Emerging Infectious Diseases (Jul 2012)

Retrospective Evaluation of Control Measures for Contacts of Patient with Marburg Hemorrhagic Fever

  • Aura Timen,
  • Leslie D. Isken,
  • Patricia Willemse,
  • Franchette van den Berkmortel,
  • Marion P.G. Koopmans,
  • Danielle E.C. van Oudheusden,
  • Chantal P. Bleeker-Rovers,
  • Annemarie E. Brouwer,
  • Richard P.T.M. Grol,
  • Marlies E.J.L. Hulscher,
  • Jaap T. van Dissel

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3201/eid1807.101638
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 18, no. 7
pp. 1107 – 1114

Abstract

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After an imported case of Marburg hemorrhagic fever was reported in 2008 in the Netherlands, control measures to prevent transmission were implemented. To evaluate consequences of these measures, we administered a structured questionnaire to 130 contacts classified as either having high-risk or low-risk exposure to body fluids of the case-patient; 77 (59.2%) of 130 contacts responded. A total of 67 (87.0%) of 77 respondents agreed that temperature monitoring and reporting was necessary, significantly more often among high-risk than low-risk contacts (p<0.001). Strict compliance with daily temperature monitoring decreased from 80.5% (62/77) during week 1 to 66.2% (51/77) during week 3. Contacts expressed concern about development of Marburg hemorrhagic fever (58.4%, 45/77) and infecting a family member (40.2%, 31/77). High-risk contacts had significantly higher scores on psychological impact scales (p<0.001) during and after the monitoring period. Public health authorities should specifically address consequences of control measures on the daily life of contacts.

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