AUTHOR=Tewo Stephane , Thierno Balde , Banza Freddy M. , Mahamat Idriss M. , Eric-Didier N'dri K. , Raoul Djinguebey N. , Otshudiema John Otokoye , Jorge Castilla Echenique , Brahimi Moussa , Maina Djoumbarina , Egmond Evers , Woung Marcel , Shimizu Kazuki , Pavlin Boris I. , Tamuzi Jacques L. , Katoto Patrick D. M. C. , Wiysonge Charles S. , Anya Blanche-Philomene Melanga TITLE=Evaluation of the implementation of the EWARS Mobile epidemiological surveillance tool in Sudanese refugee camps in Eastern Chad: a retrospective and population-based surveillance study JOURNAL=Frontiers in Epidemiology VOLUME=Volume 5 - 2025 YEAR=2025 URL=https://www.frontiersin.org/journals/epidemiology/articles/10.3389/fepid.2025.1604446 DOI=10.3389/fepid.2025.1604446 ISSN=2674-1199 ABSTRACT=BackgroundThe escalation of the conflict in Sudan has created a major humanitarian challenge for neighboring countries, especially in the Eastern regions of Chad. This humanitarian setting's health needs are unique in that they are more vulnerable to both outbreak-prone disease and a lack of essential services. To address these challenges, the World Health Organization has supported implementing the Early Warning Alert and Response System (EWARS) Mobile. The purpose of this study was to evaluate the application of the EWARS Mobile epidemiological surveillance tool in Sudanese children’s refugees in Eastern Chad.MethodsThis was a retrospective and population-based surveillance study that provided an overview of the pattern of cases and deaths in time and space related to potential outbreaks.ResultsIn total, 1,645 alerts were reported among children in vulnerable provinces of Quaddai, Sila, and Wadi Fira. There were 41,738 alerted cases and 236 deaths, for a 0.56% projected fatality rate. The EWARS Mobile successfully reported alerted increases in cases of acute flaccid paralysis (AFP), acute jaundice syndrome (AJS), acute respiratory infection (ARI), acute watery diarrhea in children (AWD), measles, meningitis, diphtheria, neonatal tetanus (NT), dengue, dysentery, and atypical events in vulnerable children in time and space. Case reporting, alert recording, and weekly reporting were completed successfully at all levels (camps, district, zone, and province) (≥80% completion rate). In contrast, the timeliness of alert reporting, weekly reporting, and probable outbreaks did not perform well across levels (≥80% timeliness rate). Epidemic curves indicated multiple probable outbreak types, characterized by a point source (AJS and AWD under 5 years), common source (AWD in 5 years and above), propagated source (ARI and dysentery), and intermittent source (AFP, measles, meningitis, diphtheria, NT, and unusual events). The sensitivity and positive predictive value were estimated at 81% (79%–83%) and 72.0% (68%–75%), respectively.ConclusionsThe EWARS Mobile is a practical solution for Eastern Chad provinces to implement throughout the pre-epidemic and outbreak periods in vulnerable children in this severe humanitarian crisis. However, efforts should be made to improve timeliness indicators at all subnational levels and incorporate alarm indicators.