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Measles among under-9-month-olds in rural Bangladesh: its significance for age at immunization
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Published
1991
Author(s)
Fauveau, Vincent
Chakraborty, J.
Sarder, A.M.
Khan, M.A.
Koenig, M.A.
Metadata
Any decision to modify measles immunization strategies away from the use of the conventional vaccine given to children at 9 months of age to the adoption of recently proposed vaccine strains that can be given to 4-6-month-olds will depend on the age distribution of severe cases of measles in the community. Reported are the results of an analysis of two community-based measles surveillance systems in rural Bangladesh, which found that 17% of all measles cases reported for under-5-year-olds in a nonvaccinated population involved infants aged less than 9 months. In a vaccinated population from the same area, 31% of all measles cases reported for under-5-year-olds occurred among under-9-month-olds. Using a rather restrictive definition for measles-related deaths (those occurring within 6 weeks of the onset of the rash), the proportion of measles-related deaths that occurred before 9 months of age was 13% of all such deaths that were reported
Citation
Bull World Health Organ 1991;69(1):67-72