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Measles Outbreak at a Privately Operated Detention Facility: Arizona, 2016

Authors :
Heather Venkat
Manisha Patel
Ken Komatsu
Ahmed M. Kassem
Chia-ping Su
Diana Elson
Paul A. GastaƱaduy
Paul A. Rota
Shane Brady
Graham Briggs
Carole J. Hickman
Susan Robinson
Kathryn Fitzpatrick
Evan Timme
Clancey Hill
Sara Mercader
Eugene Livar
Jabette Franco
Sun Bae Sowers
Jessica Leung
Source :
Clin Infect Dis
Publication Year :
2019

Abstract

Background We describe a measles outbreak and control measures implemented at a privately operated detention facility housing US Immigration and Customs Enforcement detainees in 2016. Methods Case-patients reported fever and rash and were either laboratory-confirmed or had an epidemiological link to a laboratory-confirmed case-patient. Immunoglobulin G (IgG) avidity and plaque reduction neutralization tests distinguished between primary acute and reinfection case-patients. Measles-specific IgG was measured to assess detainee immunity levels. We compared attack rates (ARs) among detainees and staff, between IgG-negative and IgG-positive detainees, and by detainee housing units and sexes. Results We identified 32 measles case-patients (23 detainees, 9 staff); rash onsets were during 6 May-26 June 2016. High IgG avidity and neutralizing-antibody titers >40000 to measles (indicating reinfection) were identified in 18 (95%) and 15 (84%) of 19 tested case-patients, respectively. Among 205 unit A detainees tested for presumptive immunity, 186 (91%) had detectable IgG. Overall, the AR was 1.65%. ARs were significantly higher among detainees in unit A (7.05%) compared with units B-F (0.59%), and among male (2.33%) compared with female detainees (0.38%); however, ARs were not significantly different between detainees and staff or between IgG-negative and IgG-positive detainees. Control measures included the vaccination of 1424 of 1425 detainees and 190 of 510 staff, immunity verification for 445 staff, case-patient isolation, and quarantine of affected units. Conclusions Although ARs were low, measles outbreaks can occur in intense-exposure settings, despite a high population immunity, underscoring the importance of high vaccination coverage and containment in limiting measles transmission.

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Clin Infect Dis
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....ea24b782c8239fdcc93ec0ebebfe5868