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Published in: Conflict and Health 1/2017

Open Access 01-12-2017 | Research

Including refugees in disease elimination: challenges observed from a sleeping sickness programme in Uganda

Authors: Jennifer J. Palmer, Okello Robert, Freddie Kansiime

Published in: Conflict and Health | Issue 1/2017

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Abstract

Background

Ensuring equity between forcibly-displaced and host area populations is a key challenge for global elimination programmes. We studied Uganda’s response to the recent refugee influx from South Sudan to identify key governance and operational lessons for national sleeping sickness programmes working with displaced populations today. A refugee policy which favours integration of primary healthcare services for refugee and host populations and the availability of rapid diagnostic tests (RDTs) to detect sleeping sickness at this health system level makes Uganda well-placed to include refugees in sleeping sickness surveillance.

Methods

Using ethnographic observations of coordination meetings, review of programme data, interviews with sleeping sickness and refugee authorities and group discussions with health staff and refugees (2013–2016), we nevertheless identified some key challenges to equitably integrating refugees into government sleeping sickness surveillance.

Results

Despite fears that refugees were at risk of disease and posed a threat to elimination, six months into the response, programme coordinators progressed to a sentinel surveillance strategy in districts hosting the highest concentrations of refugees. This meant that RDTs, the programme’s primary surveillance tool, were removed from most refugee-serving facilities, exacerbating existing inequitable access to surveillance and leading refugees to claim that their access to sleeping sickness tests had been better in South Sudan. This was not intentionally done to exclude refugees from care, rather, four key governance challenges made it difficult for the programme to recognise and correct inequities affecting refugees: (a) perceived donor pressure to reduce the sleeping sickness programme’s scope without clear international elimination guidance on surveillance quality; (b) a problematic history of programme relations with refugee-hosting districts which strained supervision of surveillance quality; (c) difficulties that government health workers faced to produce good quality surveillance in a crisis; and (d) reluctant engagement between the sleeping sickness programme and humanitarian structures.

Conclusions

Despite progressive policy intentions, several entrenched governance norms and practices worked against integration of refugees into the national sleeping sickness surveillance system. Elimination programmes which marginalise forced migrants risk unwittingly contributing to disease spread and reinforce social inequities, so new norms urgently need to be established at local, national and international levels.
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Footnotes
1
Apart from this passive approach to case detection, western districts of the West Nile region have benefitted from tsetse control activities using insecticide-treated targets established under a 2011 pilot programme. Under the multi-country Trypa-No! project, Adjumani is expected to be included in 2017. Mobile team-based screening was also used on a small scale in the pilot to measure the project’s impact [27].
 
2
Major refugee settlements in West Nile were established in Adjumani and Arua Districts in 2014 and 2015 and in Yumbe and Amuru Districts in 2016. As of 30 Sep 2016, more than half of South Sudanese refugees in Uganda (58%) were living in settlements in Adjumani District [51].
 
3
Whereas pre-2016, most displacement to Uganda came from non-endemic areas of South Sudan, the increase in fighting in southern states since July 2016 means more refugees are now coming from disease-affected areas [52, 53] and they are settling inside and outside of Adjumani.
 
4
Based on experience with the CATT diagnostic test positioned in central facilities, recommended global strategy for areas of high transmission intensity is to reduce surveillance to a restricted number of ‘sentinel’ sites once no cases have been reported from an area in the last five years, during which time control measures such as outreach-based screening should have been in place [26].
 
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Metadata
Title
Including refugees in disease elimination: challenges observed from a sleeping sickness programme in Uganda
Authors
Jennifer J. Palmer
Okello Robert
Freddie Kansiime
Publication date
01-12-2017
Publisher
BioMed Central
Published in
Conflict and Health / Issue 1/2017
Electronic ISSN: 1752-1505
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1186/s13031-017-0125-x

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