Author:
ADAMS M. S.,CROFT A. M. J.,WINFIELD D. A.,RICHARDS P. R.
Abstract
An outbreak of rubella in April 1996 involved four male British
soldiers deployed to
Bosnia–Herzegovina. All were helicopter ground crew who were
members of the same unit and
who periodically travelled to and worked at forward air refuelling
stations in Bosnia. There
was a potential for spread of the infection to adjacent British units,
to
troops of other nations
in the peacekeeping force, and also to the local civilian population.
The British force included
620 female personnel, some of whom may have been non-immune to rubella.
One pregnant
British servicewoman was repatriated to UK for her own protection.
There was a potential
health risk, including the possibility of congenital rubella syndrome,
in the non-immune wives
and partners of deployed male personnel, as a result of contact during
the mid-tour home
leave of the husbands or partners. The outbreak was monitored through
a medical surveillance
system known as ARRC 97, and was contained by prompt and rigorous
control measures. This
outbreak shows the importance of effective surveillance and of good
microbiology laboratory
support during military operations. The role of immunization against
rubella during future military deployments is discussed.
Publisher
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Subject
Infectious Diseases,Epidemiology
Cited by
13 articles.
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