Showing posts with label Mass gatherings. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Mass gatherings. Show all posts

Sunday, July 20, 2014

EID Journal: Respiratory Viruses & Bacteria Among Pilgrims During The 2013 Hajj

image

Credit Wikipedia

 

# 8852

 

While MERS cases have thankfully  declined over the summer months, there remain concerns that it may return this fall during the time of the Hajj (early October), when roughly 2 million devout from around the world will make the pilgrimage to the Saudi Holy sites.

 

Mass gatherings such as the Hajj, Chunyun (Chinese New Years-Spring Festival), Carnival in Rio, Mardi Gras, and the Super Bowl all bring together huge groups of people, and all have the potential to amplify the transmission of diseases.

 

The good news is, that while mass gatherings may provide greater opportunities for disease outbreaks, history has shown that major epidemic outbreaks have been rare. One notable exception was the 1918 Liberty Loan Parade in Philadelphia, which was attended by as many as 200,000 people.

 

During the 1918 Pandemic, most cities instituted strict public health ordinances; they closed schools, movie houses, pool rooms, restaurants . . even churches. But Philadelphia went ahead with a massive parade on September 28th of that year, apparently heartened by the low number of flu cases reported in Pennsylvania to that point.

 

Over the next three weeks, at least 6,081 deaths from influenza and 2,651 deaths from pneumonia were registered in Pennsylvania, most occurring in Philadelphia (CDC source).

 

While a particularly dramatic example, concerns over seeing a repeat of this sort of thing run high enough that mass gathering medicine has now become a specialty (see Lancet: Mass Gathering and Health), and public health agencies around the world gear up for every large gathering event (see How The ECDC Will Spend Your Summer Vacation & The ECDC Risk Assessment On Brazil’s FIFA World Cup)

 


Although they carry the highest potential impact, public health concerns for these mass gathering events go far beyond exotic diseases like MERS and pandemic influenza.  

 

Tuberculosis, pneumococcal disease, meningococcal disease, chickenpox, pertussis, polio, cholera, mumps and a plethora of other respiratory viral and bacterial diseases all rank high on the list of potential infectious disease threats, along with concerns over food-borne and vector borne illnesses.

 

To try to quantify the risks of acquiring, and spreading, some of the more commonly seen respiratory pathogens during the Hajj, a group of researchers have – for the second year in a row – tested a group of Hajjis both before and after the Hajj for carriage of a variety of bacterial and viral pathogens.


While carriage these  pathogens among test subjects was high prior to attending the Hajj, they increased markedly immediately post-Hajj, indicating efficient transmission of several respiratory pathogens.

 

 

Respiratory Viruses and Bacteria among Pilgrims during the 2013 Hajj

Samir Benkouiten, Rémi Charrel, Khadidja Belhouchat, Tassadit Drali, Antoine Nougairede, Nicolas Salez, Ziad A. Memish, Malak al Masri, Pierre-Edouard Fournier, Didier Raoult, Philippe Brouqui, Philippe Parola, and Philippe GautretComments to Author
Abstract

Pilgrims returning from the Hajj might contribute to international spreading of respiratory pathogens. Nasal and throat swab specimens were obtained from 129 pilgrims in 2013 before they departed from France and before they left Saudi Arabia, and tested by PCR for respiratory viruses and bacteria. Overall, 21.5% and 38.8% of pre-Hajj and post-Hajj specimens, respectively, were positive for ≥1 virus (p = 0.003). One third (29.8%) of the participants acquired ≥1 virus, particularly rhinovirus (14.0%), coronavirus E229 (12.4%), and influenza A(H3N2) virus (6.2%) while in Saudi Arabia. None of the participants were positive for the Middle East respiratory syndrome coronavirus. In addition, 50.0% and 62.0% of pre-Hajj and post-Hajj specimens, respectively, were positive for Streptococcus pneumoniae (p = 0.053). One third (36.3%) of the participants had acquired S. pneumoniae during their stay. Our results confirm high acquisition rates of rhinovirus and S. pneumoniae in pilgrims and highlight the acquisition of coronavirus E229.

 

More than 2 million Muslims gather annually in Saudi Arabia for a pilgrimage to the holy places of Islam known as the Hajj. The Hajj presents major public health and infection control challenges. Inevitable overcrowding within a confined area with persons from >180 countries in close contact with others, particularly during the circumambulation of the Kaaba (Tawaf) inside the Grand Mosque in Mecca, leads to a high risk pilgrims to acquire and spread infectious diseases during their time in Saudi Arabia (1), particularly respiratory diseases (2). Respiratory diseases are a major cause of consultation in primary health care facilities in Mina, Saudi Arabia, during the Hajj (3). Pneumonia is a leading cause of hospitalization in intensive care units (4).

<SNIP>

In this study, we confirmed that performing the Hajj pilgrimage is associated with an increased occurrence of respiratory symptoms in most pilgrims; 8 of 10 pilgrims showed nasal or throat acquisition of respiratory pathogens. This acquisition may have resulted from human-to-human transmission through close contact within the group of French pilgrims because many of them were already infected with HRV or S. pneumoniae before departing from France. Alternatively, the French pilgrims may have acquired these respiratory pathogens from other pilgrims, given the extremely high crowding density to which persons from many parts of the world are exposed when performing Hajj rituals. Finally, contamination originating from an environmental source might have played a role.

(Continue . . . )

 

If all of this sounds vaguely familiar, you may recall the following Clinical Infectious Diseases study (also co-authored by Ziad Memish) - Unmasking Masks in Makkah: Preventing Influenza at Hajj – from 2012

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Each year more than 2 million people from all over the world attend the Hajj pilgrimage to Saudi Arabia. At least 60% of them develop respiratory symptoms there or during outward or homebound transit [1, 2] During recent interpandemic years, approximately 1 in 10 pilgrims with respiratory symptoms in Makkah have had influenza detected by polymerase chain reaction tests of respiratory samples [3, 4]. Pneumonia is the leading cause of hospitalization at Hajj, accounting for approximately 20% of diagnoses on admission [5].

 

All of this has the potential to help seed emerging strains of viral and bacterial diseases around the world, and while perhaps not nearly as dramatic as a pandemic outbreak, still carries with it considerable public health implications.

 

But this year – with fears that MERS might spread internationally  – public health officials must also be concerned with those 60%-80% of Hajjis who will return home this fall with respiratory symptoms.

 

We’ve discussed the The Limitations Of Airport Screening in the past, so in a different approach, the following sign appears in airports in the United Kingdom urging self-reporting of illness and travel history to one’s doctor. Similar signs have been erected at airports around the globe (see MERS Advisories Go Up In Some US Airports).

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While we don’t know if MERS will make a return during the Hajj, given the high incidence of respiratory illnesses reported in returning Hajjis, I expect that we’ll be hearing a lot about testing for suspected MERS-CoV this fall. 

 

Undoubtedly the vast majority of these travelers will have influenza, Rhinoviruses, RSV, HCoV E229, or simple bacterial pneumonia, but ruling out the MERS coronavirus is going to represent a major public health logistical challenge, even in places like the UK and the United States.

 

How well this can be accomplished in low-resource regions of the world, to where many of the pilgrims will be returning, remains to be seen. The hope is that the level of MERS cases will remain low in the Middle East during the time of the Hajj,  as it has for the past two years. 

 

Stay tuned.

Friday, June 06, 2014

The ECDC Risk Assessment On Brazil’s FIFA World Cup

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Cites Hosting FIFA Cup & July Temps – Credit ECDC

 

 

# 8713

Each year there are multiple mass gatherings which could conceivably facilitate disease transmission; including the Super bowl, Mardi Gras, Ramadan, and Carnival in Rio - and the biggest of them all – the Hajj.  Epidemiologists also watch Chunyun, or the Spring Festival Travel Season (of which Chinese New Years is a central part) with particular interest, as it is rightfully billed as the largest annual migration of humans on the planet.

 

Chunyun begins about 15 days before the Lunar New Year and runs for about 40 days total (see Health Vigilance For The Chinese New Years) and during which time more than  2 billion passenger journeys will be made (mostly via crowded rail and bus) across Asia.

 

While mass gatherings and holiday travel events like Chunyun certainly provide greater opportunities for disease outbreaks, history has shown that major epidemic outbreaks have been a rarity (for an exception, see The Impact Of Mass Gatherings & Travel On Flu Epidemics).

 

Still, public health authorities must anticipate and prepare for the worst (see How The ECDC Will Spend Your Summer Vacation).

 

While later in the year all eyes will be on the Hajj in Saudi Arabia, right now the more immediate concern is the FIFA World Cup which will be held in Brazil between June 12th and July 13th.  This event is held every four years, and will draw soccer fans from all over the world to the twelve host cities.

 

The CDC updated their travel notice earlier this week (Watch - Level 1, Practice Usual Precautions), with advice on vaccines, medicines to take, and even security and safety information while traveling.  

 

Today the ECDC has released a 16-page PDF risk assessment on the World Cup, which not only includes illnesses or infections that may be acquired while in Brazil, but also infections that may be imported into Brazil by international travelers.

 

In April of this year the American Society for Microbiology  published a press release warning that upcoming FIFA World Cup in Brazil, along with the presence of two very competent vectors (Aedes Aegypti & Aedes Albopictus mosquitoes) could help put the Chikungunya virus on a fast track to spreading across the Americas (see Study: Chikungunya’s Growing Threat To The Americas).

 

But local public health officials will be on the lookout for international travelers arriving carrying everything from cholera, to MERS, to measles.   Below you’ll find some excerpts from this document:

 

Conclusions


Over the last years, Brazil has managed to eliminate many infections like measles and rubella, which are still endemic in many other countries and could be imported to Brazil by international visitors [1].


In order to prevent the re-introduction of measles and rubella to Brazil, but also to protect visitors from diseases still endemic in Brazil, visitors to the World Cup should be vaccinated against several diseases as recommended by the Brazilian health authorities and WHO/PAHO (Pan American Health Organization) [2, 3]. Vaccination coverage should include:

  • all diseases included in the immunisation schedule of all EU Member States: poliomyelitis, diphtheria, tetanus, pertussis, measles, mumps and rubella;
  • all diseases included in the immunisation schedule of some EU Member States: tuberculosis, pneumococcal disease, meningococcal disease, human papilloma virus (HPV) and chickenpox;
  • diseases with an increased risk of acquisition for visitors to Brazil: hepatitis A, yellow fever, rabies, and typhoid fever; and
  • one disease which could be re-introduced to Brazil: cholera.

EU citizens visiting the 2014 World Cup in Brazil will be most at risk of gastrointestinal illness and vector-borne infections. Therefore, they should pay attention to standard hygienic measures to reduce the risk of gastrointestinal illness and protect themselves against mosquito and other insect bites using insect repellent and/or wearing long-sleeved shirts and trousers in regions where vector-borne diseases are endemic.


EU citizens visiting the 2014 World Cup in Brazil should seek pre-travel assessment and consider the following measures:

  • Malaria chemoprophylaxis if planning to travel to areas at risk for malaria transmission.
  • Vaccination for influenza (preferably with the 2014 southern hemisphere seasonal vaccine) because the event takes place at the peak of the influenza season in the southern and south-eastern regions of Brazil.
  • Vaccination for yellow fever if visiting areas where the vaccination is recommended [4];
  • All other vaccinations recommended by health authorities in Brazil, in particular hepatitis A and all vaccinations included in the immunisation schedule of EU Member States.


EU travellers to the Brazil 2014 World Cup tournament should avoid sexual risk behaviours to decrease the risk of sexually transmitted infections, blood-borne infections, and HIV. If healthcare is needed, travellers should contact Brazil's healthcare system (Sistema Único de Saúde – SUS) through local hospitals or use their private health insurance at any healthcare provider [5]. Travellers who require hospitalisation in the EU after having been hospitalised in Brazil should report their previous hospitalisation in order to accelerate the possible ascertainment of recent healthcare-associated infections.

EU travellers to Brazil, and particularly to the large metropolitan areas of Rio de Janeiro and Sao Paulo, should exercise caution, pay close attention to their personal security, and monitor the media for events that may affect their safety.


Surveillance for communicable diseases should be sensitive enough to detect threats at a stage when interventions are likely to prevent or reduce the impact of outbreaks. There is a possibility that returning travellers will export communicable diseases, for example vector-borne diseases such as dengue, and introduce them to their country of residence.


There are a number of diseases and infections that are highly unlikely to occur during the 2014 Brazil World Cup, but are still important to get monitored because of their severity and high case-fatality ratio. These include viral haemorrhagic fevers and diseases that could result from intentional release, such as anthrax, plague and smallpox. Outbreaks and spread of vaccine-preventable diseases are of particular concern during  mass gatherings but there are no indications that the risk is higher than usual.


Based on the epidemiological profile for infectious diseases for Brazil and the profile of the visiting populations, it is recommended that ECDC should conduct enhanced epidemic intelligence surveillance for communicable diseases from 5 June to 20 July 2014

(Continue . . . )

 

For more on mass gatherings and public health you may wish to revisit:

 

Lancet: Mass Gathering and Health

Tuesday, May 21, 2013

MERS, Mass Gatherings & Public Health

image

Credit Wikipedia

 

 

# 7302

 

In Saudi Arabia, religious tourism – most notably Umrah, which runs from December to the end of Ramadan (August 7th) - and the Hajj, which falls in mid October this year – are big business, accounting for roughly 3% of their Gross National Product.

 

According to a recent Arab News report, more than 7 million pilgrims visit Saudi Arabia each year, adding more than $16 billion dollars to the local economy.

 

Egypt, Turkey, Pakistan and Iran provide the most pilgrims, but devout Muslims come from nearly every nation on earth to take part in `lesser pilgrimages’, called (Umrah), and in the Hajj.

 

Yesterday we learned that a Tunisian tourist, recently returned from a trip to Qatar and Saudi Arabia, died from the novel coronavirus (and two of his relatives were infected) raising concerns that visitors to the Gulf States could spread the virus around the globe (see KUNA Report On Tunisian Coronavirus Case).

 

What little we do know about the progression of this disease suggests that it has a prolonged incubation period  - estimated at 10 days – giving travelers plenty of time to become infected, and travel home, before they become symptomatic.

 

The Hajj this October will likely see 4 million pilgrims over a relatively short time span, while between now and the end of Ramadan, a couple of million tourists are expected to visit Saudi Arabia.

 

All of which means that public health officials must decide upon, and implement, prudent measures to minimize the risk of spreading this virus further. 

 

 

This, as you might well guess, isn’t a new concern. And considerable thought has been devoted to it.  So a brief review of the topic of mass gatherings and public health:

 

Last fall, just before the Hajj of 2012 - and just weeks after we learned of the first novel coronavirus cases in Saudi Arabia – we saw the following report in the ECDC’s  journal Eurosurveillance

 

 

Eurosurveillance, Volume 17, Issue 41, 11 October 2012

Rapid communications

The Hajj: updated health hazards and current recommendations for 2012

J A Al-Tawfiq1, Z A Memish


This year the Hajj will take place during 24–29 October. Recent outbreaks of Ebola haemorrhagic fever in Uganda and the Democratic Republic of the Congo, cholera in Sierra Leone, and infections associated with a novel coronavirus in Saudi Arabia and Qatar required review of the health recommendations of the 2012 Hajj. Current guidelines foresee mandatory vaccination with quadrivalent meningococcal vaccine for all pilgrims, and yellow fever and poliomyelitis vaccine for pilgrims from high-risk countries. Influenza vaccine is strongly recommended.


The annual Hajj is one of the greatest assemblies of humankind on earth. Each year, three million Muslims attend the Hajj in Mecca, Saudi Arabia. Of these, 1.8 million non-Saudi Arabians usually come from overseas countries and 89% (1.6 millions) of them arrive by air [1]. Pilgrims come from more than 180 countries worldwide and about 45,000 pilgrims each year arrive to Saudi Arabia from the European Union [2].

<SNIP>

Pre- and post-Hajj travel advice

The Hajj is a unique event with possible impact on international public health. Healthcare practitioners around the world must be attentive to the potential risks of disease transmission during the Hajj. They must recommend appropriate strategies for the prevention and control of communicable diseases before, during and after the completion of the Hajj. The current international collaboration in planning vaccination campaigns, developing visa quotas, arranging rapid repatriation, and managing health hazards at the Hajj are crucial steps in this process. The Saudi Arabian Ministry of Health publishes the Hajj requirements for each Hajj season. This year’s Hajj recommendations have recently been published [3].

Recent outbreaks of Ebola haemorrhagic fever in Uganda and the Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC), cholera in Sierra Leone, and infections associated with a novel coronavirus in Saudi Arabia and Qatar required review of the health recommendations of the 2012 Hajj. We present here the changes and additions made in the recommendations for these diseases. For completeness, we also summarise the existing recommendations [3,4].

(Continue . . . )

 

Similarly, in January of last year, The Lancet ran a six-part series on mass gatherings and health issues, which becomes all the more relevant today.

 

Mass Gatherings Health

Published January 16, 2012

Executive summary

A six-part series describes the scope of the emerging specialty of mass-gatherings health. Mass gatherings are events such as religious occasions, music festivals, or sports events that attract enough people to exceed the capacity of routine health and public safety measures. Managing such events requires providing for all eventualities from infectious disease outbreaks to security against terrorist attacks. Thus mass gatherings health is a topic that goes beyond the scope of typical public health provision.

 

The first paper in the series describes the influence that the Hajj pilgrimage has had on the development of mass gatherings health. The second paper looks at the prevention of infectious diseases associated with mass gatherings. In the third paper, non-communicable disease risks associated with mass gatherings are reviewed. The fourth paper looks at crowd and environmental management during mass gatherings. Fifth is a review of infectious diseases surveillance and modelling. The final paper sets out a research agenda for the mass gatherings health specialty. This series is timely as London prepares to host the 2012 Olympic Games.

Series Comment
Mass gatherings health Series

John McConnell

Full Text | PDF

Series Papers
Emergence of medicine for mass gatherings: lessons from the Hajj

Ziad A Memish, Gwen M Stephens, Robert Stephen, Qanta A Ahmed

Summary | Full Text | PDF

Global perspectives for prevention of infectious diseases associated with mass gatherings

Ibrahim Abubakar, Philippe Gautret, Gary W Brunette, Lucille Blumberg, David Johnson, Gilles Poumerol, Ziad A Memish, Maurizio Barbeschi, Ali S Khan

Summary | Full Text | PDF

Non-communicable health risks during mass gatherings

Robert Steffen, Abderrezak Bouchama, Anders Johansson, Jiri Dvorak, Nicolas Isla, Catherine Smallwood, Ziad A Memish

Summary | Full Text | PDF

Crowd and environmental management during mass gatherings

Anders Johansson, Michael Batty, Konrad Hayashi, Osama Al Bar, David Marcozzi, Ziad A Memish

Summary | Full Text | PDF

Infectious disease surveillance and modelling across geographic frontiers and scientific specialties

Kamran Khan, Scott J N McNabb, Ziad A Memish, Rose Eckhardt, Wei Hu, David Kossowsky, Jennifer Sears, Julien Arino, Anders Johansson, Maurizio Barbeschi, Brian McCloskey, Bonnie Henry, Martin Cetron, John S Brownstein

Summary | Full Text | PDF

Research agenda for mass gatherings: a call to action

John S Tam, Maurizio Barbeschi, Natasha Shapovalova, Sylvie Briand, Ziad A Memish, Marie-Paule Kieny

Summary | Full Text | PDF

 

Each year there are multiple mass gatherings which could conceivably facilitate disease transmission; including the Super bowl, Mardi Gras, and Carnival in Rio, and the Hajj.

 

The good news is, that while mass gatherings may provide greater opportunities for disease outbreaks, history has shown that major epidemic outbreaks have been a rarity (for an exception, see The Impact Of Mass Gatherings & Travel On Flu Epidemics).

 

Still, public health authorities must anticipate and prepare for the worst.

 

Because the old saying is true, `When public health works, nothing happens’.

Friday, October 12, 2012

Eurosurveillance: Hajj Health Hazards & Recommendations

 

 image

Credit Wikipedia


# 6627

 

 

While no new cases of the novel coronavirus have been detected beyond the first two from Saudi Arabia & Qatar, Singapore had a brief scare yesterday when a woman - recently arrived from Kuwait - was hospitalized with a respiratory infection (see Woman tests negative for SARS-related bug).

 

This comes on the heels of a similar case last week in Hong Kong (also negative), and 5 people isolated in Denmark (again, negative) two weeks earlier.

 

Although there are no signs that this coronavirus is being spread from person-to-person, memories of the SARS epidemic of 2003 have prompted enhanced surveillance for anyone traveling from the Middle East showing respiratory symptoms. 

 

Out of an abundance of caution, these cases are quickly isolated and tested - even though health officials know most will turn out to have something far less exotic than this new coronavirus. 

 

With the Hajj only 10 days away - and influenza and other viruses in circulation – we shouldn’t be surprised to see this drill repeated around the world as pilgrims return home from Mecca at the end of the month.

 

Which brings us to this Rapid Communications from the ECDC journal Eurosurveillance, posted yesterday.  I’ve only included excerpts, follow the link to read it in its entirety.

 

 

ECDC logo

Eurosurveillance, Volume 17, Issue 41, 11 October 2012

Rapid communications

The Hajj: updated health hazards and current recommendations for 2012

J A Al-Tawfiq1, Z A Memish


This year the Hajj will take place during 24–29 October. Recent outbreaks of Ebola haemorrhagic fever in Uganda and the Democratic Republic of the Congo, cholera in Sierra Leone, and infections associated with a novel coronavirus in Saudi Arabia and Qatar required review of the health recommendations of the 2012 Hajj. Current guidelines foresee mandatory vaccination with quadrivalent meningococcal vaccine for all pilgrims, and yellow fever and poliomyelitis vaccine for pilgrims from high-risk countries. Influenza vaccine is strongly recommended.


The annual Hajj is one of the greatest assemblies of humankind on earth. Each year, three million Muslims attend the Hajj in Mecca, Saudi Arabia. Of these, 1.8 million non-Saudi Arabians usually come from overseas countries and 89% (1.6 millions) of them arrive by air [1]. Pilgrims come from more than 180 countries worldwide and about 45,000 pilgrims each year arrive to Saudi Arabia from the European Union [2].

<SNIP>

Pre- and post-Hajj travel advice

The Hajj is a unique event with possible impact on international public health. Healthcare practitioners around the world must be attentive to the potential risks of disease transmission during the Hajj. They must recommend appropriate strategies for the prevention and control of communicable diseases before, during and after the completion of the Hajj. The current international collaboration in planning vaccination campaigns, developing visa quotas, arranging rapid repatriation, and managing health hazards at the Hajj are crucial steps in this process. The Saudi Arabian Ministry of Health publishes the Hajj requirements for each Hajj season. This year’s Hajj recommendations have recently been published [3].

Recent outbreaks of Ebola haemorrhagic fever in Uganda and the Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC), cholera in Sierra Leone, and infections associated with a novel coronavirus in Saudi Arabia and Qatar required review of the health recommendations of the 2012 Hajj. We present here the changes and additions made in the recommendations for these diseases. For completeness, we also summarise the existing recommendations [3,4].

(Continue . . . )

 

 

Whenever there is a mass gathering (or migration) of people, public health officials must plan on how to deal with, and hopefully contain, any disease outbreaks.

 

Earlier this year the ECDC, along with local public health officials, geared up for three very high profile and well attended public events; The London Olympics and Para-Olympics Games, and the UEFA EURO 2012 football championship.

 

You can see their preparations in How The ECDC Will Spend Your Summer Vacation.

 

Similarly, as this report details, Saudi Arabia is taking serious steps to prevent disease outbreaks. 

 

Every year there are multiple mass gatherings which could conceivably facilitate disease transmission; including the Super bowl, Mardi Gras, and Carnival in Rio, and the Hajj.

And the granddaddy of all human migrations takes place every winter across Asia, with the celebration of the Lunar New Year. More than 2 billion passenger journeys – mostly by crowded train – are made in China alone over a six week period.

 

The good news is, that while mass gatherings and migrations provide greater opportunities for disease outbreaks, history has shown that serious outbreaks rarely occur.

 

Still, public health authorities must anticipate and prepare for the worst, even though it probably won’t happen. This is hardly wasted energy.

 

After all, we’ll never know the number of outbreaks that have been prevented by proactive measures over the years.

 

The old saying is true, `When public health works, nothing happens’.

 

For more on health planning for mass gatherings, you may wish to revisit:

 

Lancet: Mass Gatherings And Health
The Impact Of Mass Gatherings & Travel On Flu Epidemics
The Lunar New Year And Flu

Friday, June 08, 2012

How The ECDC Will Spend Your Summer Vacation

 

 

# 6374

 

This summer there will be three high profile, well-attended public events in Europe; The London Olympics and Para-Olympics Games, and the UEFA EURO 2012 football championship (which is being hosted by Poland and the Ukraine).

 

Hundreds of thousands of visitors will converge on multiple venues over the summer, coming from all parts of Europe and around the world.  And as with any large gathering of people, there are serious public health concerns.

 

Over the past few months we’ve seen some hyperbolic media stories suggesting that these games could help launch the next pandemic, but past experience with other big travel events, like the Hajj, the Carnival in rio, The World Cup,  or our own Super Bowl suggests that is unlikely.

 

It is true that some disease outbreaks have been exacerbated by the gathering of large crowds. 

 

This past year a number of people were exposed to measles at the Super Bowl in Indianapolis, leading to a limited outbreak of the disease (mostly among the unvaccinated).

 

Perhaps most famously, the city of Philadelphia went ahead with plans to hold a Liberty Loan parade in September of 1918, which was attended by 200,000 people.

 

Although the flu pandemic had already begun, the city fathers were apparently heartened by the low number of cases that had been reported in Philadelphia. Other cities, like St. Louis, banned public gatherings, closed movie theatres, and even limited church gatherings.

 

What happened next is best demonstrated by the following graph, which depicts an explosion of pandemic flu cases beginning just days after the parade.

The chart above, taken from the PNAS journal article entitled Public Health Interventions and Pandemic Intensity During the 1918 Influenza Pandemic , shows the excess mortality in two American cities.

 

The tall spike represents Philadelphia, while the lower curve represents St. Louis.

 

Over the next three weeks, at least 6,081 deaths from influenza and 2,651 deaths from pneumonia were registered in Pennsylvania, most occurring in Philadelphia (CDC source).

 

So the potential is there, assuming that a novel pathogen to which there is limited immunity is introduced to the crowds.

 

The good news is, that while mass gatherings provide greater opportunities for disease outbreaks, history has shown that serious outbreaks like that which followed the 1918 Philadelphia parade are a rarity.

 

Still, there is enough concern that a good deal of planning has gone into the surveillance and prevention of disease spread at these summer events. Earlier this year in Lancet: Mass Gatherings And Health, we looked at a 6-part series on public health measures during mass gathering events.

 

 

The ECDC has published a report today outlining some of the steps they are taking to try to prevent disease outbreaks during these mass gathering events.

 

Watching the summer games

08 Jun 2012

Two large mass gathering events involving millions of EU citizens and worldwide visitors are being hosted this summer in the EU: the UEFA EURO 2012 football championship and London 2012 Olympic and Paralympic Games.

 

ECDC is enhancing its surveillance activities this summer, watching for any infectious disease health events that could present a public health threat during these sport events. As of today, a summary of relevant health events will be included in the weekly Communicable Disease Threat Report (CDTR), published on this website.

 

ECDC is working with the hosting country competent bodies of Poland, the United Kingdom and the Ukraine to provide international surveillance activities in order to support their public health actions.

 

Global mass gathering events can present challenges for public health because of their scale and the possible additional demands made of the public health services. To tackle these challenges, surveillance systems can be enhanced to target specific diseases or syndromes and to support timely response actions to reduce their impact and risk of spread.

 

Based on its founding regulation, one of the core functions of ECDC is undertaking daily 24/7 epidemic intelligence. This term encompasses activities related to early identification of potential health threats, as well as their verification, assessment and investigation, in order to recommend adequate public health control measures. Epidemic intelligence sources of information vary from health data routinely collected through standardised surveillance systems to unstructured official and unofficial reports of any origin.

 

What will ECDC be doing during these mass gathering events?

During the months of June-September 2012, ECDC is undertaking enhanced event-based surveillance as part of its routine epidemic intelligence activities. It has adapted media screening tools and its procedures to assist detecting timely infectious disease threats which may be relevant for these events, and the hosting and participating countries. The use of social media and blog fora as a mechanism of timely identification of disease threats is being explored in this context.

 

ECDC is working very closely with the hosting countries and international partners such as the World Health Organisation, including having liaison officers to facilitate daily communication with ECDC. A daily bulletin containing information on events relevant from a public health perspective will be provided to public health authorities of Member States and the event-hosting countries.

 

A summary of relevant infectious disease threats will be included in the weekly CDTR published on this website.

 

What kind of infectious diseases is ECDC looking for?

Large gatherings of people may be subject to increased public health risks, including non-communicable diseases. Based on experience from previous such mass gatherings, it is unlikely that infectious diseases will be a major problem at these two events.

 

The greatest risk for visitors to these mass gatherings is likely to be related to food and waterborne diseases, such as food poisoning due to inappropriately handled food items or inadequate hand hygiene practices. At the same time, in the context of outbreaks of measles and other vaccine preventable diseases in Europe, unvaccinated and non-immune people may be at increased risk of infection.

 

In addition to food- and water-borne diseases and vaccine preventable diseases, ECDC will be monitoring for a wide range of infectious diseases and syndromes through available data sources and networks, as it does on a daily basis, in order to detect unusual events or outbreaks.

 

The organisers of these mass gatherings have published public messages about how to stay healthy in order to best enjoy these events. Preventative measures that people can take themselves and can contribute to keeping others healthy include things such as: washing hands regularly, ensure relevant vaccinations are up to date, practice safe sex, stay out of the sun, and stay at home if you feel unwell. For those seeking travel or health advice, specific information for EURO 2012 and London 2012 can be found below.

ECDC Rapid risk assessment on measles

WHO European Region on health planning for large events

 

 

Assuming that no large outbreaks of illness or disease occurs, it will be due primarily to the advance work done by local and regional public health officials in planning for these events.

 

The old saying is true, `When public health works, nothing happens’.

Tuesday, January 17, 2012

Lancet: Mass Gatherings And Health

 

 


# 6079

 

Whenever there is a mass gathering (or migration) of people, the thoughts of public health officials inevitably turn to the prospect of having to deal with, and hopefully contain, outbreaks of disease.

 

With the upcoming Summer Olympics in London this year, it is not surprising that the The Lancet has devoted considerable space to a six-part series covering many of the public health issues that come with managing mass gatherings.

 

Concerns go well beyond infectious diseases like measles, influenza, and norovirus, and also involve terrorist attacks, crushing injuries from unruly crowds, food borne illnesses, and sanitation.

 

These articles are (unfortunately) behind a pay wall, but summaries are available (free registration req.), as is a short audio presentation where John McConnell discusses the background to the series.

 

 

Mass Gatherings Health

Published January 16, 2012

Executive summary

A six-part series describes the scope of the emerging specialty of mass-gatherings health. Mass gatherings are events such as religious occasions, music festivals, or sports events that attract enough people to exceed the capacity of routine health and public safety measures. Managing such events requires providing for all eventualities from infectious disease outbreaks to security against terrorist attacks. Thus mass gatherings health is a topic that goes beyond the scope of typical public health provision.

(Continue . . .)

 

This issue pops up nearly every year, and with good reason. Epidemiologists remember well the lessons of 1918,  where it was demonstrated that influenza epidemics can surge in the wake of large gatherings.

 

During the fall wave of the Spanish Flu most cities instituted strict public health ordinances; they closed schools, movie houses, pool rooms, restaurants . . even churches.

 

Those cities that took these measures generally saw much lower levels of death and illness.

 

But Philadelphia went ahead with a massive Liberty Loan parade on September 28th of that year, apparently heartened by the low number of flu cases reported in Pennsylvania to that point.

 

Thousands gather in the streets of Philadelphia for the Liberty Loan Parade.

Days after Philadelphia’s Liberty Loan parade in September 1918, which was attended by 200,000 people, hundreds of cases of influenza were reported. [Credit: Naval Historical Center]

What happened next is best demonstrated by the following graph, which depicts an explosion of pandemic flu cases beginning just days after the parade.

 

The chart above, taken from the PNAS journal article entitled Public Health Interventions and Pandemic Intensity During the 1918 Influenza Pandemic , shows the excess mortality in two American cities.

 

The tall spike represents Philadelphia, while the lower curve represents St. Louis.

 

Over the next three weeks, at least 6,081 deaths from influenza and 2,651 deaths from pneumonia were registered in Pennsylvania, most occurring in Philadelphia (CDC source).

 

So it is little wonder that we saw some amount of angst during the lead up to the 2010 World Cup games over the concern that it might enhance the spread of the 2009 H1N1 pandemic virus (see Russia Urges Sports Fans Not To Travel To World Cup Game).

 

Each year there are multiple mass gatherings which could conceivably facilitate disease transmission; including the Super bowl, Mardi Gras, and Carnival in Rio, and the Hajj.

 

But the granddaddy of all human migrations takes place each winter across Asia, with the celebration of the Lunar New Year.  It is expected that more than 2 billion passenger journeys – mostly by crowded train –will be made in China alone over this six week period.

 

This year, the lunar New Year will fall on January 23rd, but the festivities span several weeks.

 

In many Asian cultures it is a long held tradition that people return home to attend a reunion dinner with their families on the eve of the lunar New Year. They stay a few days, then return to the cities from whence they came.

 

All of which provides opportunities pathogens to hitch rides to remote areas of the world where they may not have arrived yet, and for viruses to be carried from rural areas back to the cities.

 

Due to the potential for disease transmission (including mosquito borne illnesses, food poisoning, flu, etc.) during this very busy holiday period, the CDC posts some travel advice each year to those planning a trip to Asia.

 

Good Luck. Good Health. Good Cheer. Happy Lunar New Year!

Chinese dragon puppet

 

The good news is, that while mass gatherings provide greater opportunities for disease outbreaks, history has shown that serious outbreaks like that which followed the 1918 Philadelphia parade are a rarity.

 

Still, public health authorities must anticipate and prepare for the worst, even though it probably won’t occur. This is hardly wasted energy.

 

After all, we’ll never know the number of outbreaks that have been prevented by proactive measures over the years.

 

The old saying is true, `When public health works, nothing happens’.