The Pan African Medical Journal (Dec 2020)

The first sixty days of COVID-19 in a humanitarian response setting: a descriptive epidemiological analyses of the outbreak in South Sudan

  • Joy Luba Lomole Waya,
  • Richard Lako,
  • Sudhir Bunga,
  • Helen Chun,
  • Valerie Mize,
  • Boniface Ambani,
  • Joseph Francis Wamala,
  • Argata Guracha Guyo,
  • John Henry Gray,
  • Malick Gai,
  • Sylvester Maleghemi,
  • Matthew Kol

DOI
https://doi.org/10.11604/pamj.2020.37.384.27486
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 37, no. 384

Abstract

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INTRODUCTION: The coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) was declared a pandemic on March 11, 2020. South Sudan, a low-income and humanitarian response setting, reported its first case of COVID-19 on April 5, 2020. We describe the socio-demographic and epidemiologic characteristics of COVID-19 cases in this setting. METHODS: We conducted a cross-sectional descriptive analysis of data for 1,330 confirmed COVID-19 cases from the first 60 days of the outbreak. RESULTS: Among the 1,330 confirmed cases, the mean age was 37.1 years, 77% were male, 17% were symptomatic with 95% categorized as mild, and the case fatality rate was 1.1%. Only 24.7% of cases were detected through alerts and sentinel site surveillance, with 95% of the cases reported from the capital, Juba. Epidemic doubling time averaged 9.8 days (95% confidence interval 7.7 – 13.4), with an attack rate of 11.5 per 100,000 population. Test positivity rate was 18.2%, with test rate per 100,000 population of 53 and mean test turn-around time of 9 days. The case to contact ratio was 1:2.2. CONCLUSION: This 2-month initial period of COVID-19 in South Sudan demonstrated mostly young adults and men affected, with most cases reported as asymptomatic. Systems’ limitations highlighted included a small proportion of cases detected through surveillance, low testing rates, low contact elicitation, and long collection to test turn-around times limiting the country’s ability to effectively respond to the outbreak. A multi-pronged response including greater access to testing, scale-up of surveillance, contact tracing and community engagement, among other interventions are needed to improve the COVID-19 response in this setting.

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