一次卫生准备和应对的环境扫描:卢旺达的Covid-19大流行病例。

Gloria Igihozo, Phaedra Henley, Arne Ruckert, Charles Karangwa, Richard Habimana, Rosine Manishimwe, Leandre Ishema, Hélène Carabin, Mary E Wiktorowicz, Ronald Labonté
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引用次数: 3

摘要

背景:在过去十年中,东非70%的新发和再发传染病暴发起源于卢旺达所在的刚果盆地。为了应对这些日益增加的灾难性疫情风险,政府于2011年开始将“同一个健康”(OH)纳入其传染病应对系统,以加强其防范和控制疫情。卢旺达在应对当前COVID-19大流行方面的出色表现,使其成为了解在这一前所未有的情况下如何应用卫生保健结构和原则的绝佳范例。方法:在2020年8月至12月期间对已发表文献和灰色文献进行了快速环境扫描,以评估卢旺达的OH结构及其对COVID-19大流行的反应。总共有132份文件,包括官方政府文件、发表的研究、报纸文章和政策,使用主题分析进行了分析。结果:卢旺达的卫生保健结构由来自负责人类、动物和环境卫生部门的多学科小组组成。该国制定了卫生保健战略计划和政策,概述了其对人畜共患病感染的应对措施,将卫生保健纳入大学课程,以培养卫生保健队伍,建立多学科快速反应小组,并在动物和人类卫生部门建立了分散的实验室,以加强监测。为应对2019冠状病毒病,该国在疫情发生前制定了一项准备和应对计划,并成立了一个多部门联合工作组,协调应对疫情。通过利用其卫生组织结构,卢旺达能够迅速实施卫生组织知情的COVID-19应对措施。结论:卢旺达将OH纳入传染病和COVID-19应对系统的做法表明,将OH原则应用于各级传染病治理的重要性。卢旺达示范了如何通过多部门协作机制加强对疫情和大流行病的准备和应对。由于我们的环境扫描的快速性质,我们预计我们的发现会有局限性,这意味着我们的环境扫描旨在为COVID-19政策应对提供信息,并鼓励对卢旺达冠状病毒应对中的OH进行全面的情景分析。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。

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An environmental scan of one health preparedness and response: the case of the Covid-19 pandemic in Rwanda.

Background: Over the past decade, 70% of new and re-emerging infectious disease outbreaks in East Africa have originated from the Congo Basin where Rwanda is located. To respond to these increasing risks of disastrous outbreaks, the government began integrating One Health (OH) into its infectious disease response systems in 2011 to strengthen its preparedness and contain outbreaks. The strong performance of Rwanda in responding to the on-going COVID-19 pandemic makes it an excellent example to understand how the structure and principles of OH were applied during this unprecedented situation.

Methods: A rapid environmental scan of published and grey literature was conducted between August and December 2020, to assess Rwanda's OH structure and its response to the COVID-19 pandemic. In total, 132 documents including official government documents, published research, newspaper articles, and policies were analysed using thematic analysis.

Results: Rwanda's OH structure consists of multidisciplinary teams from sectors responsible for human, animal, and environmental health. The country has developed OH strategic plans and policies outlining its response to zoonotic infections, integrated OH into university curricula to develop a OH workforce, developed multidisciplinary rapid response teams, and created decentralized laboratories in the animal and human health sectors to strengthen surveillance. To address COVID-19, the country created a preparedness and response plan before its onset, and a multisectoral joint task force was set up to coordinate the response to the pandemic. By leveraging its OH structure, Rwanda was able to rapidly implement a OH-informed response to COVID-19.

Conclusion: Rwanda's integration of OH into its response systems to infectious diseases and to COVID-19 demonstrates the importance of applying OH principles into the governance of infectious diseases at all levels. Rwanda exemplifies how preparedness and response to outbreaks and pandemics can be strengthened through multisectoral collaboration mechanisms. We do expect limitations in our findings due to the rapid nature of our environmental scan meant to inform the COVID-19 policy response and would encourage a full situational analysis of OH in Rwanda's Coronavirus response.

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