Health Monitoring in Mayotte. Update as of November 24, 2023.

Key points

Gastroenteritis

  • The seasonal GEA outbreak has entered the post-epidemic phase;

  • The rate of emergency department visits for gastroenteritis is declining and is at a level comparable to that of previous seasons during the same period;

  • Enteropathogenic Escherichia coli (EPEC) and non-adherent Escherichia coli (DAEC) have been identified in the majority of stool samples analyzed over the past 4 weeks, while the proportion of rotavirus—which has been declining for several weeks—fell below 5% in week 46;

  • Sales of anti-diarrheal medications and oral rehydration solutions (ORS) in pharmacies are decreasing and are at the level of the highest sales rate for anti-diarrheal medications and ORS recorded during the same period in 2014–2022;

  • Since the start of the GEA outbreak, 19 severe cases have been admitted to the intensive care unit at the Mayotte Hospital Center (CHM); no new cases admitted to the ICU have been reported since Week 36.

Bronchiolitis

  • Emergency department visits remain at a low level, lower than in previous years. No circulation of respiratory syncytial virus (RSV), the primary cause of bronchiolitis.

Influenza

  • The positivity rate for Influenza A(H3N2) remains stable at a high level; the epidemic phase began in week 44. In total, since the start of the epidemic, 9 severe cases of influenza have been admitted to the ICU.

COVID-19

  • Increased circulation of the virus since week 43 after several months of very low circulation; 35 RT-PCR-positive cases in week 46. Three severe cases admitted to intensive care in weeks 45 and 46.

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