IMMUNITY TO WHOOPING-COUGH, CHICKEN-POX, AND RUBELLA.

The Lancet ◽  
1930 ◽  
Vol 215 (5570) ◽  
pp. 1194-1195
Keyword(s):  
2019 ◽  
Vol 29 (Supplement_4) ◽  
Author(s):  
M Marino ◽  
A Spadea ◽  
G Furia ◽  
E M Frisicale ◽  
M B Michelazzo ◽  
...  

Abstract Issue/problem One of the duty of a State is to guarantee the protection of the health of all citizens, both safeguarding the sick individual needing care and protecting the healthy individual. An important objective of the vaccination prevention programs is to protect people most at risk of contracting infections because of their health conditions. Description of the problem In April 2019 the District 14 of Local Health Autority Roma 1 was asked by a father of an immunosuppressed child (6 years old), worried about infectious diseases, to verify the safeness of his child school attendance (the first class of primary school). First, a list of the class mates was asked to the school, in order to check their vaccination status by interrogating the web based regional vaccination register. Then, the District asked to the school to plan a meeting with classmates’ parents and teachers, in order to inform about the importance of a complete immunization both for the classmates and the immunosuppressed child protection. Results Preliminary results show that, among 18 classmates, 77.8% had full vaccination coverage for the second dose measles and fourth dose whooping cough (not mandatory for children aged less than 7 years), 22.2% were immunized for chicken pox. Among the parents attending the meeting, 15 agreed to complete their children vaccination cycle, all the teachers agreed to undergo whooping cough and chicken pox vaccination in order to allow a safe school attendance to the immunosuppressed child. Parents and teachers were given an appointment in a vaccination center for the week following the meeting. Lessons It is important to promote a real ’vaccination culture’ starting from the school, in order to develop greater citizenship awareness about the potential of vaccinations and to contrast fake news and ignorance leading to dangerous prejudices. Key messages The active collaboration between institutions (sanitary and school) allows, through the integration between different competences, to achieve health objectives to protect the community. Talking to pupils’ parents about infectious diseases and their prevention makes it possible to increase knowledge and therefore awareness of the importance of adult and children health protection.


2012 ◽  
Vol 9 (74) ◽  
pp. 2167-2180 ◽  
Author(s):  
Amber M. Holdsworth ◽  
Nicholas K.-R. Kevlahan ◽  
David J. D. Earn

Incidence of infection time-series data for the childhood diseases measles, chicken pox, rubella and whooping cough are described in the language of multifractals. We explore the potential of using the wavelet transform maximum modulus (WTMM) method to characterize the multiscale structure of the observed time series and of simulated data generated by the stochastic susceptible-exposed-infectious-recovered (SEIR) epidemic model. The singularity spectra of the observed time series suggest that each disease is characterized by a unique multifractal signature, which distinguishes that particular disease from the others. The wavelet scaling functions confirm that the time series of measles, rubella and whooping cough are clearly multifractal, while chicken pox has a more monofractal structure in time. The stochastic SEIR epidemic model is unable to reproduce the qualitative singularity structure of the reported incidence data: it is too smooth and does not appear to have a multifractal singularity structure. The precise reasons for the failure of the SEIR epidemic model to reproduce the correct multiscale structure of the reported incidence data remain unclear.


PEDIATRICS ◽  
1978 ◽  
Vol 61 (2) ◽  
pp. 251-251
Author(s):  
T. E. C.

No disease has had as many supposed cures as whooping cough. The following Irish cure is surely a novel one. I have not been able to discover whether or not it proved effective. There are many curious customs and superstitions existing even in this enlightened age, and among the most peculiar are some practised by the peasants of Ireland for the cure of various complaints. In certain districts of that country whooping-cough is treated in quite a unique manner. A few months ago much amusement was caused by a case which came before the Coroner's Court in Belfast, in which whooping-cough was treated in a child by passing the sufferer three times under a donkey. Mr. W. R. Le Fann, in his amusing book on Irish life, relates several other instances of a like nature, and draws attention to the fact that nearly all the most popular remedies are for the relief of whooping-cough or chicken-pox. Some donkeys are believed to be possessed of curative virtues in a much higher degree than are others. A man living in County Cork owned an animal which could boast of more than a local reputation. This man used to lead his donkey through the streets of the City of Cork, crying out: "Will any one come under my ass for the chin-cough?" [A name given to whooping-cough in the rural parts of Ireland.] In County Down the charms in vogue were more various. Two kinds of food obtained from two first cousins who are married, and soup made from the tails of mice is there regarded as a panacea for chicken-pox.


The Lancet ◽  
1980 ◽  
Vol 315 (8167) ◽  
pp. 718
Author(s):  
E Miller
Keyword(s):  

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