Tropical Medicine and Infectious Disease (May 2022)

The Emergence of Japanese Encephalitis in Australia and the Implications for a Vaccination Strategy

  • Luis Furuya-Kanamori,
  • Narayan Gyawali,
  • Deborah J. Mills,
  • Leon E. Hugo,
  • Gregor J. Devine,
  • Colleen L. Lau

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/tropicalmed7060085
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 7, no. 6
p. 85

Abstract

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Japanese encephalitis (JE) is the leading cause of viral encephalitis in Asia. Until 2022, only six locally transmitted human JE cases had been reported in Australia; five in northern Queensland and one in the Northern Territory. Thus, JE was mainly considered to be a disease of travellers. On 4 March 2022, JE was declared a ‘Communicable Disease Incident of National Significance’ when a locally acquired human case was confirmed in southern Queensland. By 11 May 2022, 41 human JE cases had been notified in four states in Australia, in areas where JE has never been detected before. From this perspective, we discuss the potential reasons for the recent emergence of the JE virus in Australia in areas where JE has never been previously reported as well as the implications of and options for mass immunisation programs if the outbreak escalates in a JE virus-immunologically naïve population.

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