BMC Medicine (Jul 2021)

The East African Community (EAC) mobile laboratory networks in Kenya, Burundi, Tanzania, Rwanda, Uganda, and South Sudan—from project implementation to outbreak response against Dengue, Ebola, COVID-19, and epidemic-prone diseases

  • Muna Affara,
  • Hakim Idris Lagu,
  • Emmanuel Achol,
  • Richard Karamagi,
  • Neema Omari,
  • Grace Ochido,
  • Eric Kezakarayagwa,
  • Francine Kabatesi,
  • Anatole Nkeshimana,
  • Abdi Roba,
  • Millicent Nyakio Ndia,
  • Mamo U. Abudo,
  • Alice Kabanda,
  • Etienne Mpabuka,
  • Emil Ivan Mwikarago,
  • Philip Ezekiel Kutjok,
  • Donald Duku Samson,
  • Lul Lojok Deng,
  • Nyambura Moremi,
  • Maria Ezekiely Kelly,
  • Peter Bernard Mtesigwa Mkama,
  • Alex Magesa,
  • Stephen Karabyo Balinandi,
  • Godfrey Pimundu,
  • Susan Ndidde Nabadda,
  • Dewi Ismajani Puradiredja,
  • Julia Hinzmann,
  • Sophie Duraffour,
  • Martin Gabriel,
  • Gerd Ruge,
  • Wibke Loag,
  • Rogers Ayiko,
  • Stanley Serser Sonoiya,
  • Juergen May,
  • Michael J. Katende,
  • Florian Gehre

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1186/s12916-021-02028-y
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 19, no. 1
pp. 1 – 15

Abstract

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Abstract Background East Africa is home to 170 million people and prone to frequent outbreaks of viral haemorrhagic fevers and various bacterial diseases. A major challenge is that epidemics mostly happen in remote areas, where infrastructure for Biosecurity Level (BSL) 3/4 laboratory capacity is not available. As samples have to be transported from the outbreak area to the National Public Health Laboratories (NPHL) in the capitals or even flown to international reference centres, diagnosis is significantly delayed and epidemics emerge. Main text The East African Community (EAC), an intergovernmental body of Burundi, Rwanda, Tanzania, Kenya, Uganda, and South Sudan, received 10 million € funding from the German Development Bank (KfW) to establish BSL3/4 capacity in the region. Between 2017 and 2020, the EAC in collaboration with the Bernhard-Nocht-Institute for Tropical Medicine (Germany) and the Partner Countries’ Ministries of Health and their respective NPHLs, established a regional network of nine mobile BSL3/4 laboratories. These rapidly deployable laboratories allowed the region to reduce sample turn-around-time (from days to an average of 8h) at the centre of the outbreak and rapidly respond to epidemics. In the present article, the approach for implementing such a regional project is outlined and five major aspects (including recommendations) are described: (i) the overall project coordination activities through the EAC Secretariat and the Partner States, (ii) procurement of equipment, (iii) the established laboratory setup and diagnostic panels, (iv) regional training activities and capacity building of various stakeholders and (v) completed and ongoing field missions. The latter includes an EAC/WHO field simulation exercise that was conducted on the border between Tanzania and Kenya in June 2019, the support in molecular diagnosis during the Tanzanian Dengue outbreak in 2019, the participation in the Ugandan National Ebola response activities in Kisoro district along the Uganda/DRC border in Oct/Nov 2019 and the deployments of the laboratories to assist in SARS-CoV-2 diagnostics throughout the region since early 2020. Conclusions The established EAC mobile laboratory network allows accurate and timely diagnosis of BSL3/4 pathogens in all East African countries, important for individual patient management and to effectively contain the spread of epidemic-prone diseases.

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