Abstract

Crises due to armed conflict, forced displacement and natural disasters result in excess morbidity and mortality due to infectious diseases. Historically, acute respiratory infections (ARIs) have received relatively little attention in the humanitarian sector. We performed a systematic review to generate evidence on the burden of ARI in crises, and inform prioritisation of relief interventions. We identified 36 studies published since 1980 reporting data on the burden (incidence, prevalence, proportional morbidity or mortality, case-fatality, attributable mortality rate) of ARI, as defined by the International Classification of Diseases, version 10 and as diagnosed by a clinician, in populations who at the time of the study were affected by natural disasters, armed conflict, forced displacement, and nutritional emergencies. We described studies and stratified data by age group, but did not do pooled analyses due to heterogeneity in case definitions. The published evidence, mainly from refugee camps and surveillance or patient record review studies, suggests very high excess morbidity and mortality (20-35% proportional mortality) and case-fatality (up to 30-35%) due to ARI. However, ARI disease burden comparisons with non-crisis settings are difficult because of non-comparability of data. Better epidemiological studies with clearer case definitions are needed to provide the evidence base for priority setting and programme impact assessments. Humanitarian agencies should include ARI prevention and control among infants, children and adults as priority activities in crises. Improved data collection, case management and vaccine strategies will help to reduce disease burden.

Highlights

  • Infectious diseases in crisis-affected populations Health crises may be defined as the occurrence of morbidity and mortality in excess of secular trends, due to natural or man-made disasters [1]

  • The risk of infectious disease epidemics is usually considered to be low [69], but this may lead to neglect of common conditions such as acute respiratory infections (ARIs)

  • ARIs are less noticeable than epidemic-prone diseases in crises, and any abnormal increases are difficult to detect against a background of consultations for fever and rapidly evolving health facility utilisation rates

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Summary

Introduction

Infectious diseases in crisis-affected populations Health crises may be defined as the occurrence of morbidity and mortality in excess of secular trends, due to natural or man-made disasters [1]. With the exception of natural disasters and some recent wars (e.g. Iraq, Lebanon), the excess death toll in crises appears to be mainly “indirect”. Excess deaths are due to an increased risk of disease and case-fatality brought about by conditions such as displacement into overcrowded camps, food insecurity, and breakdown of public health services, rather than the direct effects of the crisis [1,2]. While most indirect excess mortality during crises is of infectious aetiology, data on the relative contribution of various infectious diseases are scarce.

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