Emerging Infectious Diseases (Jan 2017)

Oral Cholera Vaccine Coverage during an Outbreak and Humanitarian Crisis, Iraq, 2015

  • Eugene Lam,
  • Wasan Al-Tamimi,
  • Steven Paul Russell,
  • Muhammad Obaid-ul Islam Butt,
  • Curtis Blanton,
  • Altaf Sadrudin Musani,
  • Kashmira A. Date

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3201/eid2301.160881
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 23, no. 1
pp. 38 – 45

Abstract

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During November–December 2015, as part of the 2015 cholera outbreak response in Iraq, the Iraqi Ministry of Health targeted ≈255,000 displaced persons >1 year of age with 2 doses of oral cholera vaccine (OCV). All persons who received vaccines were living in selected refugee camps, internally displaced persons camps, and collective centers. We conducted a multistage cluster survey to obtain OCV coverage estimates in 10 governorates that were targeted during the campaign. In total, 1,226 household and 5,007 individual interviews were conducted. Overall, 2-dose OCV coverage in the targeted camps was 87% (95% CI 85%–89%). Two-dose OCV coverage in the 3 northern governorates (91%; 95% CI 87%–94%) was higher than that in the 7 southern and central governorates (80%; 95% CI 77%–82%). The experience in Iraq demonstrates that OCV campaigns can be successfully implemented as part of a comprehensive response to cholera outbreaks among high-risk populations in conflict settings.

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