Abstract:
Background: measles remains a public health concern in Uganda. With frequent outbreaks despite
vaccination efforts. In January 2024, kyenjojo District experienced a measles outbreak with over 70
cases and 3 deaths, the 7-1-7 metric, endorsed by WHO provides a standardized framework to
evaluate outbreak response by assessing detection within 7 days, notification within 1 day and
response initiation within 7 days. We evaluated the measles outbreak response in Kyenjojo District,
Uganda, using the 7-1-7 framework to assess timeliness detection, notification, and response.
Methods: We conducted a cross sectional study that collected quantitative data from
epidemiological reports, outbrek line lists. We analysed epidemiological and surveillance data to
quantify timelines for detection, notification, and response. Additionally,we uncovered facilitators
and bottlenecks influencing outbreak management.
Results: Only the notification milestone met the 7-1-7 benchmark, occurring within one day of
laboratory confirmation. Detection was delayed by 16 days and response initiation was on the day
of notification however, final early response actions were completed after 11 days, exceeding the
seven-day threshold. Facilitators included information from some proactive health workers, VHT,
district leadership, structured coordination, and timely laboratory confirmation. Barriers stemmed
from weak VHT-facility linkages, delayed partner mobilisation, logistical gaps, and limited
training, insufficient community reporting, and operational fatigue.
Conclusions: our study revealed timeliness gaps in detection and full response initiation, however
the district achieved timely notification. While Uganda’s surveillance system demonstrated strength
in notification, frontline response remains hindered by human resource structural challenges at the
District and facility level. Systemic weakness in surveillance, logistics and preparedness curtailed
outbreak control despite strong leadership and partner support.
Recommendation: Strengthen community and facility surveillance through VHT engagement;
institionalize of digtal platforms for rapid notification; pre-position vaccines and essential supplies;
operationalize and fund district response plans; scale up adoption of the 7-1-7 metric locally to
improve outbreak response performance.