Title: Measles Outbreak
1Measles Outbreak
- Paige Jordan RN, BSN
- Region II Epidemiologist
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3Steps of an Outbreak Investigation
- Prepare for fieldwork.
- Establish the existence of an outbreak.
- Verify the diagnosis.
4Steps of an Outbreak Investigation
- 4. Define and identify cases.
- Establish a case definition
- Identify and count cases
- Perform descriptive epidemiology.
- Develop hypotheses.
- Evaluate hypotheses.
5Steps of an Outbreak Investigation (2)
- 8. As necessary, reconsider, refine hypotheses
and execute additional studies - Additional epidemiological studies
- Other types of studies laboratory,
environmental - Implement control and prevention measures.
- Communicate findings.
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7Step 1.
- Prepare for Fieldwork
- Accumulate knowledge, equipment, sample
questionnaires, etc. - Anticipate employee health issues
- Know the Clinical Case Definition and Case
Classification. - Make travel and leave arrangements
- Know your role in the investigation
8Employee Health
- Interviewers must be immune
- Two doses of measles-containing vaccine one month
apart on or after the first birthday OR - Laboratory evidence or history of prior disease
- Birth before 1957
- consider 1 dose MMR if no history of disease or
laboratory evidence of immunity
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10Measles Basics
11Measles Basics
- Clinical
- Prodrome
- Stepwise increase in fever up to 103-105 F
- Followed by cough, coryza, conjunctivitis
- Kopliks spots
- 1-2 days before rash to 1-2 days after rash
- Punctate blue-white spots on red background
12Measles Basics
- Clinical(2)
- Rash maculopapular, begins at hairline,
progresses downward - Blanch for first 3-4 days
- Discrete gt confluent
- Fades in order of appearance
- May desquamate
13Measles Basics
14Measles Basics
- Complications
- Diarrhea 8
- Otitis media 7
- Pneumonia 6
- Encephalitis 0.1
- Death 0.2
- Hospitalization 18
15Measles in Chicago, 1989MMWR, 1990 39317
- Cases 2232
- Hospitalization 755 (33.8)
- Diarrhea 340 (15.2)
- Pneumonia 186 (8.3)
- Otitis media 52 (2.3)
- Encephalitis 1 (0.04)
- Deaths 8 (0.36)
16Measles Basics
17Measles Basics
- Reservoir
- Humans
- Transmission
- Person-to-person via droplets
- Airborne in closed area for up to 2 hours after a
person with measles occupied the area
18Measles Basics
19Measles Basics
- Incubation period
- Exposure to prodrome
- Average 10-12 days
- Exposure to rash
- 7-18 days
- Average 14 days
20Measles Basics
21Measles Basics
- Infectious period
- From 4 days prior to rash onset to 4 days after
rash onset
22Measles Basics
23Measles Basics
- Control measures
- Post-exposure vaccination within 72 hours
provides protection - MIG for immunosuppressed, pregnant or infants.
- In school or daycare
- exclude unless 2 doses of measles vaccine are
documented - In health care
- Exclude susceptibles from day 5 through day 21
after exposure
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25Jay S.
- 3 year old healthy male
- Onset of cold symptoms on 3/7/03 RX
amoxicillin on 3/8 because of fever 105 F - Rash onset 3/10/03
- Blood test negative for measles
26Jay S
27Anything else you want to know
28Step 2.
- Establish the Existence of an Outbreak
- Outbreak (epidemic) occurrence of more cases
than expected in a given area or among a specific
group of people over a particular period of time. - Cluster aggregation of cases in a given area
over a particular period without regard to
whether the number is more than expected
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31Is this an outbreak?
32Step 2.
- Establish the Existence of an Outbreak
- Is this more than expected?
- For measles
- 1 case outbreak
33Step 3.
- Verify the diagnosis
- Typical clinical presentation
- Laboratory confirmation
- Isolation of measles virus (e.g., nasopharynx,
urine) - Significant rise in measles IgG by any standard
serologic assay - Positive serologic test for measles IgM
34What do you want to do now?
35Step 4
- Establish a case definition
- Identify and count cases
36Establish a Case Definition
- Clinical case definition
- Should include person, place and time.
- Should be consistant with established standards
like CDC case definition. -
37Establish case definition (cont.)
- Any person with the following symptoms that live
in and around Huntington with an onset of the
below symptoms in the past 2 weeks. - An illness characterized by all of the following
- A generalized maculopapular rash lasting gt 3 days
- A temperature gt 101 F
- Cough, coryza or conjunctivitis
38Establish a Case Definition (2)
- Laboratory criteria for diagnosis
- Positive serologic test for measles
immunoglobulin M (IgM) antibody, or - Significant rise in measles antibody level by any
standard serologic assay, or - Isolation of measles virus from a clinical
specimen -
39Establish a Case Definition (3)
- Case Classification
- Suspected Febrile illness accompanied by
generalized maculopapular rash - Probable A case that meets the clinical case
definition, has noncontributory or no serologic
or virologic testing, and is not
epidemiologically linked to a confirmed case - Confirmed A case that is laboratory confirmed
or that meets the clinical case definition and is
epidemiologically linked to a confirmed case. A
laboratory-confirmed case does not need to meet
the clinical case definition. -
40The report on Jay S. arrives . . .
41Is Jay a case?
- 3 year old healthy male
- Onset of cold symptoms on 3/7/03 RX
amoxicillin on 3/8 because of fever 105 F - Rash onset 3/10/03
- Blood test negative for measles
42Is Jay a case?
- Case Classification
- Suspected Febrile illness accompanied by
generalized maculopapular rash - Probable A case that meets the clinical case
definition, has noncontributory or no serologic
or virologic testing, and is not
epidemiologically linked to a confirmed case - Confirmed A case that is laboratory confirmed
or that meets the clinical case definition and is
epidemiologically linked to a confirmed case. A
laboratory-confirmed case does not need to meet
the clinical case definition.
43Is Jay a case?
- Case Classification
- Suspected Febrile illness accompanied by
generalized maculopapular rash - Probable A case that meets the clinical case
definition, has noncontributory or no serologic
or virologic testing, and is not
epidemiologically linked to a confirmed case - Confirmed A case that is laboratory confirmed
or that meets the clinical case definition and is
epidemiologically linked to a confirmed case. A
laboratory-confirmed case does not need to meet
the clinical case definition.
44Step 4
- Establish a case definition
- Identify and count cases
45What type of surveillance would you like to do?
- Active surveillance
- Individually phone / visit health care providers
to search for additional cases - Enhanced passive surveillance
- Disseminate written request for reports of
additional cases
46 . . . Good surveillance pays off!
47Peter M.
- 7 ½ year old home-schooled previously healthy
male - Onset of runny nose, cough, fever of 104 on
3/10/03 - Rash began on the forehead 3/13/03 progressed
downward, now fading from the face - Measles IgM () on 3/14/03
48Peter M.
49Is Peter M. a case?
- Onset of runny nose, cough, fever of 104 on
3/10/03 - Rash began on the forehead 3/13/03 progressed
downward, now fading from the face - Measles IgM () on 3/14/03
50 . . . Good surveillance really, really pays off!
51Step 5.
- Perform Descriptive Epidemiology
- Person
- Place
- Time
52Measles in Chicago, 1989MMWR, 1990 39317
- N 2,232
- Age
- Less than 5 1,663 (74.5)
- Less than 1 422 (18.9)
- Race / ethnicity
- Black 1,594 (71.4)
- Hispanics 506 (22.7)
53Measles in Chicago, 1989MMWR, 1990 39317
- N 2,232
- Vaccination status
- Unvaccinated 1,667 (74.7)
- Preschool children age 1-4 929 (41.6)
- Less than 16 months 731
- Less than 1 year of age 422
- Deaths 8
- N 7 in Children lt 5 years
- N 5 in Children lt 15 months
54Time to take a close look at these cases . . .
55Your conclusions
- 3 confirmed / probable cases
- Population at-risk
- preschool and early school-age with 0 or 1 doses
of MMR - in Cabell County
- No clustering within Cabell County
- Clustered in time
56Step 6, 7, 8
- 6.Develop hypotheses
- 7. Evaluate hypotheses
- 8. As necessary, reconsider/refine hypotheses,
case definition and execute additional studies - epidemiological
- other
57Step 9.
- Implement control measures EARLY!
58Measles control
- Vaccination (ideally within 72 hours of exposure)
- Two doses in population where measles is
occurring, OR - Exclude until 21 days after rash onset in the
last case - Measles immune globulin (within 6 days of
exposure) - Selected infants, pregnant women,
immunocompromised persons
59Investigate . . .
- Forward
- Determine who is at-risk from exposure to these
cases - Implement control measures to prevent future
cases - Backward
- Identify where these cases originated
- Take action to prevent future exposures
60Teamwork Time
- What are your hypotheses?
- i.e., where did these cases come from?
- What kind of control measures do you want to
implement? - For whom?
- Other questions?
61Oh, and by the way . . . Jay S. is IgM ()
62Step 10.
63Step 10.
- Communicate findings
- 3 children with rash onset from 3/10 to 3/14
- Exposure to an unidentified index case around
2/24 to 3/3 - Doctors offices notified
- Notify patients
- Exclude susceptible HCW day 5-21 after exposure
- Affected daycares
- Exclude children until 2 doses documented.
64THE END