Emerging Infectious Diseases (Nov 2015)

Contact Tracing Activities during the Ebola Virus Disease Epidemic in Kindia and Faranah, Guinea, 2014

  • Meredith G. Dixon,
  • Melanie M. Taylor,
  • Jacob Dee,
  • Avi Hakim,
  • Paul Cantey,
  • Travis Lim,
  • Hawa Bah,
  • Sékou Mohamed Camara,
  • Clement B. Ndongmo,
  • Mory Togba,
  • Leonie Yvonne Touré,
  • Pepe Bilivogui,
  • Mohammed Sylla,
  • Michael H. Kinzer,
  • Fátima Coronado,
  • Jon Eric Tongren,
  • Mahesh Swaminathan,
  • Lise Mandigny,
  • Boubacar Diallo,
  • Thomas Seyler,
  • Marc Rondy,
  • Guénaël Rodier,
  • William Perea,
  • Benjamin A. Dahl

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3201/eid2111.150684
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 21, no. 11
pp. 2022 – 2028

Abstract

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The largest recorded Ebola virus disease epidemic began in March 2014; as of July 2015, it continued in 3 principally affected countries: Guinea, Liberia, and Sierra Leone. Control efforts include contact tracing to expedite identification of the virus in suspect case-patients. We examined contact tracing activities during September 20–December 31, 2014, in 2 prefectures of Guinea using national and local data about case-patients and their contacts. Results show less than one third of case-patients (28.3% and 31.1%) were registered as contacts before case identification; approximately two thirds (61.1% and 67.7%) had no registered contacts. Time to isolation of suspected case-patients was not immediate (median 5 and 3 days for Kindia and Faranah, respectively), and secondary attack rates varied by relationships of persons who had contact with the source case-patient and the type of case-patient to which a contact was exposed. More complete contact tracing efforts are needed to augment control of this epidemic.

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