Food

Epidemics That Weren’t: How Countries Shut Down Recent Outbreaks

When Ebola swept through the eastern Democratic Republic of Congo in 2018, it was a struggle to track cases. Dr. Billy Yumaine, a public health official, recalls steady flows of people moving back and forth across the border with Uganda while others hid sick family members in their homes because they feared the authorities. It took at least a week to get test results, and health officials had difficulty isolating sick people while they waited.

It took two years for the country to bring that outbreak under control, and more than 2,300 people died.

A similar disaster threatened the D.R.C. last September. Members of a family in North Kivu Province fell ill with fevers, vomiting and diarrhea, one after the other. Then their neighbors became sick, too.

But that set off a series of steps that the D.R.C. put in place after the 2018 outbreak. The patients were tested, the cases were quickly confirmed as a new outbreak of Ebola and, right away, health workers traced 50 contacts of the families.

Then they fanned out to test possible patients at health centers and screened people at the busy border posts, stopping anyone with symptoms of the hemorrhagic fever. Local labs that had been set up in the wake of the previous outbreak tested more than 1,800 blood samples.

It made a difference: This time, Ebola claimed just 11 lives.

“Those people died, but we kept it to 11 deaths, where in the past we lost thousands,” Dr. Yumaine said.

You probably didn’t hear that story. You probably didn’t hear about the outbreak of deadly Nipah virus that a doctor and her colleagues stopped in southern India last year, either. Or the rabies outbreak that threatened to race through nomadic Masai communities in Tanzania. Quick-thinking public health officials brought it in check after a handful of children died.

Officials in Kerala, India, inspected a well to catch bats, which carry the deadly nipah virus, in 2018.Credit…Agence France-Presse — Getty Images

Over the past couple of years, the headlines and the social feeds have been dominated by outbreaks around the world. There was Covid, of course, but also mpox (formerly known as monkeypox), cholera and resurgent polio and measles. But a dozen more outbreaks flickered, threatened — and then were snuffed out. While it may not feel that way, we have learned a thing or two about how to do this, and, sometimes, we get it right.

A report by the global health strategy organization Resolve to Save Lives documented six disasters that weren’t. All emerged in developing countries, including those that, like the D.R.C.., have some of the most fragile health systems on earth.

More on India

  • Urdu Poetry Festival: More than 300,000 people came to celebrate Urdu poetry during a three-day festival in New Delhi. It was testament to the peculiar reality of the language in India.
  • Tourism in Kashmir: Visitors are flocking back to the region. Тhat is proof, India says, that its imposition of control worked. But people who live there say fear and uncertainty persist.
  • A Deadly Bridge Collapse: After 134 people were killed when a pedestrian bridge collapsed in Gujarat, the country is asking why its infrastructure has failed so calamitously once again.
  • Coal Baron or Climate Warrior?: The business decisions of Gautam Adani, Asia’s richest man, could go a long way in determining whether India helps the world avert a climate catastrophe.

While cutting-edge vaccine technology and genomic sequencing have received lots of attention in the Covid years, the interventions that helped prevent these six pandemics were steadfastly unglamorous: building the trust of communities in the local health system. Training local staff in how to report a suspected problem effectively. Making sure funds are available to dispense swiftly, to deploy contact tracers or vaccinate a village against rabies. Increasing lab capacity in areas far from the main urban centers. Priming everyone to move fast at the first sign of potential calamity.

“Outbreaks don’t occur because of a single failure, they occur because of a series of failures,” said Dr. Tom Frieden, the chief executive of Resolve and a former director of the United States Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. “And the epidemics that don’t happen don’t happen because there are a series of barriers that will prevent them from happening. .”

Dr. Yumaine told me that a key step that made a difference in shutting down Congo’s Ebola outbreak in 2021 was having local health officials in each community trained in the response. The Kivu region has lived through decades of armed conflict and insecurity, and its population faces a near-constant threat of displacement. In previous public health emergencies, when people were told they would have to isolate because of Ebola exposure, they feared it was a trick to move them off their land.

“In the past, it was always people from Kinshasa who were coming with these messages,” he said, referring to the country’s capital. But this time, the instructions about lockdowns and isolation came from trusted sources, so people were more willing to listen and be tested.

Ebola prevention signage at a local health center in Madudu, Uganda, in October. Credit…Luke Dray/Getty Images

“We could give local control to local people because they were trained,” he said.

Because labs had been set up in the region, people with suspected Ebola could be tested in a day — two, at most — instead of waiting a week or more for samples to be sent more than 1,600 miles to Kinshasa.

In the State of Kerala in southern India, Dr. Chandni Sajeevan, the head of emergency medicine at Kozhikode Government Medical College hospital, led the response to an outbreak of Nipah, a virus carried by fruit bats, in 2018. Seventeen of the 18 people infected died, including a young trainee nurse who cared for the first victims.

“It was something very frightening,” Dr. Chandni said. The hospital staff got a crash course in intensive infection control, dressing up in the “moon suits” that seemed so foreign in the pre-Covid era. Nurses were distraught over the loss of their colleague.

Three years later, in 2021, Dr. Chandni and her team were relieved when the bat breeding season passed with no infections. And then, in May, deep into India’s terrible Covid wave, a 12-year-old boy with a high fever was brought to a clinic by his parents. That clinic was full, so he was sent to the next, and then to a third, where he tested negative for Covid.

But an alert clinician noticed that the child had developed encephalitis. He sent a sample to the national virology lab. It swiftly confirmed that this was a new case of Nipah virus. By then, the child could have exposed several hundred people, including dozens of health workers.

The system Dr. Chandni and her colleagues had put in place after the 2018 outbreak kicked into gear: isolation centers, moon suits, testing anyone with a fever for Nipah as well as Covid. She held daily news briefings to quell rumors and keep the public on the lookout for people who might be ill — and away from bats and their droppings, which litter coconut groves where children play. Teams were sent out to catch bats for surveillance. Everyone who had been exposed to the sick boy was put into 21 days of quarantine.

“Everyone, ambulance drivers, elevator operators, security guards — this time, they knew about Nipah and how to behave not to spread it,” she said.

Health workers in Kerala collected blood samples from a goat to test for Nipah virus after a 12-year-old boy died in September 2021.Credit…Shijith. K/Associated Press

Dr. Amanda McLelland, who leads epidemic prevention at Resolve,

told me that when she heard of new Ebola cases in Guinea in West Africa in 2021, she feared disaster. An outbreak that began in Guinea in 2014 had spread to two neighboring countries, and by the time it was declared over two years later, nearly 30,000 people had been infected and 11,325 had died.

But this time, although Guinea was already struggling to respond to Covid, it managed to bring the Ebola outbreak in check in six months, with just 11 deaths.

“That was a fantastic example of learning those lessons and investing and building sustainably in the capacity,” Dr. McLelland said.

It should be celebrated, she added. While public health failures, such as those in the face of Covid, receive plenty of attention, she said, “our success is invisible.”

Nevertheless, progress can be fitful: A new Ebola outbreak is slowly being brought under control in Uganda, and neighboring nations have watched it with concern. Dr. Frieden said he was discouraged to see this, because Uganda has a strong public health system with a track record of detecting and responding to outbreaks quickly.

“I think what we’re seeing there is the unfortunate harvest of Covid. Covid broke a lot of things,” he said. “It broke health care worker resilience, it broke the willingness of many people to follow public health advice, it broke trust in the health care system and communities that was there before. Progress is possible, but it’s also fragile.”

But Dr. Yumaine said he had growing confidence that even if Ebola were to spill back across the border from Uganda, the D.R.C. could respond swiftly, with surveillance systems that grow better all the time.

“We’re encouraged by our improvements,” he said. “But we’re not stopping there.”

Back to top button