Hospitalization for rotavirus infections decreased by > 70% following the introduction of a vaccine program in Ontario, Canada, according to a study published May 11, 2016 in the open-access journal PLOS ONE by Sarah Wilson from Public Health Ontario and the Institute for Clinical Evaluative Sciences, Canada, and colleagues.
Rotavirus infection may cause acute gastroenteritis, including vomiting, diarrhea, fever, and abdominal pain, and may lead to severe dehydration. Previous research found that for Canadian children infected with rotavirus, one third see a doctor, 15% visit the emergency department, and 7% require hospitalization. The virus is highly infectious and may easily spread to other family members and caregivers of a sick child. In 2011, Ontario became one of the first Canadian provinces to implement a universal, publicly funded rotavirus immunization program for babies at 2 and 4 months of age. With data spanning eight years, the authors of this study analyzed > 860,000 hospitalization and emergency department records for rotavirus infection and acute gastroenteritis, both before and after the introduction of the program.
While data from only one complete rotavirus season was included in the analysis, the authors found that the number of children and adults showing up at Ontario hospitals with acute gastroenteritis dropped considerably after the introduction of the rotavirus vaccine program. Since seasonal oscillations can be observed in rotavirus infection rates, the authors intend to extend their analyses in the future to confirm their findings.
Ontario rotavirus hospitalizations drop more than 70 percent after launch of infant vaccine program. Credit: Bryon Skinner, CDC/Dr. Erskine Palmer
"We were very excited to see the significant impact of the rotavirus vaccine program. Hospitalizations in Ontario due to rotavirus infection were reduced by 71%, and emergency department visits dropped by 68%," says Dr. Sarah Wilson, lead author of the study. "We expected to see a drop for babies and toddlers who were vaccinated under this program. What's particularly interesting is we saw the drop even in older kids who were too old to receive the publicly funded rotavirus vaccine, which means that protecting babies against illness also benefited older children."
source: PLOS