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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 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, 2016Measles 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 and age of vaccination
Annals of Tropical Paediatrics, 1984Measles is responsible for high morbidity and mortality in children particularly in developing countries. Infants, found by analytical studies to constitute a high risk group, are usually not covered by current vaccination programmes. In Kuwait in the epidemic years during the period 1976-1982, the incidence of measles in infants under one year was ...
Prem N. Sharma+2 more
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Pediatrics In Review, 1998
1. Henry M. Adam, MD 2. Glenn J. Fennelly, MD 1. Editor, in Chief 2. Albert Einstein College of Medicine Bronx, NY Two important changes regarding the measles vaccine ( Pediatrics in Review . 1998;19:178) have taken place.
Glenn J. Fennelly, Henry M. Adam
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1. Henry M. Adam, MD 2. Glenn J. Fennelly, MD 1. Editor, in Chief 2. Albert Einstein College of Medicine Bronx, NY Two important changes regarding the measles vaccine ( Pediatrics in Review . 1998;19:178) have taken place.
Glenn J. Fennelly, Henry M. Adam
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The future of measles vaccination
Archiv f�r die gesamte Virusforschung, 1964Current scientific studies performed all over the world will probably eventually lead to the production of a vaccine against measles that will be safe, acceptable, and effective. A voluntary mass vaccination against measles will be unlikely. Public Health authorities can hardly support financially or be willing to undertake or to push the introduction ...
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Annals of Internal Medicine, 1990
Excerpt To the Editor:The need for adequate immunity to measles in international travelers, outlined by Hill and Pearson (1) and von Reyn and Saviteer (2), is clear cut.
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Excerpt To the Editor:The need for adequate immunity to measles in international travelers, outlined by Hill and Pearson (1) and von Reyn and Saviteer (2), is clear cut.
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Measles Vaccination in Infants
JAMA: The Journal of the American Medical Association, 1982To the Editor.— On May 15, 1981, the Centers for Disease Control (CDC) reported an outbreak of measles among the children of migrant farm workers in Texas. Among these were 42 infants younger than 15 months. The CDC and the Office of Migrant Health recommended that "infants ages 6 months through 14 months be vaccinated." 1 In June of this year a ...
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