Infectious diseases during the European Union training mission Mali(EUTM MLI)–a four-year experience
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Infectious diseases during the European Union training mission Mali(EUTM MLI)–a four-year experience
Military Medical ResearchVol. 5, Issue 4, Pages: 293-303(2018)
Affiliations:
1. Department of Microbiology and Hospital Hygiene, Bundeswehr Hospital Hamburg
2. Institute for Medical Microbiology, Virology and Hygiene, University Medicine Rostock
3. Department of Preventive Medicine, Bundeswehr Medical Academy4. NATO Center of Excellence for Military Medicine (MilMedCOE), Deployment Health Surveillance Capability (DHSC)5. Institute of Medical Information Processing, Biometry and Epidemiology
Author bio:
Funds:
DOI:
CLC:R824
Published:2018
Accepted:
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[1]Hagen Frickmann,Ralf Matthias Hagen,Florian Geiselbrechtinger,Nagpal Hoysal.Infectious diseases during the European Union training mission Mali(EUTM MLI)–a four-year experience[J].Military Medical Research,2018,5(04):293-303.
DOI:
[1]Hagen Frickmann,Ralf Matthias Hagen,Florian Geiselbrechtinger,Nagpal Hoysal.Infectious diseases during the European Union training mission Mali(EUTM MLI)–a four-year experience[J].Military Medical Research,2018,5(04):293-303.DOI:
Infectious diseases during the European Union training mission Mali(EUTM MLI)–a four-year experience
摘要
Abstract
Background: The European Union Training Mission Mali(EUTM MLI) is a multinational military training deployment to the Western African tropical nation of Mali. Based on routinely collected disease and non-battle injury surveillance data
this study quantifies the true impact of infectious diseases for this tropical mission and potential seasonal variations in infectious disease threats.Methods: Categorized health events during the EUTM MLI mission and associated lost working days were reported using the EpiNATO-2 report. Infection-related health events were descriptively analyzed for a 4-year period from the 12 th week in 2013 to the 13 th week in 2017. Aggregated EpiNATO-2 data collected from all missions other than EUTM MLI were used as a comparator.Results: Among the infectious diseases reported by EUTM MLI
non-severe upper respiratory infections and gastrointestinal diseases dominated quantitatively
accounting for 1.65 and 1.42 consultations per 100 person-weeks
respectively. The number of recorded infectious disease-associated lost working days during the whole study interval was 723. Seasonal changes in disease frequency were detectable. More gastrointestinal infections were seen in the rainy season
and more respiratory infections occurred in the dry season; these were associated with peaks of more than 2.5 consultations per 100 person-weeks for both categories.Conclusion: Despite initial concerns focused on tropical infectious diseases during this mission in tropical Mali
upper respiratory tract and gastrointestinal infections predominate. The relatively low number of reported lost working days may indicate that these infections are at the milder end of the spectrum of infectious diseases despite a likely reporting bias.
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