Author:
SANTANIELLO-NEWTON A.,HUNTER P. R.
Abstract
We describe an outbreak of meningitis at a Sudanese refugee camp in Northern Uganda that
lasted over a year from February 1994. Some 291 cases occurred in a refugee population of
96860 (averaged over the year), an attack rate of 0·30%. The case fatality rate was 13·3%.
From a small number of samples taken for culture N. meningitidis serogroup A, serotype
21[ratio ]P1·9, clone III-1 was identified as the causative organism. The outbreak started in the
camp's reception centre which had the highest attack rate. Spread from the reception centre
was rapid and the epidemic reached its peak within 3 weeks. All of the cases amongst residents
of the reception centre reported having had meningococcal vaccine before arriving at the camp
and so were not immunized on arrival as would normally have been the case. Some 37547
doses of meningococcal vaccine were used in a mass immunization campaign in February and
March 1994. Following this the outbreak was declared over in August 1994 when no cases
were registered for 2 consecutive weeks. However, following a massive and sudden influx of
refugees a new epidemic peak occurred during February 1995. Many of these new refugees
were also not immunized on arrival due to pressures of numbers. A follow-up immunization
campaign then brought an end to the outbreak. Our experience confirms the effectiveness of
timely and high-coverage immunization campaigns in controlling group A meningitis outbreaks
amongst refugees in Africa.
Publisher
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Subject
Infectious Diseases,Epidemiology
Cited by
31 articles.
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