Tuesday, May 13, 2008

Austrian and Swiss authorities advise measles vaccination before travelling to the EURO 2008 soccer games

 
From the second week of March 2008, public health authorities in the province of Salzburg observed an increased number of measles cases compared to previous years. Twenty cases of measles had been were notified Austria-wide in 2007, 24 in 2006, 10 in 2005, and 14 in 2004.

The current outbreak has affected, as of 14 April, 202 people in Austria, 53 in Germany, and four in Norway, bringing the total number of cases related to this outbreak to 259. The initial case series investigation revealed that the common link was attendance of an anthroposophic school and day care centre in Salzburg city. The majority of the pupils were not vaccinated against measles.
 
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Since the third week of March 2008, the Austrian health authority has put in place a range of outbreak control measures

  • raising awareness in the overall population and encouraging measles, mumps, rubella (MMR) vaccine uptake, supported by proactive media releases;
  • dissemination of information to schools and nurseries;
  • closure of the particular school and day care centre for one week;
  • post-exposure prophylaxis for contact persons if appropriate;
  • control of vaccination documents in all persons of the affected institution;
  • access restriction to school for all persons with unclear immune status;
  • closure of the particular school and day care centre for one week;
  • after re-opening of the anthroposophic school, access restriction for pupils other than those vaccinated at least once and those with serologically documented previous infection;
  • offering MMR vaccination free of charge to the population younger than 15 years;
  • and alerting health professionals.
Preliminary results of the outbreak investigation indicate the possible source case – a student from an anthroposophic school in Switzerland who visited the anthroposophic school in Salzburg city with colleagues. That student became ill with measles during their stay in Salzburg on 7 March, a week prior to the primary outbreak case in the anthroposophic school in Salzburg (13 March). Since November 2006, Switzerland is experiencing the largest measles outbreak registered in the country since notification for this disease in 1999.

Conclusions
Recently, ultra-orthodox Jewish communities and travelling communities have been implicated in outbreak of measles. The outbreak described here indicates that the anthroposophic community also is an at-risk group of measles spread, because many parents in this group choose not to vaccinate their children with the MMR vaccine. Anthroposophy, based on the writings of the mystic and social philosopher Rudolf Steiner (1861-1925), combines human development with an investigation of the divine spark found in all of nature. The movement has marked education (Waldorf/Steiner schools) and medicine. Anthroposophical doctors emphasise nature-based therapies that support the body's innate healing wisdom. Antibiotics, fever-reducing agents, and vaccinations are used at one's own discretion only.

Although measles has been eliminated or is under control in several EU countries, it is still a public health priority. Organisers of large-scale events attended by international travellers, especially youths, should consider documentation of adequate participant vaccination. In view of the current measles outbreak, Austrian and Swiss authorities advise measles vaccination before travelling to the EURO 2008 soccer games, starting on 7 June, 2008 in Austria and Switzerland.

The current multi-state outbreak of measles once again highlights the need to improve the vaccination coverage in Austria, along with disease surveillance and outbreak-control capabilities. Diligent case investigation of every single measles case is a prerequisite to achieve the goal of measles eradication by 2010, planned by the World Health Organization European Office.

[ Source: Quackwatch.org ]

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