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Severe pertussis in infants: Estimated impact of first vaccine dose at 6 versus 8 weeks in Australia

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Date

Authors

Foxwell, A. Ruth
McIntyre, Peter
Quinn, Helen
Roper, Katrina
Clements, Mark

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Publisher

Lippincott Williams & Wilkins

Abstract

We estimated the potential benefits of advancing the first dose of pertussis vaccine for infants from 8 to 6 weeks of age, using Australian national disease databases. Infants had notification rates 3-fold greater than the general population and accounted for 52% of recorded hospitalizations. Infants 1 and 2 months of age had notification rates 3.5 times (95% CI: 2.7-4.5) higher than infants 3 to 11 months of age. Estimation of acceleration of the vaccine to 6 weeks of age reduced average notifications, hospitalizations, and hospital bed-days by 8%, 9%, and 12%, respectively, with larger reductions in an epidemic year.

Description

Citation

Source

The Pediatric Infectious Disease Journal

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License Rights

Restricted until

2037-12-31