Nederlands Tijdschrift voor Geneeskunde
Volume 142, Issue 10, 1998, Pages 521-525

Hepatitiis A epidemic in Heerlen late in 1996; importance of immunisation of immigrant children [Hepatitis-A-epidemie in heerlen, eind 1996; het belang van immunisatie van migrantenkinderen] (Article)

Hoebe C.J.P.A.*
  • a GGD Oostelijk Zuid-Limburg, Postbus 155, 6400 AD Heerlen, Netherlands

Abstract

Objective. Description of a local epidemic of hepatitis A in 196 in Heerlen, the Netherlands. Design. Descriptive. Setting. Regional Health Service Oostelijk Zuid-Limburg, Heerlen, the Netherlands. Method. Semistructured questions were asked by telephone of patients, patients' parents, general practitioners, the daycare centre manager and the head of the primary school, to collect information about cases. Results. In the last four months of 1996, 41 persons (23 children and 18 adolescents and adults) were infected in a city of some 50,000 inhabitants. The primary case was most likely a three-year-old boy from Moroccan parents, who prior to his disease had visited his family in Morocco and although nonimmune had not been immunised. From the boy's family the virus spread to a day-care centre and a primary school. In this epidemic patients of 15 different general practitioners were affected. An intervention with hepatitis A immunoglobulin in the day-care centre and primary school and immunoglobulin prophylaxis in affected families was effective in halting the epidemic. Conclusion. Special attention is needed for immunisation of children of travelling immigrant parents. Immunoglobulin prophylaxis in affected families and notification of cases to the regional health institute by general practitioners may prevent cases. Serological notification by the regional laboratory as well as notification of infectious diseases by day-care centres and schools will add to the regional infection surveillance and control.

Author Keywords

[No Keywords available]

Index Keywords

primary school Netherlands immigrant Disease Transmission, Horizontal human hepatitis A middle aged Hepatitis A Vaccines day care Humans Adolescent male female clinical article Disease Outbreaks Article epidemic adult childhood disease virus transmission Emigration and Immigration Viral Hepatitis Vaccines hepatitis A antibody immunization Morocco Hepatitis A Virus, Human Child

Link
https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-0032492452&partnerID=40&md5=886fea81fe088f2a02a3118ed0e746b4

ISSN: 00282162
Cited by: 8
Original Language: Dutch