Abstract
BackgroundAs a consequence of war and the collapse of the health system in Yemen, which prevented many people from accessing health facilities to obtain primary health care, vaccination coverage was affected, leading to a deadly diphtheria epidemic at the end of 2017.ObjectiveThis study aimed to describe the epidemiology of diphtheria in Yemen and determine its incidence and case fatality rate.MethodsData were obtained from the diphtheria surveillance program 2017-2018, using case definitions of the World Health Organization. A probable case was defined as a case involving a person having laryngitis, pharyngitis, or tonsillitis and an adherent membrane of the tonsils, pharynx, and/or nose. A confirmed case was defined as a probable case that was laboratory confirmed or linked epidemiologically to a laboratory-confirmed case. Data from the Central Statistical Organization was used to calculate the incidence per 100,000 population. A P value <.05 was considered significant.ResultsA total of 2243 cases were reported during the period between July 2017 and August 2018. About 49% (1090/2243, 48.6%) of the cases were males. About 44% (978/2243, 43.6%) of the cases involved children aged 5 to 15 years. Respiratory tract infection was the predominant symptom (2044/2243, 91.1%), followed by pseudomembrane (1822/2243, 81.2%). Based on the vaccination status, the percentages of partially vaccinated, vaccinated, unvaccinated, and unknown status patients were 6.6% (148/2243), 30.8% (690/2243), 48.6% (10902243), and 14.0% (315/2243), respectively. The overall incidence of diphtheria was 8 per 100,000 population. The highest incidence was among the age group <15 years (11 per 100,000 population), and the lowest incidence was among the age group ≥15 years (5 per 100,000 population). The overall case fatality rate among all age groups was 5%, and it was higher (10%) in the age group <5 years. Five governorates that were difficult to access (Raymah, Abyan, Sa'ada, Lahj, and Al Jawf) had a very high case fatality rate (22%).ConclusionsDiphtheria affected a large number of people in Yemen in 2017-2018. The majority of patients were partially or not vaccinated. Children aged ≤15 years were more affected, with higher fatality among children aged <5 years. Five governorates that were difficult to access had a case fatality rate twice that of the World Health Organization estimate (5%-10%). To control the diphtheria epidemic in Yemen, it is recommended to increase routine vaccination coverage and booster immunizations, increase public health awareness toward diphtheria, and strengthen the surveillance system for early detection and immediate response.
Highlights
Diphtheria affected a large number of people in Yemen in 2017-2018
Diphtheria is an acute bacterial disease caused by Corynebacterium diphtheria and presents most commonly as a membranous pharyngitis
This study aimed to describe the epidemiology of diphtheria and determine its incidence and case fatality rate (CFR)
Summary
Diphtheria is an acute bacterial disease caused by Corynebacterium diphtheria and presents most commonly as a membranous pharyngitis. Diphtheria was one of the most common causes of morbidity and mortality among children in the prevaccine era. The mortality rate associated with diphtheria was as high as 50% but dropped to about 15% after widespread use of diphtheria antitoxin treatment [2]. Throughout history, diphtheria has remained one of the most frightening infectious diseases globally, causing overwhelming epidemics with high case fatality rates and mainly affecting children. Individuals, children, who are not vaccinated or are partially vaccinated are at risk of diphtheria. As a consequence of war and the collapse of the health system in Yemen, which prevented many people from accessing health facilities to obtain primary health care, vaccination coverage was affected, leading to a deadly diphtheria epidemic at the end of 2017
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