Modeling Measles Transmission in the North American Amish and Options for Outbreak Response
Authored by Kasper H Kisjes, Kimberly M Thompson
Date Published: 2016
DOI: 10.1111/risa.12440
Sponsors:
United States Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC)
Platforms:
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Model Documentation:
Other Narrative
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Model Code URLs:
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Abstract
Measles outbreaks in the United States continue to occur in
subpopulations with sufficient numbers of undervaccinated individuals, with a 2014 outbreak in Amish communities in Ohio pushing the annual
cases to the highest national number reported in the last 20 years. We
adapted an individual-based model developed to explore potential
poliovirus transmission in the North American Amish to characterize a
1988 measles outbreak in the Pennsylvania Amish and the 2014 outbreak in
the Ohio Amish. We explored the impact of the 2014 outbreak response
compared to no or partial response. Measles can spread very rapidly in
an underimmunized subpopulation like the North American Amish, with the
potential for national spread within a year or so in the absence of
outbreak response. Vaccination efforts significantly reduced the
transmission of measles and the expected number of cases. Until global
eradication, measles importations will continue to pose a threat to
clusters of underimmunized individuals in the United States. Aggressive
outbreak response efforts in Ohio probably prevented widespread
transmission of measles within the entire North American Amish.
Tags
Elimination
Community
population
Vaccination
United-states
Economic-impact
Polio outbreaks
Rubella