Abstract
The effects of the rubella epidemics in 1978 and 1986 among patients attending antenatal clinics at St Thomas' Hospital were compared. Although many pregnant women who had been exposed to rubella-like illnesses were investigated in both 1978 (269) and 1986 (160), the number of cases of maternal rubella was substantially lower in 1986 (1) than in 1978 (17). Rubella vaccination of 11-14-year-old girls was introduced in the United Kingdom in 1970, but 10% of our patients were susceptible and only 36% gave a definite history of vaccination. Despite the smaller number of maternal rubella cases, substantial resources were expended on assessing patients who had been exposed to or who presented with rubella-like illnesses. In 1978 an intensification of the selective rubella vaccination campaign was recommended, but experience in the 1986 epidemic supports the view that the programme should be augmented by vaccination of preschool children with a combined measles, mumps, and rubella vaccine, with a view to rubella eradication.
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