Table 1. Included cholera outbreak locations and reporting dates.
Peer-reviewed* | Grey literature* | Case study* | |
---|---|---|---|
African Region | |||
DRC | Eastern Provinces (2017)[9] | Four outbreaks (2017–2020) | |
Cameroon | Douala (2004)[11] | ||
Guinea | National (2012)[15] | ||
Kenya | Nyanza Province (2008)[12] | ||
Nigeria | National (2017–2018)[13] | ||
Sierra Leone | National (2012)[14,15] | ||
South Sudan | Juba (2015)[16] | National (2017–2018)[13] † | |
Zimbabwe | National (2008–2009),[28] Harare (2018–2019)[10] | Harare (2018–2019) | |
Eastern Mediterranean Region | |||
Yemen | National (2016–2018),[17] Hodeidah (2016–2017)[18] | National[10,13,17,19,21,29] | National (2016–2020) |
Region of the Americas | |||
Haiti | National (2013–2017),[23] Centre (2015–2017),[22] Port au Prince (2010–2011)[24] | National[10,13] | National (2010–2019) |
South-East Asia Region | |||
Bangladesh | Dhaka (2013–2014)[25,26] | ||
Nepal | Kathmandu Valley (2016)[27] |
*Reporting duration is not the same as outbreak duration.
† The report included description of cholera specific RRT, however, they have not responded to a cholera outbreak.