Measles-containing vaccination rates in southern Alberta.

Background Southern Alberta is home to many unique homogeneous communities that typically educate their children in private schools. A number of these communities do not promote immunization as a preventive public health measure, although the reasons behind this vary. People within these communities keep themselves somewhat secluded from other populations and thus do not benefit from overall herd immunity. This has led to frequent outbreaks of vaccine-preventable diseases in private schools affiliated with these homogeneous religious communities. Objective To report on low immunization rates of measles, mumps, rubella (MMR) and MMR-varicella in southern Alberta communities and schools and to compare the epidemiology of immunization rates in certain vulnerable communities with those of same-age cohorts in South Zone communities. Methods The analysis includes immunization data at the individual level submitted to the provincial immunization repository, Immunization and Adverse Reactions to Immunization, and the Alberta Health Services Meditech module between January 1, 2013, and June 30, 2013. Results Heterogeneity of immunization status was found among communities and among schools. The status of two year old children up to date on immunizations ranged from 46.6% in Fort Macleod to 71.9% in Oyen, with a mean of 57.3 children in every 100 up to date. By age seven, the mean percentage of immunized children in southern Alberta was 77.6%, ranging from 57.8% in Picture Butte to 94.6% in Oyen. Immunization status among schools ranged from 17% to 100%, with a mean of 89.3% of children fully immunized and a median of 91% immunized. Conclusion There is heterogeneity of immunization uptake for childhood measles-containing vaccine by community and by school in southern Alberta. This study highlights that the location of the school may not align with geographic community as it pertains to immunization rates. Analysis of childhood immunization data at both community and school level is important in understanding the risks of vaccine-preventable illness spread in a given geographic region, such as Alberta South Zone. Data from this study can be used to inform specific interventions required to improve immunization coverage rates in these unique homogeneous cultural communities and their respective schools, and to decrease the risk of measles transmission in Southern Alberta.

[1]  Measles mumps and rubella virus vaccine , 2015, Reactions Weekly.

[2]  H. D. de Melker,et al.  Large ongoing measles outbreak in a religious community in the Netherlands since May 2013. , 2013, Euro surveillance : bulletin Europeen sur les maladies transmissibles = European communicable disease bulletin.

[3]  S. Wicker,et al.  Measles in health-care settings. , 2013, American journal of infection control.

[4]  P. van Damme,et al.  Measles outbreak in Europe: susceptibility of infants too young to be immunized. , 2012, Vaccine.

[5]  R. Booy,et al.  Vaccination and herd immunity: what more do we know? , 2012, Current opinion in infectious diseases.

[6]  M. Muscat Who gets measles in Europe? , 2011, The Journal of infectious diseases.

[7]  P. Rota,et al.  Implications of a 2005 measles outbreak in Indiana for sustained elimination of measles in the United States. , 2006, The New England journal of medicine.

[8]  K. Ehresmann,et al.  An elementary school outbreak of varicella attributed to vaccine failure: policy implications. , 2004, The Journal of infectious diseases.

[9]  J. Kulig,et al.  Refusals and Delay of Immunization Within Southwest Alberta , 2002 .