Mumps in a general population. A sero-epidemiologic study.

An epidemiologic and serologic study of 126 mumps patients and their 233 family contacts selected from a quota survey of the Hillsborough County, Florida, population was carried out. The estimated annual incidence was 19.5 cases of mumps per 1,000 population per year. Physicians saw only 27% of the 126 cases and reported only 14% of those brought to their attention. Twenty-five percent of the family contacts presumably had inapparent infections. Secondary attack rates in households varied by age from 14% to 46%. No important difference in geometric mean complement fixation and hemagglutination titers was found between reexposed adults and a comparison group not recently reexposed in the family.