Abstract

BackgroundTo understand operational challenges involved with responding to US measles outbreaks in 2017–19 and identify applicable lessons in order to inform preparedness and response operations for future outbreaks, particularly with respect to specific operational barriers and recommendations for outbreak responses among insular communities.MethodsFrom August 2019 to January 2020, we conducted 11 telephone interviews with 18 participants representing state and local health departments and community health centers that responded to US measles outbreaks in 2017–19, with a focus on outbreaks among insular communities. We conducted qualitative, thematic coding to identify and characterize key operational challenges and lessons identified by the interviewees.ResultsWe categorized principal insights into 5 topic areas: scale of the response, vaccination operations, exclusion policies, community engagement, and countering anti-vaccine efforts. These topics address resource-intensive aspects of these outbreak responses, including personnel demands; guidance needed to support response operations and reduce transmission, such as excluding exposed or at-risk individuals from public spaces; operational challenges and barriers to vaccination and other response activities; and effectively engaging and educating affected populations, particularly with respect to insular and vulnerable communities.ConclusionsMeasles outbreak responses are resource intensive, which can quickly overwhelm existing public health capacities. Early and effective coordination with trusted leaders and organizations in affected communities, including to provide vaccination capacity and facilitate community engagement, can promote efficient response operations. The firsthand experiences of public health and healthcare personnel who responded to measles outbreaks, including among insular communities, provide evidence-based operational lessons that can inform future preparedness and response operations for outbreaks of highly transmissible diseases.

Highlights

  • To understand operational challenges involved with responding to United States (US) measles outbreaks in 2017–19 and identify applicable lessons in order to inform preparedness and response operations for future outbreaks, with respect to specific operational barriers and recommendations for outbreak responses among insular communities

  • Scale of the response Though contact tracing can be a key component of outbreak responses, highly transmissible diseases that result in many potential exposures can exceed existing contact tracing

  • Multiple informants indicated that the scale of their measles outbreaks outpaced existing contact tracing capacity

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Summary

Introduction

To understand operational challenges involved with responding to US measles outbreaks in 2017–19 and identify applicable lessons in order to inform preparedness and response operations for future outbreaks, with respect to specific operational barriers and recommendations for outbreak responses among insular communities. The United States is facing a re-emergence of vaccinepreventable diseases, such as measles, among populations with low vaccination coverage [1,2,3,4,5]. These outbreaks will likely continue as anti-vaccine sentiment and vaccine hesitancy increase [6, 7]. The United States eliminated measles in 2000 [8]; numerous large outbreaks occurred in multiple states in 2017–19, following imported cases in travelers arriving from countries with active local transmission. Outbreaks can quickly result in large numbers of cases and contacts,

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