1. A 2009 Varicella Outbreak in a Connecticut Residential Facility for Adults with Intellectual Disability.
- Author
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Leung, Jessica, Kudish, Kathy, Wang, Chengbin, Moore, Latetia, Gacek, Paul, Radford, Kay, Lopez, Adriana, Sosa, Lynn, Schmid, D. Scott, Cartter, Matthew, and Bialek, Stephanie
- Subjects
CHICKENPOX ,VARICELLA-zoster virus ,IMMUNOGLOBULIN M ,POLYMERASE chain reaction ,SKIN cancer - Abstract
We investigated a varicella outbreak in a residential facility for adults with intellectual disabilities. A case of varicella was defined as a generalized maculopapular rash that developed in a facility resident or employee. Immunoglobulin M testing was conducted on serologic samples, and polymerase chain reaction testing was performed on environmental and skin lesion samples. Eleven cases were identified among 70 residents and 2 among ~145 staff. An unrecognized case of herpes zoster was the likely source. Case patients first entered any residential facility at a younger age than non-case residents (9.5 vs 15.0 years; P < .01). Varicella zoster virus DNA was detected 2 months after the outbreak in environmental samples obtained from case patients' residences. This outbreak exemplifies the potential for at-risk pockets of varicella-susceptible adults, especially among those who have lived in residential facilities from a young age. Evidence of immunity should be verified for all adults and healthcare staff in similar residential settings. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2010
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