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Volume 31, Number 2—February 2025
Research

Epidemiologic and Genomic Surveillance of Vibrio cholerae and Effectiveness of Single-Dose Oral Cholera Vaccine, Democratic Republic of the Congo

Christine Marie George1Comments to Author , Alves Namunesha1, Kelly Endres, Willy Felicien, Presence Sanvura, Jean-Claude Bisimwa, Jamie Perin, Justin Bengehya, Jean Claude Kulondwa, Ghislain Maheshe, Cirhuza Cikomola, Lucien Bisimwa, Alain Mwishingo, David A. Sack, and Daryl Domman
Author affiliation: Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health, Baltimore, Maryland, USA (C.M. George, K. Endres, J. Perin, D.A. Sack); Université Catholique de Bukavu, Bukavu, Democratic Republic of the Congo (A. Namunesha, W. Felicien, P. Sanvura, J.-C. Bisimwa, G. Maheshe, C. Cikomola, L. Bisimwa, A. Mwishingo); Ministère de la Santé, Bukavu (J. Bengehya, J.-C. Kulondwa); University of New Mexico Health Sciences Center, Albuquerque, New Mexico, USA (D. Domman)

Main Article

Figure 1

Location of patients with diarrhea and the corresponding healthcare facilities where they sought treatment in a surveillance study of Vibrio cholerae and effectiveness of single-dose oral cholera vaccine, Democratic Republic of the Congo, 2020–2024. A total of 115 healthcare facilities and 1,098 households of patients with diarrhea are shown; 56 patient households had missing Global Positioning System coordinates.

Figure 1. Location of patients with diarrhea and the corresponding healthcare facilities where they sought treatment in a surveillance study of Vibrio cholerae and effectiveness of single-dose oral cholera vaccine, Democratic Republic of the Congo, 2020–2024. A total of 115 healthcare facilities and 1,098 households of patients with diarrhea are shown; 56 patient households had missing Global Positioning System coordinates.

Main Article

1These first authors contributed equally to this article.

Page created: December 30, 2024
Page updated: January 31, 2025
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