The case-area targeted rapid response strategy to control cholera in Haiti: a four-year implementation study

Author(s)
Rebaudet, S., Bulit, G., Gaudart, J., Michel, E., Gazin, P., Evers, C., et al.
Pages
18 pp
Date published
16 Apr 2019
Publisher
PLOS Neglected Tropical Diseases
Type
Articles
Keywords
Epidemics & pandemics, Health, Response and recovery
Countries
Haiti

In October 2010, Haiti was struck by a large-scale cholera epidemic. The Haitian government, UNICEF and other international partners launched an unprecedented nationwide alert-response strategy in July 2013. Coordinated NGOs recruited local rapid response mobile teams to conduct case-area targeted interventions (CATIs), including education sessions, household decontamination by chlorine spraying, and distribution of chlorine tablets. An innovative red-orange-green alert system was also established to monitor the epidemic at the communal scale on a weekly basis. Our study aimed to describe and evaluate the exhaustiveness, intensity and quality of the CATIs in response to cholera alerts in Haiti between July 2013 and June 2017.