http://www.nytimes.com/aponline/national/AP-Hepatitis-A.html
December 18, 2001
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CHICAGO (AP) -- Hepatitis A outbreaks in all age groups could be prevented
if children were routinely vaccinated against the liver ailment, a study in
Northern California suggests.
When 66 percent of eligible children in Butte County received free hepatitis
A vaccinations over six years, cases in the county dropped nearly 94 percent.
The number of reported cases fell from 57 in 1995 to 4 in 2000, the lowest
number in more than 30 years, the study found.
The study was conducted by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention
and was published in Wednesday's Journal of the American Medical Association.
Hepatitis A is an inflammation of the liver that can cause flu-like symptoms
and jaundice. Children are less severely affected than adults and may even have
no symptoms. The virus can be spread by human feces or contaminated water or
food. The disease usually clears up in about two months.
Federal estimates suggest there were 270,000 cases nationwide in 1997, and
Western states are disproportionately affected.
The CDC recommends routine vaccination of children in Western states with
high rates of the virus: Alaska, Arizona, California, Idaho, Nevada, New
Mexico, Oklahoma, Oregon, South Dakota, Utah and Washington.
Of those, only Oklahoma and Alaska routinely require the childhood vaccine
statewide, said Dr. Philip Rosenthal, president of the Northern California
chapter of the American Liver Foundation. Nevada will begin requiring the shots
in July, but Rosenthal said efforts to make them mandatory in California have
so far failed.
The vaccine became available in 1995 for American children ages 2 and up.
During the study, 29,789 children ages 2 through 12 in Butte County received
at least one dose; 17,681 received the recommended second dose. No serious side
effects were reported. The incidence last year of 1.9 cases per 100,000
population was the lowest of any county in the state.
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