A SARS-CoV-2 Alpha outbreak was detected in a nursing home after residents and staff had completed vaccination with BNT162b. In a retrospective cohort study, we estimated an age-adjusted vaccine effectiveness of 88% [95% confidence interval (95%CI) 41-98%] against hospitalization/death. Ct values at diagnosis were higher with longer intervals since the second vaccination [>21 vs. ≤21 days: 4.82 cycles, 95%CI: 0.06-9.58]. Secondary attack rates were 67% lower in households of vaccinated [2/9 (22.2%)] than unvaccinated infected staff [12/18 (66.7%); p=0.046]. Vaccination reduced the risk of severe outcomes, Ct values and transmission, but not fully. Non-pharmaceutical interventions remain important for vaccinated individuals.
Increasing 2-dose vaccination coverage has led to an interruption of endemic measles virus circulation in Germany. However, outbreaks after virus importation still occur and contribute to international transmission chains. Between 2003 and 2009, annual measles incidence ranged between 0.2 and 2.8 per 100,000 population. Immunization gaps have been identified especially in secondary-school students and young adults, which is also reflected by a shift in age distribution of reported measles cases toward older age groups. Stronger political commitment and standardized guidelines for outbreak containment were put in place in Germany in the past years, but the last step toward measles elimination cannot be made until the number of susceptible individuals has been further reduced. In addition to routine childhood vaccination, supplementary immunization activities are needed targeting school students and young adults to close critical immunization gaps. Intensification of public awareness and sound information on vaccinations are necessary to convince skeptics and remind the forgetful.
Overexposure of humans to ionizing radiation has occurred worldwide in the past and will surely occur again in the future. In order to allow an effective radiation accident management, it is consequently necessary to be prepared for such emergency situations and to improve means and ways to help people suffering from radiation-induced health impairments. Such approaches should rely on knowledge and experience gained from previous radiation incidents. A prerequisite for any scientific evaluation and comparison of information related to radiation accidents is to collect data in a standardized way. Therefore, the SEARCH database (System for Evaluation and Archiving of Radiation accidents based on Case Histories) has been developed in our department and implemented as an Oracle 8.0 database containing to date more than 800 case histories. The use of this registry is so far limited to active contributors and requires each contributor to sign a cooperation agreement. More information is available under http://www.faw.uniulm.de/radmed/.
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