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Comparative Study
. 1984 Dec 8;2(8415):1322-4.
doi: 10.1016/s0140-6736(84)90831-6.

Outbreak of paralytic poliomyelitis, Taiwan

Comparative Study

Outbreak of paralytic poliomyelitis, Taiwan

R J Kim-Farley et al. Lancet. .

Abstract

Taiwan had been free of major poliomyelitis outbreaks since 1975, but from May 29 to Oct 26, 1982, 1031 cases of type 1 paralytic poliomyelitis were reported to the Taiwan health authorities. Before the outbreak approximately 80% of infants had received at least 2 doses of trivalent oral poliovaccine (OPV) by their first birthday. Of the 86% of poliomyelitis patients whose vaccination status was known 65% had not had poliovaccine, 19% had received one dose, 8% had received two doses, and 8% had received three or more doses. Vaccine efficacy was calculated to be 82% after one dose, 96% after two doses, and 98% after three or more doses. Failure to vaccinate rather than vaccine failure was the most important risk factor in this outbreak. A child who had not had any vaccine was 80 times more likely to become a case than one who had received three or more doses of poliovaccine, independent of sanitation facilities at home. A child was 5 times more likely to become a case if he received water from non-municipal rather than municipal sources. Furthermore, for children who received municipal water, the risk was doubled if the family shared a toilet with at least one other family. This outbreak shows that major epidemics can occur in areas that have high overall community vaccination levels. Identification and vaccination of subpopulations with low coverage is essential for the control of poliomyelitis.

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