A Community-wide hepatitis A outbreak in the Shoalhaven region, New South Wales

Authors

  • Timothy Heath Western Sector Public Health Unit, 13 New Street, North Parramatta New South Wales 2151; National Centre for Epidemiology and Population Health, Australian National University, Canberra
  • Desolie Lovegrove Illawarra Public Health Unit, Wollongong
  • Christine Roberts National Centre for Epidemiology and Population Health, Australian National University, Canberra

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.33321/cdi.1997.21.1

Keywords:

hepatitis A virus, outbreak

Abstract

We investigated a community-wide outbreak of hepatitis A virus infection in the Shoalhaven region of the New South Wales south coast. Epidemiological features of the outbreak suggested that transmission was predominantly person-to-person. These included: the prolonged course of the epidemic, the bimodal age-specific attack rate, the lower socioeconomic risk groups affected, and the large proportion of cases who reported prior contact with another case. Although widespread use of post-exposure immunoprophylaxis appeared to be effective in preventing symptomatic infection in individuals, it did not rapidly halt the outbreak. We review methods of mass intervention for community-wide outbreaks of hepatitis A virus infection, and define priorities for investigation of future outbreaks. Comm Dis Intell 1997;21:1-4

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Published

09/01/97

How to Cite

Heath, Timothy, Desolie Lovegrove, and Christine Roberts. 1997. “A Community-Wide Hepatitis A Outbreak in the Shoalhaven Region, New South Wales”. Communicable Diseases Intelligence 21 (January):1-4. https://doi.org/10.33321/cdi.1997.21.1.

Issue

Section

Outbreak report

Categories