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Mysterious 'Disease X' has been killing dozens of people in the Congo

December 10, 2024 · Comment icon 11 comments
Mystery disease
The CDC have deployed experts to the region. Image Credit: Pixabay / ELG21
The unidentified disease causes a range of flu-like symptoms and seems to mainly affect women and children.
Andrew Lee: A "mystery disease" recently struck the south-western corner of the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC), killing between 67 and 143 people over two weeks. The disease was reported to cause flu-like symptoms of fever, headache, cough and anaemia.

An epidemiologist told Reuters that it was mainly women and children who were seriously affected by the disease. But little else is known about the disease so far.

Health officials in the DRC are urgently investigating this incident to identify the cause of this deadly outbreak. Initially, they would consider possible diseases known to be endemic to the region such as malaria, dengue or Chikungunya.

However, they are likely to face difficulties detecting the cause because of diagnostic testing infrastructure issues, as well as difficulties with sample collections, transport of those samples to laboratory and testing.

In low-income countries, such as the DRC, many clinical laboratories can only test for common pathogens. Limitations in the quality and performance of some of their clinical laboratories are also a problem.

If it is not one of the usual suspects, the detection of rarer pathogens often requires samples to be sent to more specialist laboratories that can do specialised tests, such as gene sequencing.

This could mean that samples need to be sent to laboratories abroad. However, the international sharing of such biological samples is highly contentious over concerns that the benefits of doing so are often not fairly shared between countries.

Another priority for local health officials is to understand the extent and severity of the outbreak. The high mortality and number of cases of people affected are alarming. However, it is not easy to work out the true extent of such outbreaks, as not all infected patients will be detected.

Not all infected people seek care. Clinics may be few and far between, especially in remote areas, and are often understaffed. Indeed, the DRC has fewer than two doctors per 10,000 population (by comparison the UK which has more than 31 doctors per 10,000 population).

Even if patients did attend a hospital or clinic, not all infections would be diagnosed. Not all patients would be tested for infection, and not all detected infections are reported to the health authorities.

The lack of information about the cause, extent and number of infected people makes it hard to accurately assess the threat it poses. But this is not an isolated risk. Outbreaks of new infectious diseases have occurred regularly over the years.

This is partly driven by climate change, changing population demography, urbanisation and deforestation that enables the "spillover" of infections from animals to humans.
Unfortunately, our global infectious disease radar is broken. Disease surveillance is fragmented globally.

In poorer countries, there will be many areas where diseases are not detected or are detected late. Surveillance services are often poorly resourced and understaffed, staff often lack training or supervision, and reporting may not be standardised.

There is also often a significant delay from the time a person gets infected, and is diagnosed with the disease, to the time it is reported to the public health authorities. This in turn delays disease control responses to outbreaks. These problems are worse in resource-poor settings, such as in sub-Saharan Africa.

What solutions are being tried?

One World Health Organization (WHO) initiative being trialled in several countries across Africa, South America and south Asia, is the 7-1-7 initiative. This sets aspirational targets for outbreaks of infectious diseases to be detected within seven days, notified to public health authorities within a day, and seven days to complete an initial response. This is a laudable aim but it may still be too late for fast-moving outbreaks.

Another solution is to better integrate and better coordinate existing surveillance activities and systems. One such WHO initiative is Integrated Disease Surveillance and Response (IDSR), which has mainly been deployed in Africa over the past two decades.

IDSR has had mixed success so far. A recent review found information technology system issues, financial constraints and data-sharing problems, as well as workforce gaps.

Other global initiatives include the International Pathogen Surveillance Network brought together by the WHO Hub for Pandemic and Epidemic Intelligence, and recent efforts to promote collaborative surveillance across different agencies and sectors (from human health to animal health and the environment) to work together and share information as well as expertise.

The effectiveness of such initiatives remains to be seen, but they are a step in the right direction. Without better disease surveillance globally, we may not detect the next pandemic until it is too late.

Andrew Lee, Professor of Public Health, University of Sheffield

This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license.

Read the original article. The Conversation

Source: The Conversation | Comments (11)




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Recent comments on this story
Comment icon #2 Posted by and-then 1 month ago
I wonder if it is related to their consumption of "bush meat"?  Those symptoms sound like a form of influenza.   
Comment icon #3 Posted by Abramelin 1 month ago
That's how it often starts in Africa. Like AIDS.
Comment icon #4 Posted by diddyman68 1 month ago
I watched a documentary a while ago about a village somewhere in africa ,where a mysterious disease was killing many villagers. They would drink the blood or consume a body part of the deceased to ward off evil spirits. A disease expert came in and eventually discovered what they were doing, unfortunately many more deaths happened before one woman with the disease agreed to an autopsy when she died.even after it was proven the villagers were reluctant to stop their practices.
Comment icon #5 Posted by CrimsonKing 1 month ago
https://nypost.com/2024/12/09/world-news/mystery-deadly-disease-x-spreads-in-congo-as-who-struggles-to-trace-origin/
Comment icon #6 Posted by Claira 1 month ago
It sounds like they're getting hit with just about everything, with children getting hit the hardest. Hope they get to the bottom of Disease X before it further spreads. It's quite worrisome.
Comment icon #7 Posted by Cho Jinn 1 month ago
"This is partly driven by climate change..." I made it that far.  It's the secular equivalent of attributing everything to the Holy Spirit, at this point.  Or maybe contributors get crypto dumps for every mention of the string, would be an easy smart contract to write. Interesting article, though. That region is full of not-so-friendly pathogens.  And arthropods.  And reptiles.  And mammals.  And cryptids!
Comment icon #8 Posted by Opus Magnus 1 month ago
The Democratic-Republic of the Congo [DRC] is the site on an ongoing genocide.  Over 6 million have been killed since 19961, but the crisis stretches back further.  Genocides in neighboring Rwanda have roots that trace back hundreds of years.  While members of the same race, the Rwandans seperated into two classes: The Tutsis and Hutus.  The Hutus were the lower class, and Tustis the upper class.  After World War II the area was decolonized, and the Hutus began rebelling against the Tutsis. In 1994 the Hutus killed more than 1 million Tutsis and 150,000-250,000 women were raped2.  Now wi... [More]
Comment icon #9 Posted by Occupational Hubris 1 month ago
Idiotic response
Comment icon #10 Posted by Cho Jinn 1 month ago
Reaction is telling. And the angel answered her, “[Climate Change] will come upon you, and the power of the Most High will overshadow you." - Luke 1:35 Therefore I tell you, every sin and blasphemy will be forgiven people, but the blasphemy against [Climate Change] will not be forgiven. - Matthew 12:31 Jesus turned and said to Peter, “Get behind me, [Carbon]! You are a stumbling block to me; you do not have in mind the concerns of [Climate Change], but merely human concerns.” - Matthew 16:23 Did you even go to protest last Sunday?
Comment icon #11 Posted by Torviking 1 month ago
I’m with Cho Jinn, I got as far as climate change and just went out of the post.


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