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Industry: Email Alert RSS FeedOutbreak of measles in a private international school - Geneva, Switzerland, 1989
Morbidity and Mortality Weekly Report, July 27, 1990
On March 3, 1989, the medical adviser of a private international school in Geneva telephoned the department of the Cantonal Medical Officer to report the occurrence of five cases of measles. The Geneva health services rapidly implemented prospective and retrospective surveillance that identified 12 other cases; in the subsequent 2-week period, nine new cases occurred, bringing the total to 26 cases among the 741 students at the school (Table 1).
The first case occurred during the week of january 11-17 (Figure 1) in a student from a central African country who had spent the Christmas holidays with his family. After report of the first cases, an information letter in English and French was sent to the parents, and a meeting was arranged at the school in preparation for an internal
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TABLE 1. Country of origin of students and number of measles cases observed during an outbreak in a private international school -- Geneva, Switzerland, January--March 1989
Country No. students No. cases United States of America 125 4 Switzerland 103 1 United Kingdom 43 0 France 40 2 Italy 36 4 Iran (Islamic Republic of) 23 0 Japan 21 0 Spain 18 2 Lebanon 17 0 Netherlands 16 1 Libyan Arab Jamahiriya 14 1 Finland 13 0 Greece 13 3 Egypt 12 1 Other (*) 247 8 Total 741 26
(*) Includes Andorra, Bahrain, Cyprus, Mexico, Saudi Arabia, Sweden, Turkey, and Zaire; altogether more than 50 countries.
vaccination campaign. A series of articles on measles epidemics in communities were provided for the school nurse and made available to students and parents, and two vaccination sessions were organized at the school.
Students were not vaccinated if they submitted documentation of measles vaccination after the age of 15 months or a medical certificate stating that they had already had measles. Written authorization from their parents was required for their vaccination at the school. Boarders, whose parents generally could not be reached within the desired period, were vaccinated under the responsibility of the school.
Of the 255 students not already vaccinated against measles, 192 (26% of all students) were vaccinated during sessions organized at the school. The others were not vaccinated, either because they produced documentation of previous vaccination (198 [27%]); they were sick, absent, or had been vaccinated by a private physician when the epidemic occurred (63 [9%]); or the parents had not understood the information letter (288 [39%]) (in this case a second letter was sent). No new cases occurred after March 15.
For more than one third of the students, parents failed to reply with permission to vaccinate. Subsequently, the Youth Health Department sent recommendations to the school concerning the maintenance of students' medical records and the possibility of improved future collaboration.
Measles elimination will prove difficult in Switzerland because of the following constraints: 1) measles vaccination is not compulsory, 2) there is a shortage of data on vaccination coverage, 3) communicable diseases are not reported by practitioners, and 4) the structures capable of taking effective action in the event of an outbreak are inadequate.
Adapted from the Weekly Epidemiological Record 1990;65:173-5. Based on a report by the Institute of Social and Preventive Medicine, University of Geneva. Div. of Immunization, Center for Prevention Svcs, CDC.
Editorial Note: This outbreak illustrates the potential for measles transmission in school settings, in particular when vaccination coverage is low. It is encouraging that health authorities in Switzerland took aggressive steps to try to control the outbreak. Low vaccination coverage among school-aged children was also felt to be a contributing factor during a recent communitywide outbreak of measles in Quebec [1].
Documentation of measles vaccination is not required for school attendees in Quebec [1] or Seitzerland. Many students who lack documentation of vaccination probably receive measles vaccine as a result of routine childhood vaccination programs; however, lack of systematic vaccination in this population leads to accumulation of susceptibles, and measles outbreaks can occur. School vaccination requirements in the United States have been highly effective in increasing vaccine coverage among school-aged children and in decreasing the incidence of measles [2].
Outbreaks of measles in school settings can occur even with universal school vaccination requirements and high vaccination coverage. Some persons may remain susceptible as a result of exemptions to vaccination, and 2%-5% will be susceptible because of vaccine failure. In 1989, 170 measles outbreaks in the United States involving predominantly school-aged persons accounted for 32% of all reported cases. As many as 89% of patients in these outbreaks had been vaccinated on or after their first birthday [3]. Routine administration of a second dose of measles vaccine will help to reduce the number of school-aged children who are susceptible because of vaccine failure and decrease the likelihood of outbreaks in this setting [4].
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