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Social Behavior and Meningococcal Carriage in British Teenagers

Social Behavior and Meningococcal Carriage in British Teenagers
Social Behavior and Meningococcal Carriage in British Teenagers
Understanding predisposing factors for meningococcal carriage may identify targets for public health interventions. Before mass vaccination with meningococcal group C conjugate vaccine began in autumn 1999, we took pharyngeal swabs from ?14,000 UK teenagers and collected information on potential risk factors. Neisseria meningitidis was cultured from 2,319 (16.7%) of 13,919 swabs. In multivariable analysis, attendance at pubs/clubs, intimate kissing, and cigarette smoking were each independently and strongly associated with increased risk for meningococcal carriage (p<0.001). Carriage in those with none of these risk factors was 7.8%, compared to 32.8% in those with all 3. Passive smoking was also linked to higher risk for carriage, but age, sex, social deprivation, home crowding, or school characteristics had little or no effect. Social behavior, rather than age or sex, can explain the higher frequency of meningococcal carriage among teenagers. A ban on smoking in public places may reduce risk for transmission.
1080-6059
950-957
MacLennan, J.
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Kafatos, G.
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Neal, K.
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Andrews, N.
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Cameron, J.C.
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Roberts, R.
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Evans, M.R.
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Cann, K.
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Baxter, D.N.
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Maiden, M.C.J.
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Stuart, J.M.
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MacLennan, J.
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Kafatos, G.
efc7c86d-e7b7-4f98-a143-14871013b1c9
Neal, K.
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Andrews, N.
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Cameron, J.C.
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Roberts, R.
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Evans, M.R.
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Cann, K.
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Baxter, D.N.
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Maiden, M.C.J.
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Stuart, J.M.
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MacLennan, J., Kafatos, G., Neal, K., Andrews, N., Cameron, J.C., Roberts, R., Evans, M.R., Cann, K., Baxter, D.N., Maiden, M.C.J. and Stuart, J.M. (2006) Social Behavior and Meningococcal Carriage in British Teenagers. Emerging Infectious Diseases, 12 (6), 950-957.

Record type: Article

Abstract

Understanding predisposing factors for meningococcal carriage may identify targets for public health interventions. Before mass vaccination with meningococcal group C conjugate vaccine began in autumn 1999, we took pharyngeal swabs from ?14,000 UK teenagers and collected information on potential risk factors. Neisseria meningitidis was cultured from 2,319 (16.7%) of 13,919 swabs. In multivariable analysis, attendance at pubs/clubs, intimate kissing, and cigarette smoking were each independently and strongly associated with increased risk for meningococcal carriage (p<0.001). Carriage in those with none of these risk factors was 7.8%, compared to 32.8% in those with all 3. Passive smoking was also linked to higher risk for carriage, but age, sex, social deprivation, home crowding, or school characteristics had little or no effect. Social behavior, rather than age or sex, can explain the higher frequency of meningococcal carriage among teenagers. A ban on smoking in public places may reduce risk for transmission.

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Published date: 2006

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Local EPrints ID: 152823
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/152823
ISSN: 1080-6059
PURE UUID: 1a6b5fac-286c-47c2-8648-6b9819e96863

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Date deposited: 25 May 2010 10:45
Last modified: 14 Mar 2024 01:24

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Contributors

Author: J. MacLennan
Author: G. Kafatos
Author: K. Neal
Author: N. Andrews
Author: J.C. Cameron
Author: R. Roberts
Author: M.R. Evans
Author: K. Cann
Author: D.N. Baxter
Author: M.C.J. Maiden
Author: J.M. Stuart

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