scholarly journals Measles outbreaks in Germany

2002 ◽  
Vol 6 (12) ◽  
Author(s):  
A Siedler ◽  
W Hellenbrand ◽  
Gernot Rasch

Since November 2001, as in the previous year, several outbreaks of measles have been reported to the German notification system for infectious diseases. These outbreaks have been reported from the states of Bavaria, Lower Saxony, and North Rhine Westphalia.

2020 ◽  
Vol 41 (S1) ◽  
pp. s431-s432
Author(s):  
Rachael Snyders ◽  
Hilary Babcock ◽  
Christopher Blank

Background: Immunization resistance is fueling a resurgence of vaccine-preventable diseases in the United States, where several large measles outbreaks and 1,282 measles cases were reported in 2019. Concern about these measles outbreaks prompted a large healthcare organization to develop a preparedness plan to limit healthcare-associated transmission. Verification of employee rubeola immunity and immunization when necessary was prioritized because of transmission risk to nonimmune employees and role of the healthcare personnel in responding to measles cases. Methods: The organization employs ∼31,000 people in diverse settings. A multidisciplinary team was formed by infection prevention, infectious diseases, occupational health, and nursing departments to develop the preparedness plan. Immunity was monitored using a centralized database. Employees without evidence of immunity were asked to provide proof of vaccination, defined by the CDC as 2 appropriately timed doses of rubeola-containing vaccine, or laboratory confirmation of immunity. Employees were given 30 days to provide documentation or to obtain a titer at the organization’s expense. Staff with negative titers were given 2 weeks to coordinate with the occupational heath department for vaccination. Requests for medical or religious accommodations were evaluated by occupational heath staff, the occupational heath medical director, and the human resources department. All employees were included, though patient-interfacing employees in departments considered higher risk were prioritized. These areas were the emergency, dermatology, infectious diseases, labor and delivery, obstetrics, and pediatrics departments. Results: At the onset of the initiative in June 2019, 4,009 employees lacked evidence of immunity. As of November 2019, evidence of immunity had been obtained for 3,709 employees (92.5%): serological evidence of immunity was obtained for 2,856 (71.2%), vaccine was administered to 584 (14.6%), and evidence of previous vaccination was provided by 269 (6.7%). Evidence of immunity has not been documented for 300 (7.5%). The organization administered 3,626 serological tests and provided 997 vaccines, costing ∼$132,000. Disposition by serological testing is summarized in Table 1. Conclusions: A measles preparedness strategy should include proactive assessment of employees’ immune status. It is possible to expediently assess a large number of employees using a multidisciplinary team with access to a centralized database. Consideration may be given to prioritization of high-risk departments and patient-interfacing roles to manage workload.Funding: NoneDisclosures: None


2002 ◽  
Vol 6 (8) ◽  
Author(s):  
V Hasseltvedt ◽  
E A Høiby

Notification of cases of systemic pneumococcal disease has been mandatory since Norway’s notification system for infectious diseases (Meldingssystem for smittsomme sykdommer, MSIS) was implemented at a national level in 1975. The legislation was updated with the introduction of the Infectious Diseases Control Act in 1995.


2010 ◽  
Vol 15 (21) ◽  
Author(s):  
E Jelastopulu ◽  
G Merekoulias ◽  
E C Alexopoulos

This study investigates the completeness of the reporting of infectious diseases in the prefecture of Achaia, western Greece in the period of 1999-2004. We collected hospital records relating to infectious diseases retrospectively from three major hospitals in the region and compared the records to corresponding records at the prefectural public health department (PHD). After record-linkage and cross-validation a total of 1,143 notifiable cases were identified in the three hospitals, of which 707 were reported to the PHD of Achaia, resulting in an observed underreporting of infectious diseases of 38% during the study period. At prefecture level, a further 259 cases were notified by other sources, mainly by the fourth hospital of the region not included in our study, resulting in a total of 966 cases reported to the PHD; 73% of these were reported from the three hospitals included in our study, 27% were notified by the fourth hospital not included in our study and less then 0,3% by physicians working in a private practice or health centre. Meningitis (51%), tuberculosis (12%) and salmonellosis (8%) were the most frequently reported diseases followed by hospitalised cases of varicella (7%), brucellosis (6%) and hepatitis (6%). During the study period, clustering of specific diseases like brucellosis, meningitis, mumps, and salmonellosis was observed, indicating possible outbreaks. Our results show that notification system needs to be improved, in order to ensure proper health resources allocation and implementation of focused prevention and control strategies.


2012 ◽  
Vol 17 (8) ◽  
Author(s):  
L Mughini-Gras ◽  
C Graziani ◽  
F Biorci ◽  
A Pavan ◽  
R Magliola ◽  
...  

We describe trends in the occurrence of acute infectious gastroenteritis (1992 to 2009) and food-borne disease outbreaks (1996 to 2009) in Italy. In 2002, the Piedmont region implemented a surveillance system for early detection and control of food-borne disease outbreaks; in 2004, the Lombardy region implemented a system for surveillance of all notifiable human infectious diseases. Both systems are internet based. We compared the regional figures with the national mean using official notification data provided by the National Infectious Diseases Notification System (SIMI) and the National Institute of Statistics (ISTAT), in order to provide additional information about the epidemiology of these diseases in Italy. When compared with the national mean, data from the two regional systems showed a significant increase in notification rates of non-typhoid salmonellosis and infectious diarrhoea other than non-typhoid salmonellosis, but for food-borne disease outbreaks, the increase was not statistically significant. Although the two regional systems have different objectives and structures, they showed improved sensitivity regarding notification of cases of acute infectious gastroenteritis and, to a lesser extent, food-borne disease outbreaks, and thus provide a more complete picture of the epidemiology of these diseases in Italy.


2010 ◽  
Vol 139 (4) ◽  
pp. 516-523 ◽  
Author(s):  
S. TANIHARA ◽  
E. OKAMOTO ◽  
T. IMATOH ◽  
Y. MOMOSE ◽  
A. KAETSU ◽  
...  

SUMMARYInadequate notification is a recognized problem of measles surveillance systems in many countries, and it should be monitored using multiple data sources. We compared data from three different surveillance sources in 2007: (1) the sentinel surveillance system mandated by the Act on Prevention of Infectious Diseases and Medical Care for Patients Suffering Infectious Diseases, (2) the mandatory notification system run by the Aichi prefectural government, and (3) health insurance claims (HICs) submitted to corporate health insurance societies. For each dataset, we examined the number of measles cases by month, within multiple age groups, and in two categories of diagnostic test groups. We found that the sentinel surveillance system underestimated the number of adult measles cases. We also found that HIC data, rather than mandatory notification data, were more likely to come from individuals who had undergone laboratory tests to confirm their measles diagnosis. Thus, HIC data may provide a supplementary and readily available measles surveillance data source.


2009 ◽  
Vol 5 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
-- --

<p>Deskriptiv infeksjonsepidemiologi:</p><p><em>Anne Eskild</em>, Innledning<br /><em>Preben Aavitsland</em>, Description and use of the Norwegian notification system for infectious diseases<br /><em>Einar Heldal</em>, Underrapportering av tuberkulose<br /><em>Anne Eskild og Helvi Holm Samdal</em>, T-celle lymfotropt virus type II (HTLV-II) infeksjon blant HIV-smittede intravanøse staffmisbrukere<br /><em>Per Bergjø og medarbeidere</em>, Forekomst av HIV i Tanzania<br /><em>Yngvar Tveten og Bjørn-Erik Kristiansen</em>, Typing av staphylococcus aureus for epidemiologiske formål<br /><em>Preben Aavitsland og Øyvind Nilsen</em>, A new anonymous case reporting system for sexually transmitted diseases in Norway</p><p>Risikofaktorer for infeksjonssykdommer:</p><p><em>Georg Kapperud</em>, Risikofaktorer for campylobacter-infeksjon i Norge<br /><em>Per Nafstad og medarbeidere</em>, Passiv røyking og nedre luftveisinfeksjoner blant små barn. Er det en sammenheng også i Norge?<br /><em>Eystein Skjerve</em>, Endring i mønsteret av næringsmiddelbårne sjukdommer<br /><em>Andrew Jenkins og medarbeidere</em>, Human papillomavirus types and cervical cancer in Norway<br /><em>Marit Grønning</em>, Mulig assosiasjon mellom infeksjoner i barneårene og utvikling av multippel sklerose?</p><p>Matematiske modeller for å forstå epidemiers dynamikk:</p><p><em>Hein Stigum</em>, Matematisk modellering av seksuelt overførbare sykdommer</p><p>Studier av infeksjonsforebyggende strategier:</p><p><em>Gunnar Bjune og Preben Aavitsland</em>, Hvordan studere effekten av vaksinering?<br /><em>Bjørn-Erik Kristiansen og Yngvar Tveten</em>, Smitteoppsporing og smittesanering ved tilfeller av meningokokksykdom</p><p>Andre artikler:</p><p><em>Torgeir Bruun Wyller</em>, Egenrapportering av hjerneslag. Validitet og konsekvenser for prevalensestimater</p>


2014 ◽  
Vol 143 (4) ◽  
pp. 687-694 ◽  
Author(s):  
D. ZIEHM ◽  
S. RETTENBACHER-RIEFLER ◽  
L. KREIENBROCK ◽  
A. CAMPE ◽  
M. PULZ ◽  
...  

SUMMARYWe conducted a case-control study based on 884 laboratory-confirmed sporadicSalmonellacases reported to the German infectious disease notification system. For controls, we recruited 510 rotavirus cases via the same system. Univariable and multivariable logistic regression analyses were performed separately for children aged 0–3 years and 4–14 years. In both age groups, the highest odds ratios (OR) were found for raw ground pork consumption [0–3 years: OR 8·6, 95% confidence interval (CI) 2·4–30·8; 4–14 years: OR 4·5, 95% CI 1·1–19]. Further risk factors were exposure to animals (OR 1·6, 95% CI 1·1–2·1), consumption of poultry (OR 1·5, 95% CI 1·1–2·1), food items containing eggs (OR 1·5, 95% CI 1·1–2) and black pepper (OR 1·7, 95% CI 1·1–3·5) in children aged 0–3 years, and consumption of uncooked pork sausage (OR 3·6, 95% CI 1·4–9·3) in children aged 4–14 years. This study highlights the significance of raw pork products (‘Mett’ in German) as risk factors for sporadic salmonellosis in children in Germany.


2021 ◽  
Vol 53 ◽  
Author(s):  
Hyeri Seok ◽  
Dae Won Park ◽  
Kwang Nam Kim ◽  
Min Ja Kim ◽  
Sung-Han Kim ◽  
...  

2001 ◽  
Vol 5 (44) ◽  
Author(s):  
V Hasseltvedt ◽  
E A Høiby

The modernised national notification system for infectious diseases in Norway (Meldingssystem for smittsomme sykdommer, MSIS) was implemented on a national level in 1975. Cases of systemic group A streptococcal (GAS) disease (diagnosed by blood culture or cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) positives, or both) have been notifiable since the beginning. With the introduction of the Infectious Diseases Control Act in 1995, severe invasive GAS disease (including necrotising fasciitis) with or without a positive blood culture was included in the MSIS database.


Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document