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Outbreak of chickenpox in a refugee camp of northern Thailand

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dc.contributor gCOE program, Institute of Tropical Medicine (Nekken), Nagasaki University, Sakamoto, Nagasaki-shi, Japan; Médecins Sans Frontières, Paris, France
dc.creator Shimakawa, Y
dc.creator Camélique, O
dc.creator Ariyoshi, K
dc.date 2010-02-22
dc.date.accessioned 2017-01-31T07:21:19Z
dc.date.available 2017-01-31T07:21:19Z
dc.identifier Confl Health 2010;4:4
dc.identifier 1752-1505
dc.identifier 20175899
dc.identifier 10.1186/1752-1505-4-4
dc.identifier http://hdl.handle.net/10144/114099
dc.identifier http://fieldresearch.msf.org/msf/handle/10144/114099
dc.identifier Conflict and Health
dc.identifier.uri http://dspace.mediu.edu.my:8181/xmlui/handle/10144/114099
dc.description Although chickenpox is a generally mild, self-limited illness of children, it can cause fatal disease in adults. Accumulating reports from tropical countries showed a high prevalence of seronegativity among the adults, implying that varicella diseases could become a heavy burden in tropical countries. However, in the situation of humanitarian emergencies in tropical areas, chickenpox has largely been ignored as a serious communicable disease, due to lack of data regarding varicella mortality and hospital admissions in such a context. This is the first report describing an outbreak of chickenpox in a refugee camp of tropical region. In 2008, we experienced a varicella outbreak in ethnic Lao Hmong refugee camp in Phetchabun Province, northern Thailand. The attack rate was 4.0% (309/7,815) and this caused 3 hospitalizations including one who developed severe varicella pneumonia with respiratory failure. All hospitalizations were exclusively seen in adults, and the proportion of patients > or = 15 years old was 13.6% (42/309). Because less exposure to varicella-zoster virus due to low population density has previously been suggested to be one of the reasons behind higher prevalence of susceptible adults in tropics, the influx of displaced people from rural areas to a densely populated asylum might result in many severe adult cases once a varicella outbreak occurs. Control interventions such as vaccination should be considered even in refugee camp, if the confluence of the risk factors present in this situation.
dc.language en
dc.relation http://www.conflictandhealth.com/content/4/1/4
dc.rights Archived with thanks to Conflict and Health
dc.title Outbreak of chickenpox in a refugee camp of northern Thailand
dc.type Article


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