• Am. J. Trop. Med. Hyg. · Oct 2017

    Building and Rebuilding: The National Public Health Laboratory Systems and Services Before and After the Earthquake and Cholera Epidemic, Haiti, 2009-2015.

    • Frantz Jean Louis, Josiane Buteau, Jacques Boncy, Renette Anselme, Magalie Stanislas, Mary C Nagel, Stanley Juin, Macarthur Charles, Robert Burris, Eva Antoine, Chunfu Yang, Mireille Kalou, John Vertefeuille, Barbara J Marston, David W Lowrance, and Varough Deyde.
    • Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, Port-au-Prince, Haiti.
    • Am. J. Trop. Med. Hyg. 2017 Oct 1; 97 (4_Suppl): 21-27.

    AbstractBefore the 2010 devastating earthquake and cholera outbreak, Haiti's public health laboratory systems were weak and services were limited. There was no national laboratory strategic plan and only minimal coordination across the laboratory network. Laboratory capacity was further weakened by the destruction of over 25 laboratories and testing sites at the departmental and peripheral levels and the loss of life among the laboratory health-care workers. However, since 2010, tremendous progress has been made in building stronger laboratory infrastructure and training a qualified public health laboratory workforce across the country, allowing for decentralization of access to quality-assured services. Major achievements include development and implementation of a national laboratory strategic plan with a formalized and strengthened laboratory network; introduction of automation of testing to ensure better quality of results and diversify the menu of tests to effectively respond to outbreaks; expansion of molecular testing for tuberculosis, human immunodeficiency virus, malaria, diarrheal and respiratory diseases; establishment of laboratory-based surveillance of epidemic-prone diseases; and improvement of the overall quality of testing. Nonetheless, the progress and gains made remain fragile and require the full ownership and continuous investment from the Haitian government to sustain these successes and achievements.

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