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On Individual and Community-Level Determinants of Pertussis Incidence and Vaccination
On Individual and Community-Level Determinants of Pertussis Incidence and Vaccination
Details
Title
On Individual and Community-Level Determinants of Pertussis Incidence and Vaccination
Author(s)
Goldstein, Neal D.
Advisor(s)
Welles, Seth
Keywords
Epidemiology
Date
201507
Publisher
Drexel University
Thesis
Ph.D., Epidemiology -- Drexel University, 2015
Abstract
The association between vaccination and vaccine-preventable infectious diseases is well established. Vaccines are often highly effective at preventing disease not only in an individual, but also in a community. Despite the overall high coverage of vaccination in the United States, there has been a recent resurgence of new and existing infectious diseases. In particular, incident pertussis (whooping cough) has dramatically increased over the last decade, both nationally and locally in Philadelphia, where 2012 saw a doubling of the number of cases compared to the prior year. Possible causative agents include waning immunity from the Diphtheria, Tetanus, and acellular Pertussis vaccine and an increase in vaccination exemptions. This dissertation examined the recent increase in pediatric pertussis in Philadelphia through three aims. In the first aim, we examined risk factors for pertussis at both individual and contextual (neighborhood) levels, and hypothesized neighborhoods with a greater number of day cares would report more cases of pertussis. In the second aim, we challenged the traditional notion of vaccination uptake defined by the up-to-date status of an individual, and instead propose using the number of doses as a better predictor in etiologic analyses. In the third aim, we quantified misclassification of pertussis as a result of the changing case definition in 2014 (addition of infant apnea) and demonstrated that in vaccine effectiveness studies, the measure of association is likely attenuated when the investigator does not re-case classify reported cases or consider underreporting of the disease.
URI
http://hdl.handle.net/1860/idea:6408
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