Showing posts with label Map. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Map. Show all posts

Wednesday, March 1, 2017

The Current Status of the 2016 – 2017 H7N9 Outbreak in China as of March 1, 2017 (Geographic Distribution)

March 01, 2017 0 Comments


As noted in the previous post, there have been at least 460 human cases of H7N9 reported in the current H7N9 outbreak between November 1, 2016 and February 27, 2017. Of great concern is a possibility that many of these cases are a result of human-to-human transmission. There is little publicly available information about the relationships, if any, among these hundreds of cases. To date, only four two-person clusters have been reported by the World Health Organization (WHO, January 17 and February 20) with family members comprising three of the clusters. For all four of these clusters, the WHO notes that human-to-human transmission cannot be ruled out.

One important clue to the nature of the outbreak is the geographic distribution of the reported cases. An indirect signal of human-to-human transmission can be multiple cases occurring in a localized geographic area within a short period of time. The recent WHO line listing of H7N9 cases from China (Influenza at the Human Animal Interface: Summary and Assessment, February 14, 2017), only provides the province or region for each of the reported cases. Line lists of cases provided by the Centre for Health Protection (CHP) Weekly Influenza Reportprovide additional geographic locational information to the prefecture level (administrative level 2) for individual cases. The Food and Agricultural Organization of the United Nations (FAO) line list of H7N9 cases occasionally provides the geographic locale of the county or administrative level 3 for some individual cases.

The most accurate locational information for individual cases is reported in local public health reports on Chinese websites. This information has been translated to English by members at FluTrackers. Sharon Sanders at FluTrackers has linked to these translated reports in the FluTrackers running list of H7N9 cases. Unfortunately, local publication of data of confirmed H7N9 cases in China are infrequent, so geographic details about individual cases beyond administrative level 2, the prefecture level, are limited to only a handful of the reported cases in this outbreak.

However, even with limited geo-locational information for individual H7N9 cases, the geographic distribution of cases can be plotted and is very informative. The map below provides a heat map of the distribution of cases in eastern China computed from the prefecture level data. Overlaid on this map are plotted locations of individual cases. The map shows the concentrations of cases in the 2016-2017 H7N9 outbreak in the provinces of Jiangsu, Zhejiang, Anhui, and Guangdong. In southern Jiangsu, hot spots include Suzhou, Wuxi, Taizhou, and Changzhou. In northern and eastern Zhejiang, the hot spots are Hangzhou, Ningbo, and Wenzhou. Hefei is the hot spot in central Anhui province and in central Guangdong, Guangzhou is the location with the most reported infections.

This map also shows that cases are widely scattered throughout many provinces during the current outbreak. The widely dispersed nature of these cases provides indirect support that human-to-human transmission is not occurring in these areas and the infections are resulting primarily from animal-to-human transmission. Even the increased number of cases in the hot spot locations does not mean that human-to-human transmission is occurring. The prefecture level cities mentioned above have very large populations most exceeding several million people. Were human-to-human transmission occurring in these areas we would expect many more reported cases.

Tuesday, October 7, 2014

Map: Countries with Confirmed Ebola Cases from the 2014 Outbreak

October 07, 2014 0 Comments


As of October 6, 2014, seven countries have reported cases of Ebola as noted below.  The Democratic Republic of Congo has reported at least 53 cases from a local Ebola outbreak (link)  not associated with the current outbreak that apparently originated in Guinea in December 2013 (link).  

Guinea (977 confirmed cases) link
Liberia (931 confirmed cases) link
Nigeria (19 confirmed cases) link
Senegal (1 imported infection) link
Sierra Leone (2179 confirmed cases) link
Spain (1 locally acquired infection) link
United State of America (1 imported infection) link


Friday, August 29, 2014

Current Geographic Distribution and Status of Ebola in African Countries, August 29, 2014

August 29, 2014 0 Comments

As of August 29, 2014, six countries from Africa are currently reporting confirmed Ebola cases. See map below.

Democratic Republic of the Congo
The DRC has reported a Zaire ebolaovirus outbreak in province unrelated outbreak in West Africa. Forty-two confirmed, probable, and suspected Ebola cases have been reported. link
Situation: currently under control

Guinea
According to the World Health Organization (WHO) on August 28, 2014, a minimum of 648 confirmed, probable, and suspected cases of Ebola have been reported from Guinea. link
Situation: is not under control

Liberia

According to WHO as of August 28, 2014, a minimum of 1378 confirmed, probable, and suspected cases of Ebola have been reported from Liberia. link
Situation: is not under control

Nigeria
According to WHO as of August 28, 2014, 17 confirmed, probable, and suspected cases of Ebola have been reported from Nigeria. All appear to have been linked to one imported case from Liberia. link
Situation: currently under control

Senegal

As of August 29, 2014 Senegal has confirmed one imported case of Ebola. link
Situation: currently under control   

Sierra Leone
According to WHO as of August 28, 2014, a minimum of 1026 confirmed, probable, and suspected cases of Ebola have been reported from Sierra Leone. link
Situation: is not under control

Map note: Each of the six countries has reported at least one confirmed case. Case counts depicted on the map include confirmed, probable, and suspected cases.


Monday, August 25, 2014

2014 Ebola Outbreak in the Democratic Republic of Congo (Map)

August 25, 2014 0 Comments

As of August 25, 2014, at least two cases of Ebola have been identified from Équateur Province in the Democratic Republic of Congo by the Ministry of Health from among 8 tested individuals. (link)

 According to the Minister of Health Felix Kabangue Numbi, the Ebola strains identified include Sudan ebolavirus (SUDV) and a Zaire ebolavirus (EBOV)/Sudan ebolavirus cross strain. According to Kabangue Numbi the Zaire and Sudan strains are very similar.

Although there is uncertainty over the strain or strains infecting individuals in this outbreak in the Democratic Republic of Congo, it does not appear to be the same strain that has recently infected more than 2500 people in Nigeria and Western Africa.

According to Kabangue Numbi, as many as 13 people have died from this Ebola outbreak in the Democratic Republic of Congo. The index case was apparently a pregnant woman who died on August 11. The husband of this woman has tested positive and a doctor, nurse, and hygienist who treat this pregnant woman as well as two additional health care workers have died. Other suspected cases in this outbreak include relatives or villagers who attended the woman’s funeral. (link)

Contact tracing has indicated that these cases have been reported from at least three villages, Djera, Lokolia, and Watsikengo, from the Boende territory or administrative zone which is part of the Tshuapa district or subregion of the Équateur Province. (see map below) Currently 11 contacts of these confirmed and suspected cases are in isolation.


Confounding the public health situation in the Boende territory is that up to 75 deaths have been recently reported from the region. According to the World Health Organization most of these individuals have died from “febrile gastroenteritis with haemorrhaging.” (see this FluTrackers thread) Whether any of these deaths beyond the 13 referenced by Kabangue Numbi are reclassified as Ebola deaths remains to be seen.

Wednesday, August 20, 2014

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