Publication | Open Access
Parvovirus B19 infection in five European countries: seroepidemiology, force of infection and maternal risk of infection
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Citations
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References
2007
Year
We conducted a seroprevalence survey in Belgium, Finland, England & Wales, Italy and Poland on 13 449 serum samples broadly representative in terms of geography and age. Samples were tested for the presence of immunoglobulin G antibody using an enzyme immunoassay. The age-specific risk of infection was estimated using parametric and non-parametric statistical modelling. The age-specific risk in all five countries was highest in children aged 7-9 years and lower in adults. The average proportion of women of child-bearing age susceptible to parvovirus B19 infection and the risk of a pregnant women acquiring B19 infection during pregnancy was estimated to be 26% and 0.61% in Belgium, 38% and 0.69% in England & Wales, 43.5% and 1.24% in Finland, 39.9% and 0.92% in Italy and 36.8% and 1.58% in Poland, respectively. Our study indicates substantial epidemiological differences in Europe regarding parvovirus B19 infection.
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2006 | 2.3K | |
Using Data on Social Contacts to Estimate Age-specific Transmission Parameters for Respiratory-spread Infectious Agents Jacco Wallinga, Peter Teunis, Mirjam Kretzschmar American Journal of Epidemiology VaccinationInfectious Disease ModellingEpidemic IntelligenceEmerging Infectious DiseasesRespiratory-spread Infectious Agents | 2006 | 749 |
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