Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
2411034 | Vaccine | 2005 | 5 Pages |
Abstract
Two outbreaks of hepatitis A started almost simultaneously in a maternal school and in a day care centre located at opposite sides of Florence, Italy, at the end of 2002. Both of them originated from immigrant children, and in both cases, hepatitis A was initially not recognised due to aspecific symptoms. While vaccination of contacts started with delay in the first outbreak, the same intervention was organised and performed in 3 days in the other. The outbreak starting in the maternal school caused 30 notified cases, plus 7 cases diagnosed retrospectively. Nine of them were in a secondary school, where vaccination (in accordance with the Italian national guidelines on hepatitis A (HA) vaccination) had been started only after a secondary case occurred. Only three cases occurred overall in the other outbreak starting in the day care centre, where >80% of infants, children and personnel were immunised. Although few asymptomatic infections probably occurred, no source of contagion existed any longer 2 months after immunisation. A rapid vaccination of school and family contacts of hepatitis A cases after the first case (irrespective of school grade) seems to play an important role to shorten outbreak duration.
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Authors
Paolo Bonanni, Anita Franzin, Chiara Staderini, Maria Pitta, Giorgio Garofalo, Rossella Cecconi, Maria Grazia Santini, Piero Lai, Barbara Innocenti,