Cholera Outbreak in Senegal in 2005: Was Climate a Factor?

Guillaume Constantin de Magny(Maladies Infectieuses et Vecteurs: Écologie, Génétique, Évolution et Contrôle), Wassila M. Thiaw(NOAA Climate Prediction Center), Vadlamani Kumar(NOAA Climate Prediction Center), N.M. Manga(Centre Hospitalier National Universitaire de Fann), Bernard Marcel Diop(Centre Hospitalier National Universitaire de Fann), Lamine Guèye(Cheikh Anta Diop University), Mamina Kamara(Direction de la Météorologie Nationale), Benjamín Roche(Institut de Recherche pour le Développement), Raghu Murtugudde(University of Maryland, College Park), Rita R. Colwell(University of Maryland, College Park)
PLoS ONE
August 31, 2012
Cited by 86Open Access
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Abstract

Cholera is an acute diarrheal illness caused by Vibrio cholerae and occurs as widespread epidemics in Africa. In 2005, there were 31,719 cholera cases, with 458 deaths in the Republic of Senegal. We retrospectively investigated the climate origin of the devastating floods in mid-August 2005, in the Dakar Region of Senegal and the subsequent outbreak of cholera along with the pattern of cholera outbreaks in three other regions of that country. We compared rainfall patterns between 2002 and 2005 and the relationship between the sea surface temperature (SST) gradient in the tropical Atlantic Ocean and precipitation over Senegal for 2005. Results showed a specific pattern of rainfall throughout the Dakar region during August, 2005, and the associated rainfall anomaly coincided with an exacerbation of the cholera epidemic. Comparison of rainfall and epidemiological patterns revealed that the temporal dynamics of precipitation, which was abrupt and heavy, was presumably the determining factor. Analysis of the SST gradient showed that the Atlantic Ocean SST variability in 2005 differed from that of 2002 to 2004, a result of a prominent Atlantic meridional mode. The influence of this intense precipitation on cholera transmission over a densely populated and crowded region was detectable for both Dakar and Thiès, Senegal. Thus, high resolution rainfall forecasts at subseasonal time scales should provide a way forward for an early warning system in Africa for cholera and, thereby, trigger epidemic preparedness. Clearly, attention must be paid to both natural and human induced environmental factors to devise appropriate action to prevent cholera and other waterborne disease epidemics in the region.


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