Human Vaccines & Immunotherapeutics (Mar 2020)

Estimating population immunity to poliovirus in Jordan’s high-risk areas

  • Noha H. Farag,
  • Kathleen Wannemuehler,
  • William Weldon,
  • Ali Arbaji,
  • Adel Belbaisi,
  • Najwa Khuri-Bulos,
  • Derek Ehrhardt,
  • Mohammad Ratib Surour,
  • Nabil Sabri ElhajQasem,
  • Mohammad Mousa Al-Abdallat

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1080/21645515.2019.1667727
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 16, no. 3
pp. 548 – 553

Abstract

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A community-based serosurvey was conducted among children ages 6–59 to assess population immunity in Jordan’s high-risk areas following the Middle East polio outbreak response. The survey was a two-stage cluster-quota sample with high risk areas as the primary sampling units. High-risk areas included border and hard-to-reach areas, and areas with a high proportion of refugees, mobile communities and/or low coverage during previous immunization campaigns. Population immunity to poliovirus was high overall. In high-risk areas, Type 1 seroprevalence = 98% (95% CI = 96, 99), Type 2 = 98% (95% CI = 96, 99) and Type 3 = 96% (95% CI = 94, 98). Seroprevalence was higher in the refugee camps: Type 1 seroprevalence = 99.6% (95% CI = 97.9, 100); Type 2: 99.6% (95% CI = 97.9, 99.9), and Type 3: 100% (95% CI = 100,100). The vigilance that the Jordan Ministry of Health has placed on locating and vaccinating high-risk populations has been successful in maintaining high population immunity and averting polio outbreaks despite the influx of refugees from Syria.

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