Abstract
From March to July 1996 a measles outbreak occurred in northern Luxembourg with 110
reported cases centered around two primary schools (85 cases) and the surrounding community
(25 cases). Eighty four suspected cases were confirmed serologically. Vaccine coverage was
estimated from questionnaire-based surveys at the two primary schools to be 70 and 76%,
respectively. Vaccine efficacy during the outbreak was estimated to be 94.6% [95% confidence
interval (CI) 90·4–97·0]. Using the information from the school surveys, we obtained estimates
of the basic reproduction number of measles of 7·7 (95% CI 4·4–11·0) and 6·2 (95% CI
3·5–8·9), respectively. Assuming a 95% vaccine efficacy, these estimates correspond to minimal
vaccine coverages of 91·6% (95% CI 81·4–95·7) and 88·3% (95% CI 75·5–93·4) which would
have been necessary to minimize the chances of a major outbreak occurring. We can confirm
that major outbreaks in similar school settings can only be prevented if vaccination coverage
exceeds 90%.
Publisher
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Subject
Infectious Diseases,Epidemiology
Cited by
49 articles.
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