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Measles Vaccine

Pediatric Annals, 1990
Administration of measles vaccine has sharply reduced the occurrence of measles. However, "mini epidemics" occurring at increasing intervals through 1989 brought about the need for a routine two-dose schedule of measles vaccination. The prevention of preschool cases and school-based cases are two major goals of this new schedule.
I, Srugo, P A, Brunell
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Measles Vaccines

Pediatric Clinics of North America, 1990
Measles vaccine is one of the safest and most effective vaccines currently available. Use of the vaccine has decreased the incidence of measles in both developed and developing countries. Nevertheless, preventable morbidity and mortality continue to occur. In the United States, the measles problem differs when it occurs among preschool-aged children or
L E, Markowitz, W A, Orenstein
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Measles vaccines

Frontiers in Bioscience, 2008
Measles is caused by infection with measles virus (MV), a negative strand RNA virus in the Morbillivirus genus of the Paramyxoviridae family. Measles is a highly infectious disease of humans spread by the respiratory route and characterized by fever and rash.
Diane E, Griffin   +2 more
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Measles and Measles Vaccination

JAMA Pediatrics, 2016
Measles is a highly communicable viral infection with serious complications. There have been continued outbreaks of measles in countries in which measles is considered to be eliminated, such as the United States and the Netherlands, and measles remains endemic in some countries.
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Measles Aerosol Vaccination

2006
Measles ranks fifth among the five major childhood conditions which are responsible for 21% of all deaths in low and middle-income countries. Measles immunization is considered the most cost-effective public health intervention in the world. In recent years, there has been a critical need to identify alternative routes of measles immunization, which ...
J L, Valdespino-Gómez   +5 more
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Measles: Old Vaccines, New Vaccines

2008
Isolation of measles virus in tissue culture by Enders and colleagues in the 1960s led to the development of the first measles vaccines. An inactivated vaccine provided only short-term protection and induced poor T cell responses and antibody that did not undergo affinity maturation.
D E, Griffin, C H, Pan
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MEASLES VACCINATION

The Lancet, 1965
I B, HILLARY, P N, MEENAN, A J, BEALE
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Measles Vaccine

JAMA, 1961
S, KARELITZ   +7 more
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