4.5 Article

National dengue surveillance, Cambodia 2002-2020

Journal

BULLETIN OF THE WORLD HEALTH ORGANIZATION
Volume 101, Issue 9, Pages 605-616

Publisher

WORLD HEALTH ORGANIZATION
DOI: 10.2471/BLT.23.289713

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The global incidence of dengue fever has increased significantly, and reporting surveillance data is crucial for understanding the scale of the problem and developing strategies for disease control. However, surveillance practices are not standardized, particularly in low- and middle-income countries. This article summarizes two decades of policy changes, literature, statistics, and dengue case data in Cambodia to identify important changes in the disease landscape and derive lessons for future surveillance and control strategies.
Global dengue incidence has increased dramatically over the past few decades from approximately 500 000 reported cases in 2000 to over 5 million in 2019. This trend has been attributed to population growth in endemic areas, rapid unplanned urbanization, increasing global connectivity, and climate change expanding the geographic range of the Aedes spp. mosquito, among other factors. Reporting dengue surveillance data is key to understanding the scale of the problem, identifying important changes in the landscape of disease, and developing policies for clinical management, vector control and vaccine rollout. However, surveillance practices are not standardized, and data may be difficult to interpret particularly in low- and middle-income countries with fragmented health-care systems. The latest national dengue surveillance data for Cambodia was published in 2010. Since its publication, the country experienced marked changes in health policies, population demographics, climate and urbanization. How these changes affected dengue control remains unknown. In this article, we summarize two decades of policy changes, published literature, country statistics, and dengue case data collected by the Cambodia National Dengue Control Programme to: (i) identify important changes in the disease landscape; and (ii) derive lessons to inform future surveillance and disease control strategies. We report that while dengue case morbidity and mortality rates in Cambodia fell between 2002 and 2020, dengue incidence doubled and age at infection increased. Future national surveillance, disease prevention and treatment, and vector control policies will have to account for these changes to optimize disease control.

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