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PUBLIC HEALTH EMERGENCY OF 
INTERNATIONAL CONCERN (PHEIC) 
EBOLA (EVD) 
-Dr.R.PARTHASARATHI,M.D 
Dept of Community Medicine
PHEIC 
Defined in IHR 2005 as 
‘an extraordinary public health event which 
constitutes a public health risk to other States 
through the international spread of disease and 
may require a coordinated international response’. 
 Such events are required to be assessed for notification to 
WHO using a decision instrument
PHEIC 
4 decision criteria used in assessment of a public health event 
are : 
(a) The seriousness of the event’s public health impact. 
(b) The unusual or unexpected nature of the event. 
(c) The risk of international spread. 
(d) The risk that travel or trade restrictions will be imposed by 
other countries. 
Any 2 criteria Notify WHO 
 A single case of smallpox, poliomyelitis (WPV), human 
influenza caused by a new subtype and SARS must be 
immediately notified to WHO, irrespective of the context in which it 
occurs.
PHEIC
EBOLA VIRUS DISEASE (EVD) 
 It is one of the world’s most virulent diseases. 
 Formerly known as Ebola haemorrhagic fever. 
 Severe, often fatal illness, with a case fatality rate of up to 
90%. 
 EVD outbreaks occur primarily in remote villages in 
Central and West Africa, near tropical rainforests. 
 All agents that cause viral hemorrhagic fever syndrome are 
RNA viruses with a lipid envelope, all are considered 
zoonoses, all damage the microvasculature, resulting in 
increased vascular permeability, and all are members of 
one of four families: Arenaviridae, Bunyaviridae, 
Flaviviridae, and Filoviridae.
EBOLA VIRUS 
 Ebola first appeared in 1976 in 2 simultaneous outbreaks in 
Nzara, Sudan, and in Yambuku, Congo. 
 Yambuku village near the Ebola River 
 Family:Filoviridae 
 Genus: Ebolavirus (3 members Marburgvirus, Cuevavirus) 
 Species:5 types 
1. Bundibugyo ebolavirus (BDBV) 
2. Zaire ebolavirus (EBOV) 
3. Sudan ebolavirus (SUDV) 
4. Reston ebolavirus (RESTV) 
5. Taï Forest ebolavirus (TAFV).
EBOLA SPECIES 
 BDBV, EBOV, and SUDV have been associated with large 
EVD outbreaks in Africa. 
 The RESTV species, found in Philippines and the People’s 
Republic of China, can infect humans, but no illness or 
death in humans from this species has been reported to 
date.
ENVIRONMENTAL PERSISTANCE 
 Under ideal conditions, Ebola virus could remain active for 
up to 6 days. 
 Persistence of Ebola virus in the patient care environment is 
short – within 24 hours 
 Ebola virus was found, relative to other enveloped viruses, to 
be quite sensitive to inactivation by ultraviolet light and 
drying; yet sub-populations did persist in organic debris.
2014 OUTBREAK 
 On 8 August 2014, WHO declared the Ebola virus 
disease outbreak in West Africa a Public Health 
Emergency of International Concern (PHEIC) in 
accordance with the IHR 2005. 
 The current EVD outbreak is believed to have begun in 
Guinea in December 2013. 
 Viral sequencing shows strong homology (98%) with 
Zaïre Ebolavirus (EBOV) 
 As of August 16, 2014, 
2,240 suspected or confirmed cases, including 
1383 laboratory-confirmed cases and 
1,229 deaths
2014 OUTBREAK
TRANSMISSION 
 Natural Host: Fruit bats of the Pteropodidae family 
(Hypsignathus monstrosus, Epomops franqueti, and 
Myonycteris torquata) 
 Source of human infection: Blood, secretions, organs, or 
other bodily fluids of infected animals, Bushmeat 
(handling of infected chimpanzees, gorillas, fruit bats, 
monkeys, forest antelope, and porcupines found ill or 
dead or in the rainforest)
ENZOOTIC EPIZOOTIC EPIDEMIC
HUMAN-TO-HUMAN TRANSMISSION 
 Direct contact (through broken skin or mucous membranes) with 
the blood, secretions, organs or other bodily fluids of infected 
people 
 Indirect contact with environments contaminated with fluids. 
 Burial ceremonies (mourners direct contact with corpse) 
 The patients become contagious once symptoms begin. They 
are not contagious during incubation period. 
 Virus transmitted through the semen for up to 7 weeks after 
recovery from illness. 
 Health-care workers have frequently been infected 
INCUBATION PERIOD: 2 to 21 days 
CASE FATALITY RATE: 53% 
 All cases in the current outbreak- H2H
SIGNS AND SYMPTOMS 
 PRODROME: 
sudden onset of fever, intense weakness, muscle pain, 
headache and sore throat. 
 VIRAEMIA: 
vomiting, diarrhoea, rash, impaired kidney and liver 
function, and in some cases, both internal and external 
bleeding (DIC) 
Patients are infectious as long as their blood and secretions 
contain the virus.
PERSON UNDER INVESTIGATION (PUI) 
A person who has both consistent symptoms & risk factors: 
 1) Clinical criteria, which includes fever of greater than 38.6 
degrees Celsius or 101.5 degrees Fahrenheit, and additional 
symptoms such as severe headache, muscle pain, vomiting, 
diarrhoea, abdominal pain, or unexplained haemorrhage; 
AND 
 2) Epidemiologic risk factors within the past 21 days before the 
onset of symptoms, such as contact with blood or other body 
fluids or human remains of a patient known to have or suspected 
to have EVD; residence in—or travel to—an area where EVD 
transmission is active; or direct handling of bats, rodents, or 
primates from disease-endemic areas.
CASE DEFINITION FOR EVD 
Probable Case 
 A PUI who is a contact of an EVD case with either a 
high or low risk exposure. 
Confirmed Case 
 A case with laboratory confirmed diagnostic 
evidence of Ebola virus infection.
CONTACTS OF AN EVD CASE 
Contacts have different levels of exposure risk, as follows: 
High risk exposures 
A high risk exposure includes any of the following: 
 Percutaneous, e.g. the needle stick, or mucous membrane 
exposure to body fluids of EVD patient 
 Direct care or exposure to body fluids of an EVD patient 
without appropriate PPE 
 Laboratory worker processing body fluids of confirmed 
EVD patients without appropriate PPE or standard 
biosafety precautions 
 Participation in funeral rites which include direct exposure 
to human remains in the geographic area where outbreak 
is occurring without appropriate PPE
CONTACTS OF AN EVD CASE 
Low risk exposures 
A Low risk exposure includes any of the following: 
 Household member or other casual contact* with an EVD 
patient 
 Providing patient care or casual contact* without high-risk 
exposure with EVD patients in health care facilities in EVD 
outbreak affected countries 
No known exposure 
 Persons with no known exposure were present in an EVD 
outbreak affected country in the past 21 days with no low 
risk or high risk exposures.
Defined as 
*CASUAL CONTACT 
 being within approximately 3 feet (1 meter) or within the 
room or care area for a prolonged period of time (e.g., 
healthcare personnel, household members) while not 
wearing PPE 
OR 
 having direct brief contact (e.g., shaking hands) with an 
EVD case while not wearing PPE 
 Brief interactions, such as walking by a person or 
moving through a hospital, do not constitute casual 
contact.
DIFFERENTIAL DIAGNOSIS 
Always rule out 
 Other Viral Haemorrhagic Fevers. 
 Malaria 
 Yellow fever 
 Dengue 
 Leptospirosis 
 Typhoid Fever 
 Shigellosis 
 Rickettsiosis 
 Relapsing Fever 
 Cholera 
 Plague 
 Hepatitis
LABORATORY FINDINGS 
 Thrombocytopenia, leukopenia with a pronounced 
lymphopenia. 
 Neutrophilia develops after several days 
 Elevations in aspartate aminotransferase and alanine 
aminotransferase. 
 Bilirubin may be normal or slightly elevated. 
 With onset of anuria, BUN and serum creatinine rise. 
 Terminally ill patients : Tachypnea, metabolic acidosis 
 Definitive diagnosis : Isolation of the virus in tissue culture or 
PCR.
LABORATORY DIAGNOSIS 
Definitive diagnosis by 
 Antibody-capture ELISA 
 Antigen detection tests 
 Serum neutralization test- serological surveys 
 RT-PCR assay 
 Virus isolation by cell culture. 
Highly sensitive and 
confirmatory tests 
 Skin biopsies in postmortem diagnosis of infection with Ebola 
virus 
 Blood samples collection and transport according to 
guidelines and to WHO accredited labs only 
 NCDC, New Delhi and NIV,Pune in our country
MANAGEMENT 
 Isolate the patient 
• Triage rapidly to a separate room /holding area 
• The holding area should be: 
- Distant from other crowded areas 
- Well ventilated 
- Have adequate sunlight 
Notify the State and National Authority 
 Clinical management: predominantly Supportive and focus 
on early recognition of complications with appropriate 
symptom management. 
 Antipyretics, Anti-emetics, Rehydration therapy, Blood 
transfusion, Oxygen , Respiratory support and Anti-convulsants 
as needed 
 No specific drug treatment
Experimental treatment 
Zmapp 
 Combination of monoclonal antibodies which binds with outer 
glycoprotein of the virus and prevents its entry to the host 
cells 
 Efficacy yet to be proven, no clinical trials done till date. 
 In early trials- all Rhesus monkeys infected with virus 
survived when administered 1 hour after infection. 
 Produced using specific tobacco plants. 
 WHO authorised this treatment for a small group on 11th 
August,2014. 
 Even if successful, stocks will not be available till 2015 
Tekmira, a Canadian biotech company, has begun early 
human trials of a new drug
 NOT YET 
Vaccine 
 An adenovirus-vectored Ebola glycoprotein gene has proved 
protective in nonhuman primates and is undergoing phase 1 
trials in humans. 
 An experimental vesicular stomatitis virus–based vaccine has 
protected macaques when given both before and after 
infection with the Zaire Ebola virus.
PREVENTION 
 Isolation and Quarantine, Notification 
 Contact Tracing 
 Standard Precautions–At All Times, For All Patients 
 Barrier nursing 
 Hand washing 
 Personal Protective Equipment (PPE) 
 Injection safety, Safe sex practices 
 Concomitant & Terminal Disinfection, Sterilisation 
 Following SOP for Blood sample collection and Transport 
 Appropriate Hospital Waste management 
 Enhanced Surveillance 
 Health Education: Myths
P 
U 
T 
T 
I 
N 
G 
O 
N 
PPE
R 
E 
M 
O 
V 
E 
PPE
STRATEGY FOR PREVENTION AND CONTROL
AIR TRAVELLERS 
 Exit screening and communication efforts on the ground in 
West Africa to prevent sick travellers from getting on 
planes. 
 Airports in Guinea, Liberia, and Sierra Leone are screening 
outbound travellers for Ebola symptoms, including fever, 
and passengers are required to respond to a health 
questionnaire. 
 Avoid non-essential travel- WHO 
 Some countries have banned flights and entry to people 
from the affected regions.
INDIA 
 No confirmed case of Ebola till date. 
 The World Health Organisation (WHO) had informed that 
one Indian passenger had travelled on the same flight in 
which an Ebola virus patient (a foreign national) was 
travelling from Monrovia to Lagos. He was tracked and 
found healthy. 
 24-hour 'Emergency Operation Centre‘: 
011-23061469, 3205 and 1302 
 TN Helpline- 104 
 Rumours from Karnataka-WhatsApp message that student 
from the National Institute of Technology Karnataka (NITK) 
in Dakshina Kannada districthad ebola and succumbed to it
For further details and to download 
this ppt visit: 
doctorindia.wordpress.com

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Ebola ppt

  • 1. PUBLIC HEALTH EMERGENCY OF INTERNATIONAL CONCERN (PHEIC) EBOLA (EVD) -Dr.R.PARTHASARATHI,M.D Dept of Community Medicine
  • 2. PHEIC Defined in IHR 2005 as ‘an extraordinary public health event which constitutes a public health risk to other States through the international spread of disease and may require a coordinated international response’.  Such events are required to be assessed for notification to WHO using a decision instrument
  • 3. PHEIC 4 decision criteria used in assessment of a public health event are : (a) The seriousness of the event’s public health impact. (b) The unusual or unexpected nature of the event. (c) The risk of international spread. (d) The risk that travel or trade restrictions will be imposed by other countries. Any 2 criteria Notify WHO  A single case of smallpox, poliomyelitis (WPV), human influenza caused by a new subtype and SARS must be immediately notified to WHO, irrespective of the context in which it occurs.
  • 5. EBOLA VIRUS DISEASE (EVD)  It is one of the world’s most virulent diseases.  Formerly known as Ebola haemorrhagic fever.  Severe, often fatal illness, with a case fatality rate of up to 90%.  EVD outbreaks occur primarily in remote villages in Central and West Africa, near tropical rainforests.  All agents that cause viral hemorrhagic fever syndrome are RNA viruses with a lipid envelope, all are considered zoonoses, all damage the microvasculature, resulting in increased vascular permeability, and all are members of one of four families: Arenaviridae, Bunyaviridae, Flaviviridae, and Filoviridae.
  • 6. EBOLA VIRUS  Ebola first appeared in 1976 in 2 simultaneous outbreaks in Nzara, Sudan, and in Yambuku, Congo.  Yambuku village near the Ebola River  Family:Filoviridae  Genus: Ebolavirus (3 members Marburgvirus, Cuevavirus)  Species:5 types 1. Bundibugyo ebolavirus (BDBV) 2. Zaire ebolavirus (EBOV) 3. Sudan ebolavirus (SUDV) 4. Reston ebolavirus (RESTV) 5. Taï Forest ebolavirus (TAFV).
  • 7. EBOLA SPECIES  BDBV, EBOV, and SUDV have been associated with large EVD outbreaks in Africa.  The RESTV species, found in Philippines and the People’s Republic of China, can infect humans, but no illness or death in humans from this species has been reported to date.
  • 8. ENVIRONMENTAL PERSISTANCE  Under ideal conditions, Ebola virus could remain active for up to 6 days.  Persistence of Ebola virus in the patient care environment is short – within 24 hours  Ebola virus was found, relative to other enveloped viruses, to be quite sensitive to inactivation by ultraviolet light and drying; yet sub-populations did persist in organic debris.
  • 9. 2014 OUTBREAK  On 8 August 2014, WHO declared the Ebola virus disease outbreak in West Africa a Public Health Emergency of International Concern (PHEIC) in accordance with the IHR 2005.  The current EVD outbreak is believed to have begun in Guinea in December 2013.  Viral sequencing shows strong homology (98%) with Zaïre Ebolavirus (EBOV)  As of August 16, 2014, 2,240 suspected or confirmed cases, including 1383 laboratory-confirmed cases and 1,229 deaths
  • 11. TRANSMISSION  Natural Host: Fruit bats of the Pteropodidae family (Hypsignathus monstrosus, Epomops franqueti, and Myonycteris torquata)  Source of human infection: Blood, secretions, organs, or other bodily fluids of infected animals, Bushmeat (handling of infected chimpanzees, gorillas, fruit bats, monkeys, forest antelope, and porcupines found ill or dead or in the rainforest)
  • 13. HUMAN-TO-HUMAN TRANSMISSION  Direct contact (through broken skin or mucous membranes) with the blood, secretions, organs or other bodily fluids of infected people  Indirect contact with environments contaminated with fluids.  Burial ceremonies (mourners direct contact with corpse)  The patients become contagious once symptoms begin. They are not contagious during incubation period.  Virus transmitted through the semen for up to 7 weeks after recovery from illness.  Health-care workers have frequently been infected INCUBATION PERIOD: 2 to 21 days CASE FATALITY RATE: 53%  All cases in the current outbreak- H2H
  • 14.
  • 15. SIGNS AND SYMPTOMS  PRODROME: sudden onset of fever, intense weakness, muscle pain, headache and sore throat.  VIRAEMIA: vomiting, diarrhoea, rash, impaired kidney and liver function, and in some cases, both internal and external bleeding (DIC) Patients are infectious as long as their blood and secretions contain the virus.
  • 16.
  • 17. PERSON UNDER INVESTIGATION (PUI) A person who has both consistent symptoms & risk factors:  1) Clinical criteria, which includes fever of greater than 38.6 degrees Celsius or 101.5 degrees Fahrenheit, and additional symptoms such as severe headache, muscle pain, vomiting, diarrhoea, abdominal pain, or unexplained haemorrhage; AND  2) Epidemiologic risk factors within the past 21 days before the onset of symptoms, such as contact with blood or other body fluids or human remains of a patient known to have or suspected to have EVD; residence in—or travel to—an area where EVD transmission is active; or direct handling of bats, rodents, or primates from disease-endemic areas.
  • 18. CASE DEFINITION FOR EVD Probable Case  A PUI who is a contact of an EVD case with either a high or low risk exposure. Confirmed Case  A case with laboratory confirmed diagnostic evidence of Ebola virus infection.
  • 19. CONTACTS OF AN EVD CASE Contacts have different levels of exposure risk, as follows: High risk exposures A high risk exposure includes any of the following:  Percutaneous, e.g. the needle stick, or mucous membrane exposure to body fluids of EVD patient  Direct care or exposure to body fluids of an EVD patient without appropriate PPE  Laboratory worker processing body fluids of confirmed EVD patients without appropriate PPE or standard biosafety precautions  Participation in funeral rites which include direct exposure to human remains in the geographic area where outbreak is occurring without appropriate PPE
  • 20. CONTACTS OF AN EVD CASE Low risk exposures A Low risk exposure includes any of the following:  Household member or other casual contact* with an EVD patient  Providing patient care or casual contact* without high-risk exposure with EVD patients in health care facilities in EVD outbreak affected countries No known exposure  Persons with no known exposure were present in an EVD outbreak affected country in the past 21 days with no low risk or high risk exposures.
  • 21. Defined as *CASUAL CONTACT  being within approximately 3 feet (1 meter) or within the room or care area for a prolonged period of time (e.g., healthcare personnel, household members) while not wearing PPE OR  having direct brief contact (e.g., shaking hands) with an EVD case while not wearing PPE  Brief interactions, such as walking by a person or moving through a hospital, do not constitute casual contact.
  • 22. DIFFERENTIAL DIAGNOSIS Always rule out  Other Viral Haemorrhagic Fevers.  Malaria  Yellow fever  Dengue  Leptospirosis  Typhoid Fever  Shigellosis  Rickettsiosis  Relapsing Fever  Cholera  Plague  Hepatitis
  • 23. LABORATORY FINDINGS  Thrombocytopenia, leukopenia with a pronounced lymphopenia.  Neutrophilia develops after several days  Elevations in aspartate aminotransferase and alanine aminotransferase.  Bilirubin may be normal or slightly elevated.  With onset of anuria, BUN and serum creatinine rise.  Terminally ill patients : Tachypnea, metabolic acidosis  Definitive diagnosis : Isolation of the virus in tissue culture or PCR.
  • 24. LABORATORY DIAGNOSIS Definitive diagnosis by  Antibody-capture ELISA  Antigen detection tests  Serum neutralization test- serological surveys  RT-PCR assay  Virus isolation by cell culture. Highly sensitive and confirmatory tests  Skin biopsies in postmortem diagnosis of infection with Ebola virus  Blood samples collection and transport according to guidelines and to WHO accredited labs only  NCDC, New Delhi and NIV,Pune in our country
  • 25. MANAGEMENT  Isolate the patient • Triage rapidly to a separate room /holding area • The holding area should be: - Distant from other crowded areas - Well ventilated - Have adequate sunlight Notify the State and National Authority  Clinical management: predominantly Supportive and focus on early recognition of complications with appropriate symptom management.  Antipyretics, Anti-emetics, Rehydration therapy, Blood transfusion, Oxygen , Respiratory support and Anti-convulsants as needed  No specific drug treatment
  • 26. Experimental treatment Zmapp  Combination of monoclonal antibodies which binds with outer glycoprotein of the virus and prevents its entry to the host cells  Efficacy yet to be proven, no clinical trials done till date.  In early trials- all Rhesus monkeys infected with virus survived when administered 1 hour after infection.  Produced using specific tobacco plants.  WHO authorised this treatment for a small group on 11th August,2014.  Even if successful, stocks will not be available till 2015 Tekmira, a Canadian biotech company, has begun early human trials of a new drug
  • 27.  NOT YET Vaccine  An adenovirus-vectored Ebola glycoprotein gene has proved protective in nonhuman primates and is undergoing phase 1 trials in humans.  An experimental vesicular stomatitis virus–based vaccine has protected macaques when given both before and after infection with the Zaire Ebola virus.
  • 28. PREVENTION  Isolation and Quarantine, Notification  Contact Tracing  Standard Precautions–At All Times, For All Patients  Barrier nursing  Hand washing  Personal Protective Equipment (PPE)  Injection safety, Safe sex practices  Concomitant & Terminal Disinfection, Sterilisation  Following SOP for Blood sample collection and Transport  Appropriate Hospital Waste management  Enhanced Surveillance  Health Education: Myths
  • 29. P U T T I N G O N PPE
  • 30. R E M O V E PPE
  • 31. STRATEGY FOR PREVENTION AND CONTROL
  • 32. AIR TRAVELLERS  Exit screening and communication efforts on the ground in West Africa to prevent sick travellers from getting on planes.  Airports in Guinea, Liberia, and Sierra Leone are screening outbound travellers for Ebola symptoms, including fever, and passengers are required to respond to a health questionnaire.  Avoid non-essential travel- WHO  Some countries have banned flights and entry to people from the affected regions.
  • 33. INDIA  No confirmed case of Ebola till date.  The World Health Organisation (WHO) had informed that one Indian passenger had travelled on the same flight in which an Ebola virus patient (a foreign national) was travelling from Monrovia to Lagos. He was tracked and found healthy.  24-hour 'Emergency Operation Centre‘: 011-23061469, 3205 and 1302  TN Helpline- 104  Rumours from Karnataka-WhatsApp message that student from the National Institute of Technology Karnataka (NITK) in Dakshina Kannada districthad ebola and succumbed to it
  • 34.
  • 35. For further details and to download this ppt visit: doctorindia.wordpress.com

Editor's Notes

  1. Bushmeat is meat from wild animals hunted in Africa, Asia, and South America
  2. stocks
  3. characteristic filamentous form with a uniform diameter of approximately 80 nm but display great variation in length. Filaments may be straight, but they are often folded on themselves. Ebola virus has a nonsegmented negative-stranded RNA genome containing 7 structural and regulatory genes
  4.  the survival rate has been higher than previous outbreaks. ALL CASES WHO advises that the deceased be handled and buried by trained case management professionals, who are equipped to properly bury the dead.
  5. A maculopapular rash, more easily seen on white skin than on dark skin, may be present around day 5 of infection and is most evident on the trunk. Bilateral conjunctival injection is also common Myocarditis and pulmonary edema also are seen in the later stages of the disease. Terminally ill patients often die tachypneic, hypotensive, anuric, and in a coma.
  6. Evidence of mucous membrane involvement includes conjunctivitis, odynophagia or dysphagia, and bleeding from multiple sites in the gastrointestinal tract. Terminally ill patients often are obtunded, anuric, tachypneic, normothermic, and in shock. Although the mechanism is unclear, hiccups have been noted in fatal cases of Ebola.
  7. Central and western africa
  8. personal protective equipment
  9. personal protective equipment
  10. because of the presence of large amounts of viral antigen, the relatively low risk posed by sample collection, and the lack of cold-chain requirements for formalin-fixed tissues.
  11. 2 americans and 1 spanish priest, MYTHS
  12. 2 americans and 1 spanish priest, MYTHS
  13. 2 americans and 1 spanish priest, MYTHS
  14. 2 americans and 1 spanish priest, MYTHS
  15. 2 americans and 1 spanish priest, MYTHS
  16. Like france kenya US India
  17. Liberia to nigeria.........Nigerian women heading to India dead in UAE