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Towards elimination: measles susceptibility in Australia and 17 European countries

Authors :
Nick Andrews
Annedore Tischer
Annette Siedler
Richard G Pebody
Christopher Barbara
Suzanne Cotter
Arnis Duks
Nina Gacheva
Kriz Bohumir
Kari Johansen
Joel Mossong
Fernando de Ory
Katarina Prosenc
Margareta Sláciková
Heidi Theeten
Marios Zarvou
Adriana Pistol
Kalman Bartha
Dani Cohen
Jo Backhouse
Algirdas Griskevicius
Source :
Bulletin of the World Health Organization, Vol 86, Iss 3, Pp 197-204 (2008)
Publication Year :
2008
Publisher :
The World Health Organization, 2008.

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: To evaluate age-specific measles susceptibility in Australia and 17 European countries. METHODS: As part of the European Sero-Epidemiology Network 2 (ESEN2), 18 countries collected large national serum banks between 1996 and 2004. These banks were tested for measles IgG and the results converted to a common unitage to enable valid intercountry comparisons. Historical vaccination and disease incidence data were also collected. Age-stratified population susceptibility levels were compared to WHO European Region targets for measles elimination of < 15% in those aged 2-4 years, < 10% in 5-9-year-olds and < 5% in older age groups. FINDINGS: Seven countries (Czech Republic, Hungary, Luxembourg, Spain, Slovakia, Slovenia and Sweden) met or came very close to the elimination targets. Four countries (Australia, Israel, Lithuania and Malta) had susceptibility levels above WHO targets in some older age groups indicating possible gaps in protection. Seven countries (Belgium, Bulgaria, Cyprus, England and Wales, Ireland, Latvia and Romania) were deemed to be at risk of epidemics as a result of high susceptibility in children and also, in some cases, adults. CONCLUSION: Although all countries now implement a two-dose measles vaccination schedule, if the WHO European Region target of measles elimination by 2010 is to be achieved higher routine coverage as well as vaccination campaigns in some older age cohorts are needed in some countries. Without these improvements, continued measles transmission and outbreaks are expected in Europe.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
00429686
Volume :
86
Issue :
3
Database :
Directory of Open Access Journals
Journal :
Bulletin of the World Health Organization
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
edsdoj.4169709cbf7474e85f794b3038d9ef7
Document Type :
article