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Meningococcal Disease in Los Angeles County, California, and among Men in the County Jails
- Source :
- New England Journal of Medicine. 335:833-841
- Publication Year :
- 1996
- Publisher :
- Massachusetts Medical Society, 1996.
-
Abstract
- From January through March 1993, there were 54 cases of meningococcal disease in Los Angeles County, California, of which 9 occurred among men incarcerated in the county's jail system, which was 40 percent above capacity at the time. Several of the 45 patients from the community had had contact with men recently released from a county jail.We interviewed patients from the community (n=42) and neighborhood controls matched with the patients for age, race, and ethnic group (n=84) about potential exposures. We collected and cultured pharyngeal swabs for Neisseria meningitidis from men entering the central jail (n=162), men leaving the central jail (n=379), members of the jail staff (n=121), and patients at a community health center (n=214). Meningococcal isolates were identified by serotyping and multilocus enzyme electrophoresis.The presence of community-acquired meningococcal disease was strongly associated with exposure to a person who had been in or worked at one of the county jails (multivariate matched odds ratio, 18.5; 95 percent confidence interval, 3.8 to 90.8; P0.001). Pharyngeal carriage of meningococcus was significantly more frequent among men released from jail (19 percent) or entering jail (17 percent) than among workers at the jails (3 percent) or community residents seen at the clinic (1 percent). Among men entering jail, those who had previously been incarcerated were more often carriers than those who had not (21 percent vs. 7 percent, P=0.03). Of the isolates from nine community residents with serogroup C meningococcal disease, eight were the same strain as that isolated from the eight inmates with serogroup C disease.In this outbreak of meningococcal disease in Los Angeles County, nearly half of community residents with the disease had contact with persons who had been in a county jail. The high rates of carriage among recidivists and released inmates suggests that the men became meningococcal carriers while in jail.
- Subjects :
- Male
Gerontology
medicine.medical_specialty
Ethnic group
Neisseria meningitidis
medicine.disease_cause
Meningococcal disease
Disease Outbreaks
Risk Factors
Community health center
Epidemiology
Disease Transmission, Infectious
medicine
Humans
Risk factor
business.industry
Incidence
Prisoners
social sciences
General Medicine
medicine.disease
Los Angeles
Community-Acquired Infections
Meningococcal Infections
Multilocus enzyme electrophoresis
Case-Control Studies
Prisons
Carrier State
Multivariate Analysis
Pharynx
business
Demography
Subjects
Details
- ISSN :
- 15334406 and 00284793
- Volume :
- 335
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Journal :
- New England Journal of Medicine
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi.dedup.....5e00417b670b152935656001d4adb2c3
- Full Text :
- https://doi.org/10.1056/nejm199609193351201