Abstract

BackgroundFour wild polio-virus cases were reported in Borno State, Nigeria 2016, 1 year after Nigeria had been removed from the list of polio endemic countries by the World Health Organization. Resulting from Nigeria’s decade long conflict with Boko Haram, health officials had been unable to access as much as 60% of the settlements in Borno, hindering vaccination and surveillance efforts. This lack of accessibility made it difficult for the government to assess the current population distribution within Borno. This study aimed to use high resolution, visible band satellite imagery to assess the habitation of inaccessible villages in Borno State.MethodsUsing high resolution (31–50 cm) imagery from DigitalGlobe, analysts evaluated the habitation status of settlements in Borno State identified by Nigeria’s Vaccination Tracking System. The analysts looked at imagery of each settlement and, using vegetation (overgrowth vs. cleared) as a proxy for human habitation, classified settlements into three categories: inhabited, partially abandoned, and abandoned. Analysts also classified the intact percentage of each settlement starting at 0% (totally destroyed since last assessment) and increasing in 25% intervals through 100% (completely intact but not expanded) up to 200+% (more than doubled in size) by looking for destroyed buildings. These assessments were then used to adjust previously established population estimates for each settlement. These new population distributions were compared to vaccination efforts to determine the number of children under 5 unreached by vaccination teams.ResultsOf the 11,927 settlements assessed 3203 were assessed as abandoned (1892 of those completely destroyed), 662 as partially abandoned, and 8062 as fully inhabited as of December of 2017. Comparing the derived population estimates from the new assessments to previous assessment and the activities of vaccination teams shows that an estimated 180,155 of the 337,411 under five children who were unreached in 2016 were reached in 2017 (70.5% through vaccination efforts in previously inaccessible areas, 29.5% through displacement to accessible areas).ConclusionsThis study’s methodology provides important planning and situation awareness information to health workers in Borno, Nigeria, and may serve as a model for future data gathering efforts in inaccessible regions.

Highlights

  • The Global Polio Eradication Initiative (GPEI) was established in 1988 as a partnership of the World Health Organization (WHO), Rotary International, UNICEF, and the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, when the World Health Assembly resolved to eradicate polio by the year 2000; the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation joined the partnership more recently

  • In 2016, four wild poliovirus (WPV) cases were reported from Borno State in Nigeria [5], representing a major setback to GPEI

  • In 2014 and 2015, 50–60% of settlements in Borno State were inaccessible to the government of Nigeria and no polio eradication activities could be implemented in those areas

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Summary

Introduction

The Global Polio Eradication Initiative (GPEI) was established in 1988 as a partnership of the World Health Organization (WHO), Rotary International, UNICEF, and the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, when the World Health Assembly resolved to eradicate polio by the year 2000; the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation joined the partnership more recently. In 2015, Nigeria had not reported a WPV case for over 1 year and was removed from the WHO list of polio-endemic countries [4]. Four wild polio-virus cases were reported in Borno State, Nigeria 2016, 1 year after Nigeria had been removed from the list of polio endemic countries by the World Health Organization. Resulting from Nigeria’s decade long conflict with Boko Haram, health officials had been unable to access as much as 60% of the settlements in Borno, hindering vaccination and surveillance efforts. This lack of accessibility made it difficult for the government to assess the current population distribution within Borno. This study aimed to use high resolution, visible band satellite imagery to assess the habitation of inaccessible villages in Borno State

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