Titre :
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Seroprevalence of rubella in school girls and pregnant women. (2003)
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Auteurs :
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Gulbin-Bingol KARAKOC ;
Derya-Ufuk ALTINTAS ;
Nurdan EVLIYAOGLU ;
Aysun KARABAY ;
KILINC (Banu) : TUR. Blood Bank. Cukurova University. Faculty of Medicine. Adana. ;
Neslihan-Onenli MUNGAN ;
Mustafa YILMAZ ;
Department of Pediatrics. Cukurova University. Faculty of Medicine. Adana. TUR
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Type de document :
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Article
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Dans :
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European journal of epidemiology (vol. 18, n° 1, 2003)
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Pagination :
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81-84
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Langues:
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Anglais
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Mots-clés :
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Homme
;
Prévention santé
;
Grossesse
;
Enfant
;
Femme
;
Enfant 6 9 ans
;
Séropositivité
;
Prévalence
;
Epidémiologie
;
Rubéole
;
Virose
;
Infection
;
Virus
;
Surveillance
;
Turquie
;
Asie
;
Vaccination
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Résumé :
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[BDSP. Notice produite par INIST-CNRS 0nTiR0xq. Diffusion soumise à autorisation]. Many studies have been assigned to investigate the surveillance of congenital rubella syndrome, acquired rubella and seroprevalence in different countries to determine the new vaccination program and national vaccination schedules. Seroprevalence of rubella in Turkey is still insufficient and national immunization schedules do not include routine rubella vaccination. In this study we aimed to investigate the seroprevalence of rubella at child bearing age in an unvaccinated population in Adana, southern Turkey, to help determine whether routine rubella vaccination is necessary, if so when it should be administered. Ninety-four school girls aged 12-18 years living in Adana were selected for the study and stratified according to the socioeconomic status of their parents and evaluated for rubella antibodies. One hundred pregnant women aged 18-25 years and 100 pregnant women aged 26-35 years were sampled rubella antibodies. Rubella specific IgG antibody was measured qualitatively and quantitatively by using microparticule enzyme immune assay technology. Rubella specific IgG antibody was positive in 87-94 school girls (92.5%). The geometric mean rubella specific IgG antibody value was found be 148.14 IU/ml. No correlation was found between socioeconomic status and rubella seropositivity (p=0.6521). In all pregnant women rubella specific IgG antibody was found to be positive. In conclusion rubella vaccination should be considered carefully in developing countries. Because of the high seropositivity to rubella in our region we do not recommend rubella vaccination in early childhood. Yet this is a preliminary study and further studies with larger population size are needed to determine the national immunization policy for rubella.
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