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Epidemiology and Infection logoLink to Epidemiology and Infection
. 1994 Oct;113(2):355–365. doi: 10.1017/s0950268800051785

Outbreak of measles in a teenage school population: the need to immunize susceptible adolescents.

D Morse 1, M O'Shea 1, G Hamilton 1, N Soltanpoor 1, G Leece 1, E Miller 1, D Brown 1
PMCID: PMC2271543  PMID: 7925672

Abstract

An outbreak of measles occurred in a community school and the surrounding area in Crowborough, East Sussex, UK, from December 1992 to February 1993. There were 96 suspected cases reported: 66 cases among 1673 students at one school and 30 community cases. The majority of suspected cases were in those aged 11-17 (78%), 2 cases occurred in infants < 1 year old and 8 cases in adults aged 18 years or over. Data collected on 60 (91%) of the 66 suspect school cases showed 56 (93%) had an illness which met a case definition of measles. Eighteen had confirmatory IgM measles antibody. Two cases were hospitalized. The local percentage uptake for measles immunization for the school age years affected varied between 64% and 84%. A survey of parents showed that approximately 74% of the students attending the school had a history of measles immunization. The immunization rates reported by parents for children who developed measles was 21%, (29% based on GP records) compared with 77% for those who remained well. Vaccine efficacy was estimated to be 92%. This outbreak, along with others recently reported in older unimmunized children in the UK, reinforces the need for catch-up immunization programmes to reach this susceptible group of adolescents.

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Selected References

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