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- Path: sparky!uunet!europa.asd.contel.com!darwin.sura.net!spool.mu.edu!olivea!bunker!sheldev.shel.isc-br.com!wtm
- From: stevel@aio.jsc.nasa.gov (Steve Lancaster)
- Newsgroups: misc.handicap
- Subject: This can be PREVENTED!
- Summary: This can happen here!
- Keywords: polio epidemic vaccine Netherlands
- Message-ID: <26880@handicap.news>
- Date: 22 Dec 92 17:01:06 GMT
- Sender: news@bunker.shel.isc-br.com
- Reply-To: stevel@aio.jsc.nasa.gov (Steve Lancaster)
- Lines: 127
- Approved: wtm@hnews.fidonet.org
- Originator: wtm@sheldev.shel.isc-br.com
-
- Index Number: 26880
-
- Bill, Please "waste" the bandwidth to re-broadcast this portion of the
- HICN newsletter (from sci.med) in the misc.handicap newsgroup.
-
- To all:
-
- This can be prevented. Please ask your friends, who have pre-school age
- children, if their children are completely vaccinated against all
- childhood illness, especially against polio. According to a recently
- released study, the United States ranks 9th (Thats right ninth!) in the
- world in the number of its population completely vaccinated against
- polio.
-
- The polio vaccine is amazingly effective and safe. If you are concerned
- about the rare cases of polio caused by the oral polio vaccine, see your
- physician about having the injected (killed) polio vaccine administered,
- followed by (after a delay to allow immnuity levels to rise) a complete
- course of the oral polio vaccine.
-
- If you have any doubt about the benefits of an effective vaccination
- program, just walk a mile with the braces and crutches of, or roll a mile
- in the wheelchair of someone who had "preventable" polio. They have a
- lifelong reminder of just what the benefits are.
-
- One can only hope that the persons responsible for the decision not to
- have their followers vaccinated, fall into the group of people who contract
- "preventable" polio as a result of this outbreak.
-
- [Forwarded, edited material follows]
-
- Volume 5, Number 6 December 20, 1992
-
- +------------------------------------------------+
- ! !
- ! Health Info-Com Network !
- ! Newsletter !
- +------------------------------------------------+
- Editor: David Dodell, D.M.D.
- 10250 North 92nd Street, Suite 210, Scottsdale, Arizona 85258-4599 USA
- Telephone +1 (602) 860-1121
- FAX +1 (602) 451-1165
-
- Compilation Copyright 1992 by David Dodell, D.M.D. All rights Reserved.
- License is hereby granted to republish on electronic media for which no
- fees are charged, so long as the text of this copyright notice and license
- are attached intact to any and all republished portion or portions.
-
- [Lots of stuff deleted]
-
- The outbreak in the Netherlands of poliomyelitis among unvaccinated
- persons who are members of religious groups that generally do not accept
- vaccination is continuing (1). From September 17 through December 5, 1992, 54
- cases of poliomyelitis were reported to the Netherlands' Office of the Chief
- Medical Officer of Health (Figure 1). Of the 54 patients, 41 (76%) had
- paralytic manifestations of this illness; one neonate died, and 12 patients
- had aseptic meningitis. Fifty-one (94%) of the cases have been laboratory
- confirmed: 40 patients had wild poliovirus type 3 isolated from stool, and 11
- had IgM-specific antibody to poliovirus type 3 suggestive of recent
- infection. All of the reported cases have occurred among unvaccinated (n=53)
- or inadequately vaccinated (n=1) persons belonging to a religious denomination
- that routinely does not accept vaccination. Patients ranged in age from less
- than 1 month to 56 years (mean age: 18.9 years). Of the 12 provinces in the
- Netherlands, seven have reported cases of poliomyelitis; the most severely
- affected provinces are South Holland and Gelderland.
-
- Reported by:
-
- JK van Wijngaarden, MD, Div of Infectious Diseases, Office of the Chief
- Medical Officer of Health; AM van Loon, PhD, P Oostvogel, MD, MN Mulders, MSc,
- Laboratory of Virology, National Institute for Public Health and Environmental
- Protection; J Buitenwerf, PhD, Laboratory of Virology, CF Engelhard, MD, Dept
- of Infectious Diseases, Municipal Health Svcs, Rotterdam, the Netherlands.
- World Health Organization, Geneva. Div of Immunization, National Center for
- Prevention Svcs; Div of Viral and Rickettsial Diseases, National Center for
- Infectious Diseases, CDC.
-
- Editorial Note:
-
- The poliomyelitis epidemic in the Netherlands continues despite control
- measures initiated by the Dutch health authorities, including offering oral
- poliovirus vaccine to all previously unvaccinated persons belonging to
- affected religious groups and to other previously unvaccinated persons aged
- less than 41 years and offering one dose of enhanced-potency inactivated
- poliovirus vaccine to persons who are incompletely vaccinated. Based on the
- ratio of cases of asymptomatic infection to paralytic disease for persons
- infected with poliovirus type 3 (at least 1000:1) (2), an estimated 54,000
- persons in the Netherlands may have been infected with wild poliovirus type 3
- during this outbreak. Therefore, the risk for infection may be greater than
- previously assumed for unvaccinated or inadequately vaccinated travelers to
- the Netherlands. In addition, the potential for spread of this poliovirus to
- other areas (including the North American continent) by asymptomatically
- infected travelers from the Netherlands--even if not directly linked to a
- clinical case--also may be higher than previously assumed.
- To prevent transmission of imported polioviruses and cases of paralytic
- disease in the United States, increased efforts are necessary to vaccinate
- all unvaccinated or inadequately vaccinated persons in the United States in
- accordance with recommendations of the Advisory Committee on Immunization
- Practices (3,4). Public health agencies and health-care providers should
- intensify outreach, especially to unvaccinated persons in these religious
- communities who do not routinely accept vaccination.
- The risk for acquiring poliomyelitis while in the Netherlands is
- considered small because of the excellent sanitation in the country and
- because transmission of the poliovirus has been limited primarily to
- unvaccinated religious groups. Nonetheless, the polio immunity of travelers to
- the Netherlands should be evaluated, and persons with inadequate protection
- should complete a primary vaccination series with three doses of poliovirus
- vaccine before departure. For travelers with a completed primary series of
- poliovirus vaccine, it may be prudent to obtain one dose of poliovirus vaccine
- before departure, especially if extensive travel in the Netherlands or
- contact with persons in the affected religious groups is anticipated.
-
- References
-
- 1. CDC. Poliomyelitis--Netherlands, 1992. MMWR 1992;41:775-8.
-
- 2. Salk JE. Requirements for persistent immunity to poliovirus. Tr Ass Am
- Physicians 1956; 69:105-14
-
- 3. CDC. Poliomyelitis prevention. MMWR 1982;31:22-6,31-4.
-
- 4. CDC. Poliomyelitis prevention: enhanced-potency inactivated poliomyelitis
- vaccine--supplementary statement. MMWR 1987;36:795-8.
-
- ________________________________________________________________________________
- #include <std.disclaimer>
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