Notional Spread of Cholera in Haiti Following a Natural Disaster: Considerations for Military and Disaster Relief Personnel

Author:

Hadeed Steven J1ORCID,Broadway Katherine M2,Schwartz-Watjen Kierstyn T3,Tigabu Bersabeh4,Woodards Ashley J1,Swiatecka Anna L5,Owens Akeisha N6,Wu Aiguo6ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Battelle Memorial Institute, Support to DTRA Technical Reachback , Columbus, OH 43201, USA

2. Defense Sciences, Inc. (DSI), Support to DTRA Technical Reachback , San Antonio, TX 78230, USA

3. Applied Research Associates (ARA), Support to DTRA Technical Reachback , Albuquerque, NM 87110, USA

4. Global Systems Engineering (GSE), Support to DTRA Technical Reachback , Alexandria, VA 22312, USA

5. Noblis, Inc., Support to DTRA Technical Reachback , Reston, VA 20191, USA

6. Defense Threat Reduction Agency (DTRA) , Fort Belvoir, VA 22060, USA

Abstract

ABSTRACT Introduction Cholera remains a significant public health threat for many countries, and the severity largely varies by the population and local conditions that drive disease spread, especially in endemic areas prone to natural disasters and flooding. Epidemiological models can provide useful information to military planners for understanding disease spread within populations and the effectiveness of response options for preventing the transmission among deployed and stationed personnel. This study demonstrates the use of epidemiological modeling to understand the dynamics of cholera transmission to inform emergency planning and military preparedness in areas with highly communicable diseases. Materials and Methods Areas with higher probability for a potential cholera outbreak in Haiti followed by a natural disaster were identified. The hotspots were then used to seed an extended compartmental model, EpiGrid, to simulate notional spread scenarios of cholera originating in three distinct areas in Haiti. Disease parameters were derived from the 2010 cholera outbreak in Haiti, and disease spread was simulated over a 12-week period under uncontrolled and controlled spread. Results For each model location, scenarios of mitigated (intervention with 30% transmission reduction via international aid) and unmitigated (without intervention) are simulated. The results depict the geographical spread and estimate the cumulative cholera infection for each notional scenario over the course of 3 months. Disease transmission differs considerably across origin site with an outbreak originating in the department of Nippes spanning the largest geographic area and resulting in the largest number of cumulative cases after 12 weeks under unmitigated (79,518 cases) and mitigated (35,667 cases) spread scenarios. Conclusions We modeled the notional re-emergence and spread of cholera following the August 2021 earthquake in Haiti while in the midst of the global COVID-19 pandemic. This information can help guide military and emergency response decision-making during an infectious disease outbreak and considerations for protecting military personnel in the midst of a humanitarian response. Military planners should consider the use of epidemiological models to assess the health risk posed to deployed and stationed personnel in high-risk areas.

Funder

Defense Threat Reduction Agency

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health,General Medicine

Reference38 articles.

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2. Updated global burden of cholera in endemic countries;Ali;PLoS Negl Trop Dis,2015

3. Cholera fact sheet;World Health Organization (WHO),2022

4. Ending cholera—a global roadmap to 2030;World Health Organization,2017

5. Cholera in Africa;Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC),2020

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