Selected article for: "high coverage and vaccination coverage"

Author: Kayano, Taishi; Lee, Hyojung; Kinoshita, Ryo; Nishiura, Hiroshi
Title: Identifying geographic areas at risk of rubella epidemics in Japan using seroepidemiological data
  • Cord-id: fkmxfmto
  • Document date: 2020_9_30
  • ID: fkmxfmto
    Snippet: OBJECTIVE: Even with relatively high vaccination coverage, Japan experienced rubella epidemics in 2012–2014 and 2018–2019, which were fueled by untraced imported cases. We aimed to develop a risk map for rubella epidemics in Japan by geographic location via analysis of seroepidemiological data and accounting for the abundance of foreign visitors. METHODS: Geographic age distribution and seroprevalence were used to compute the age- and sex-dependent next-generation matrix in each region. We c
    Document: OBJECTIVE: Even with relatively high vaccination coverage, Japan experienced rubella epidemics in 2012–2014 and 2018–2019, which were fueled by untraced imported cases. We aimed to develop a risk map for rubella epidemics in Japan by geographic location via analysis of seroepidemiological data and accounting for the abundance of foreign visitors. METHODS: Geographic age distribution and seroprevalence were used to compute the age- and sex-dependent next-generation matrix in each region. We computed the probability of a major epidemic using the assumed number of untraced imported rubella cases proportionally modeled to the number of foreign travelers. RESULTS: Risks of a major epidemic were high in areas with capital cities, while areas with a greater fraction of older people yielded smaller effective reproduction numbers, a lower volume of foreign travelers, and thus a lower probability of a major epidemic. The volume of susceptible adult males was larger in urban geographic regions, having a greater number of foreign travelers than remote areas. CONCLUSIONS: Our findings are consistent with the observation of multiple large clusters of rubella cases in urban areas during 2012–2014 and 2018–2019. Should a future rubella epidemic occur, it will likely be in geographic areas with capital cities.

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