A critical analysis of measles transmission patterns in South Carolina reveals quantifiable links between vaccination coverage levels and disease incidence. According to recent New England Journal of Medicine research, 73% of measles cases occurred in geographic clusters with below-average childhood vaccination rates—a stark indicator of herd immunity failure in specific regions.
The distribution of cases across vaccination coverage levels illustrates this disparity clearly: areas with high coverage above 95% accounted for only 12% of cases, while moderate coverage areas (85-95%) documented 25% of cases. The remaining outbreak burden concentrated in low-coverage zones where susceptible populations reach critical density.
These data highlight that communities falling below the 95% vaccination threshold lose collective protection, creating conditions favorable for measles establishment and sustained transmission. This statistical evidence reinforces public health guidance emphasizing uniform, high vaccination coverage as essential infrastructure for outbreak prevention.
Read the full article on GMJ Newsroom.
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