No suspected polio case is too hard-to-reach for investigation and follow up in Ethiopia

A glimpse into the work of a WHO surveillance officer in Somali region

Abdisalan Muktar Ali is a World Health Organization (WHO) disease surveillance officer based in Dollo Zone in Ethiopia’s Somali Region. He is one of nine surveillance officers in the region supporting the regional health bureau in rumor investigation, active case search, and sample processing, validation and classification of suspected acute flaccid paralysis. 
In January 2022, he received a report of a case of acute flaccid paralysis (AFP) in a one-year-old boy from a low-income pastoralist family in Dollo Zone, Somali Region.  The little boy, Mohammed Abdulaziz Aden, developed sudden onset of weakness on his left arm and leg, which progressively worsened. When attempts to cure him with holy water didn’t produce results, Mohammed’s mother decided to bring him to a health facility and made the long 15 km trek to Qorof Kebele in Galadi Woreda (district) where she stayed at a relative’s house planning to go to the health centre the next day. Before she could go to the health centre, a health extension worker, Farhiya Ukash, heard about their situation and visited the family. Observing signs of acute flaccid paralysis (AFP), Farhiya immediately reported the case to Galadi Health Office. 

Initial investigation
Upon learning of the AFP case, WHO surveillance officer Abdisalan Muktar Ali promptly traveled to Galadi woreda to support verification, investigation and sample transportation for laboratory confirmation.  
Abdisalan went to Qorof Kebele in Galadi Woreda for investigation and verification of the suspected AFP case. Upon checking with the health extension worker that attended to the family, he was informed that the family had moved to an area about 90 km away from Qorof.  Undeterred by this development, Abdisalan sought the help of the kebele leader for the best way to reach the family. He was advised to talk to a group of pastoralists that come to the kebele every day at noon to sell milk. He quickly followed this lead, and eventually found someone that gave him a more specific description of the family’s current location together with an important lead – the nickname of the child’s grandfather.  He also learned that the family has moved to Jiracle Kebele in another district for pasture. 

Equipped with this information, he traveled to Jiracle Kebele the following day to look for the family. After asking around at the health post and among the communities, he was able to identify the grandmother, who confirmed that Mohammed was sick and accompanied Abdisalan to visit the family at their new settlement, 28 km away from Jiracle Kebele. They hitched a ride for the first 24 km and walked the remaining 4 km to reach the settlement.  

Upon investigation, Mohammed’s condition fully fulfilled the case definition of suspected AFP, so Abdisalan collected stool samples and dispatched them to the National Polio Laboratory at the Ethiopian Public Health Institute in Addis Ababa for confirmation.

During the visit to the family, Abdisalan counseled the mother to take her children to the nearest health post for routine immunization against vaccine-preventable diseases and encouraged her to be ready for the upcoming oral polio vaccination (nOPV) campaign planned for February 2022.
“Disease surveillance is not a responsibility to be taken lightly. As I do my job, it is with the full understanding that the wellbeing of my community rests squarely on my shoulders,” Abdisalan says. “I am aware that the alertness, accuracy and diligence with which I conduct disease surveillance can have an impact in the prevention and mitigation of a possible outbreak.”

Follow up visit

In early March 2022, Abdisalan returned to the family to follow up on the child’s condition and to inform them of the negative laboratory result. He was in good spirits as he trekked the long way to the family’s settlement because he knew he carried good news – little Mohammed was polio free! The only thing that remained was validation of his physical condition. Indeed, he found Mohammed playing and fully mobile, and following physical examination, validated that he had fully recovered. 
“Happy endings like this are the spices of our work, which often involves confirming the presence of disease in households and communities. I am happy to play this critical role in protecting my people from a potential disease outbreak like polio,” Abdisalan says, with a smile. 

WHO provides technical, logistical and financial support to Somali Region to accelerate the march towards a polio free world. The support ranges from establishing and implementing a sensitive disease surveillance to detect and notify cases to sample collection, transportation and testing at WHO accredited National Polio Laboratory in Addis Ababa for confirmation, as well as in the successful implementation of oral polio vaccination (OPV) campaigns. 
 

Note: This article have been indexed to our site. We do not claim legitimacy, ownership or copyright of any of the content above. To see the article at original source Click Here

Related Posts
Two Doctors Known for COVID Misinfo Now Reinstated on Twitter thumbnail

Two Doctors Known for COVID Misinfo Now Reinstated on Twitter

Special Reports > Exclusives — Malone and McCullough continue to make false claims about vaccine safety by Cheryl Clark, Contributing Writer, MedPage Today December 15, 2022 Two physicians accused of spreading COVID misinformation who were previously banned from Twitter are back on the platform. Robert W. Malone, MD, a self-described "skeptic of mRNA vaccines" who
Read More
CommonSpirit names Daniel Barchi as its new CIO thumbnail

CommonSpirit names Daniel Barchi as its new CIO

CommonSpirit Health announced this week that it has chosen Daniel Barchi to be its new chief information officer. WHY IT MATTERS Barchi, who starts on Nov. 7, has more than two decades of health information technology and digital transformation experience at large and complex healthcare systems. At CommonSpirit, his job will be to bring "vision
Read More
Outbreaks down but illnesses up for Europe in 2023 thumbnail

Outbreaks down but illnesses up for Europe in 2023

There was a decrease in foodborne outbreaks in 2023 in Europe but the number of people sick and hospitalized increased. Overall, 27 European Union member states and Northern Ireland reported 5,691 outbreaks, 52,127 cases, 2,894 hospitalizations and 65 deaths. There was one more death than in 2022, making it the highest total reported in the
Read More
Company suspended after refusal to allow inspectors on site thumbnail

Company suspended after refusal to allow inspectors on site

Operations at a company in Lithuania have been suspended after food agency inspectors were denied entry to the premises during an inspection. The State Food and Veterinary Service (VMVT) reported that in August, when inspectors went to fish producer Almantika UAB, company officials would not let inspectors access the site. Police officers were called by
Read More
Rona Glynn-McDonald thumbnail

Rona Glynn-McDonald

“While I had some success in philanthropy early on, I realised pretty quickly that that was because of the proximity I had to Melbourne, to privilege and to whiteness — these things that so many [other] First Nations people don’t have access to,” says Rona Glynn-McDonald, a Kaytetye woman and founding CEO of Common Ground
Read More
TikTok sensation Francis Bourgeois' real name revealed thumbnail

TikTok sensation Francis Bourgeois’ real name revealed

He's the name on everyone's lips right now, but did you know that Francis Bourgeois isn't the moniker the TikTok star was born with? The avid trainspotter, who has captivated the British public with his social media videos, can frequently be seen giving tours of his favourite trains and enthusiastically greeting passing railed vehicles. Since…
Read More
Index Of News