Spatio-temporal epidemiology of the cholera outbreak in Papua New Guinea, 2009-2011
- Authors: Horwood, Paul , Karl, Stephan , Mueller, Ivo , Jonduo, Marinjho , Pavlin, Boris , Dagina, Rosheila , Ropa, Berry , Bieb, Sibauk , Rosewell, Alexander , Umezaki, Masahiro , Siba, Peter , Greenhill, Andrew
- Date: 2014
- Type: Text , Journal article
- Relation: BMC Infectious Diseases Vol. 14, no. 1 (2014), p.
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- Description: Background: Cholera continues to be a devastating disease in many developing countries where inadequate safe water supply and poor sanitation facilitate spread. From July 2009 until late 2011 Papua New Guinea experienced the first outbreak of cholera recorded in the country, resulting in > 15,500 cases and > 500 deaths. Methods: Using the national cholera database, we analysed the spatio-temporal distribution and clustering of the Papua New Guinea cholera outbreak. The Kulldorff space-time permutation scan statistic, contained in the software package SatScan v9.2 was used to describe the first 8 weeks of the outbreak in Morobe Province before cholera cases spread throughout other regions of the country. Data were aggregated at the provincial level to describe the spread of the disease to other affected provinces. Results: Spatio-temporal and cluster analyses revealed that the outbreak was characterized by three distinct phases punctuated by explosive propagation of cases when the outbreak spread to a new region. The lack of road networks across most of Papua New Guinea is likely to have had a major influence on the slow spread of the disease during this outbreak. Conclusions: Identification of high risk areas and the likely mode of spread can guide government health authorities to formulate public health strategies to mitigate the spread of the disease through education campaigns, vaccination, increased surveillance in targeted areas and interventions to improve water, sanitation and hygiene.
Increasing chloramphenicol resistance in Streptococcus pneumoniae isolates from Papua New Guinean Children with acute bacterial meningitis
- Authors: Manning, Laurens , Laman, Moses , Greenhill, Andrew , Michael, Audrey , Siba, Peter , Mueller, Ivo , Davis, Timothy
- Date: 2011
- Type: Text , Journal article
- Relation: Antimicrobial Agents and Chemotherapy Vol. 55, no. 9 (2011), p. 4454-4456
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- Description: In Papua New Guinean (PNG) children with acute bacterial meningitis (ABM), all Haemophilus influenzae isolates were resistant to chloramphenicol. Although Streptococcus pneumoniae isolates had a median chloramphenicol MIC of 3 μg/ml, it was ≥4 μg/ml in 42.8%, and the likelihood of an area under the 24-hour concentration-time curve/MIC ratio of >100 h at a MIC of ≥4 μg/ml was approximately 50%. All isolates were ceftriaxone sensitive. These data support ceftriaxone rather than conventional chloramphenicol for all PNG children with suspected ABM.