabeen
    Arjumand Rizvi
    Uzair Ansari
    Malika Fatima
    Ghulam Akbar
    Wardah Ahmed
    Zulfiqar A. Bhutta
    Conflict and Health, 14