A prolonged, community-wide cholera outbreak associated with drinking water contaminated by sewage in Kasese District, western Uganda
Loading...
Date
2018
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
BMC
Abstract
Background: In May 2015, a cholera outbreak that had lasted 3 months and infected over 100 people was
reported in Kasese District, Uganda, where multiple cholera outbreaks had occurred previously. We conducted an
investigation to identify the mode of transmission to guide control measures.
Methods: We defined a suspected case as onset of acute watery diarrhoea from 1 February 2015 onwards in a
Kasese resident. A confirmed case was a suspected case with Vibrio cholerae O1 El Tor, serotype Inaba cultured from
a stool sample. We reviewed medical records to find cases. We conducted a case-control study to compare
exposures among confirmed case-persons and asymptomatic controls, matched by village and age-group. We
conducted environmental assessments. We tested water samples from the most affected area for total coliforms
using the Most Probable Number (MPN) method.
Results: We identified 183 suspected cases including 61 confirmed cases of Vibrio cholerae 01; serotype Inaba, with
onset between February and July 2015. 2 case-persons died of cholera. The outbreak occurred in 80 villages and
affected all age groups; the highest attack rate occurred in the 5–14 year age group (4.1/10,000). The outbreak
started in Bwera Sub-County bordering the Democratic Republic of Congo and spread eastward through sustained
community transmission. The first case-persons were involved in cross-border trading. The case-control study, which
involved 49 confirmed cases and 201 controls, showed that 94% (46/49) of case-persons compared with 79%
(160/201) of control-persons drank water without boiling or treatment (ORM-H=4.8, 95% CI: 1.3–18). Water collected
from the two main sources, i.e., public pipes (consumed by 39% of case-persons and 38% of control-persons) or
streams (consumed by 29% of case-persons and 24% control-persons) had high coliform counts, a marker of faecal
contamination. Environmental assessment revealed evidence of open defecation along the streams. No food items
were significantly associated with illness.
Conclusions: This prolonged, community-wide cholera outbreak was associated with drinking water contaminated
by faecal matter and cross-border trading. We recommended rigorous disposal of patients’ faeces, chlorination of
piped water, and boiling or treatment of drinking water. The outbreak stopped 6 weeks after these
recommendations were implemented.
Description
Keywords
Cholera, Outbreak, Case-control studies, Uganda
Citation
Kwesiga, B., Pande, G., Ario, A. R., Tumwesigye, N. M., Matovu, J. K., & Zhu, B. P. (2017). A prolonged, community-wide cholera outbreak associated with drinking water contaminated by sewage in Kasese District, western Uganda. BMC public health, 18(1), 30.