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Epidemiology and Infection logoLink to Epidemiology and Infection
. 1998 Dec;121(3):637–643. doi: 10.1017/s0950268898001587

Immunosurveillance and the evaluation of national immunization programmes: a population-based approach.

H E De Melker 1, M A Conyn-van Spaendonck 1
PMCID: PMC2809572  PMID: 10030714

Abstract

Mass vaccination can change the epidemiological dynamics of infectious diseases. It may result in a limited persistence of natural and vaccine-induced immunity and a higher mean age of infection, which may lead to a greater risk of complications. The epidemiological situation should be monitored and immunosurveillance based on the assessment of specific antibodies against vaccine-preventable diseases in human serum is one of the tools. In order to estimate the immunity of the Dutch population reliably, a large-scale, population-based, collection of serum samples was established (8359 sera in a nation-wide sampling and 1589 sera from municipalities with low vaccine coverage). In contrast to collecting residual sera from laboratories, this approach gains extensive information by means of a questionnaire regarding the determinants of the immune status and the risk factors for the transmission of infectious diseases in general. The population-based approach gives a better guarantee that the data are representative than collecting sera from laboratories does.

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