the first filling of merowe dam: a potentially important risk of amplification of the rift valley...

17
The First Filling of Merowe Dam: A Potentially Important Risk of Amplification of the Rift Valley Fever Virus Disease in Sudan

Upload: francis-robertson

Post on 20-Jan-2016

218 views

Category:

Documents


0 download

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: The First Filling of Merowe Dam: A Potentially Important Risk of Amplification of the Rift Valley Fever Virus Disease in Sudan

The First Filling of Merowe Dam: A Potentially Important

Risk of Amplification of the Rift Valley Fever Virus Disease in

Sudan

Page 2: The First Filling of Merowe Dam: A Potentially Important Risk of Amplification of the Rift Valley Fever Virus Disease in Sudan

• Dams:

• Negative impacts

• Lifespan

• The base line conditions, before construction.

• The experience of comparable eco-settings is more reliable basis for forecast (WHO, 1998).

Page 3: The First Filling of Merowe Dam: A Potentially Important Risk of Amplification of the Rift Valley Fever Virus Disease in Sudan

• The Virus:• It has a broad-spectrum of host range that includes

humans, sheep, cattle, buffalo, camels and goats but sheep and cattle were primarily targeted.

• The Vector and host animals:• There are three main means of transmission of RVFV:

transcutaneous transmission, aerosol transmission, and by mosquito or other insect bite. Aedes vexans, Ae. ochraceus, and Ae. dalzieli mosquitoes, as well as other mosquitoes and blood sucking insects, such as sand fly Phelobotomus duboscqui. Ae.cumminsii, Ae. circumluteolus, and Ae.micintoshi were reported to be vectors for the disease, but their role of transmitting the virus is not yet known.

Page 4: The First Filling of Merowe Dam: A Potentially Important Risk of Amplification of the Rift Valley Fever Virus Disease in Sudan

• Small ruminants and bovines are among the most sensitive domestic species to host animals for the virus.

Page 5: The First Filling of Merowe Dam: A Potentially Important Risk of Amplification of the Rift Valley Fever Virus Disease in Sudan

• Epidemiology :

• (RVFV) is a serious zoonosis. It can adapt itself easily to ecological changes and to being transported, and transmitted by a wide variety of mosquitoes causing livestock and human deaths.

Page 6: The First Filling of Merowe Dam: A Potentially Important Risk of Amplification of the Rift Valley Fever Virus Disease in Sudan

• Geographical distribution:

• Epizootics first concerned regions at high altitude (South Africa, 1951, Zimbabwe and Nigeria, 1958, Chad and Cameron, 1967) before getting over the Saharan barrier and affecting river valleys (Sudan, 1973, Egypt, 1977, Mauritania, 1987)

Page 7: The First Filling of Merowe Dam: A Potentially Important Risk of Amplification of the Rift Valley Fever Virus Disease in Sudan

• Experiences • There is a significant relationship between the heavy

rainfall and outbreaks of the virus.

• The 1987 epidemic in the Senegal River Valley of Mauritania near the Diama and Manantali Dams

• Where, the filling up of dams then favours the proliferation of mosquitoes and the concentration of men.

• The conjunction of these two factors probably originated the recent epidemics of Rift Valley Fever in Egypt after the first filling of Aswan Dam in 1977.

Page 8: The First Filling of Merowe Dam: A Potentially Important Risk of Amplification of the Rift Valley Fever Virus Disease in Sudan

• Expectations: (the experience of comparable eco-settings is more reliable basis for forecast)

• The first filling of Merowe Dam is expected to catalyze the spread of RVF virus.

Page 9: The First Filling of Merowe Dam: A Potentially Important Risk of Amplification of the Rift Valley Fever Virus Disease in Sudan

• Reasons: /or factors fan the flames for an outbreak after the first filling of the Merowe Dam)

• The Dam is associated with three agricultural schemes;

• Presence of pastoralists with their small herds who constitute a significant fraction of the Manasir tribe inhabit the desert regions close to the Nile valley.

• The location of these schemes • New bridges were built Marowe-Karima and Karima –Dongola

Road.• Thus the virus could have been transported to the area through

infected people or insects or even their eggs especially it is capable of being transported and there was no tracing for both animal and human movement in Sudan during the recent outbreak.

Page 10: The First Filling of Merowe Dam: A Potentially Important Risk of Amplification of the Rift Valley Fever Virus Disease in Sudan

• The predication of an outbreak of RVFV • It is sound (Saharan barrier)• It is useful for policy makers since it provides a

means for preventing, control or mitigating the consequences of the disease.

• And also because repeated prophylactic vaccination of susceptible livestock during the long-inter epidemic periods that the RVF takes, is very expense

Page 11: The First Filling of Merowe Dam: A Potentially Important Risk of Amplification of the Rift Valley Fever Virus Disease in Sudan

• Precaution measures:• Why should be taken following the filling up of

Merowe Dam? • (1) There was an outbreak in the country during October-

December 2007 where it was accompanied by human deaths and affected the economy and livestock business;

• (2) “Conditions which precipitate an epidemic of RVF are also predisposing to occurrence of other major diseases epidemics which can occur simultaneously”; and

• (3)The virus being transported by wind, there is a risk of spreading of the virus again to Egypt.

Page 12: The First Filling of Merowe Dam: A Potentially Important Risk of Amplification of the Rift Valley Fever Virus Disease in Sudan

• Measures:

• Advance preparations to implement wide area vector control measures can be an effective means of combating vector-borne diseases.

• Starting a vaccination programme for the herd is of vital importance.

Page 13: The First Filling of Merowe Dam: A Potentially Important Risk of Amplification of the Rift Valley Fever Virus Disease in Sudan

• Recommendations:• 1/ Interdisciplinary co-operation among

professionals, is especially needed to perform risk assessment and to address the system-based, physical and ecological impact of Merowe Dam in Sudan;

• 2/ As well forecasting changes in weather in Sudan is necessary for predicting new outbreaks

Page 14: The First Filling of Merowe Dam: A Potentially Important Risk of Amplification of the Rift Valley Fever Virus Disease in Sudan
Page 15: The First Filling of Merowe Dam: A Potentially Important Risk of Amplification of the Rift Valley Fever Virus Disease in Sudan

• Thanks

Page 16: The First Filling of Merowe Dam: A Potentially Important Risk of Amplification of the Rift Valley Fever Virus Disease in Sudan
Page 17: The First Filling of Merowe Dam: A Potentially Important Risk of Amplification of the Rift Valley Fever Virus Disease in Sudan