Publication | Open Access
Rotavirus and the Indigenous Children of the Australian Outback: Monovalent Vaccine Effective in a High‐Burden Setting
72
Citations
11
References
2009
Year
VaccinationVaccine SafetyIndigenous ChildrenVaccine DevelopmentAustralian OutbackMonovalent Vaccine EffectiveVaccine TestingGastrointestinal VirusRotavirus InfectionVaccine EfficacyInfection ControlMedicineVaccine ResearchEpidemiologyG9 Rotavirus Infection
Indigenous children living in arid Central Australia experience frequent outbreaks of rotavirus gastroenteritis. A widespread outbreak of G9 rotavirus infection occurred several months after introduction of the RIX4414 rotavirus vaccine. We performed a retrospective case-control study to determine vaccine efficacy during the outbreak. Two doses provided an estimated vaccine efficacy of 77.7% (95% confidence interval, 40.2%-91.7%) against hospitalization for gastroenteritis. Vaccine efficacy was 84.5% (95% confidence interval, 23.4%-96.9%) against confirmed cases of rotavirus infection. Vaccination was effective in this high-burden setting.
| Year | Citations | |
|---|---|---|
Page 1
Page 1