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The Delaware Division of Public Health (DPH) is issuing this Health Alert to inform health care providers of an outbreak in multiple states among persons reporting drug use and/or homelessness and their contacts and recommend action.
The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) and state health departments are investigating hepatitis A virus (HAV) outbreaks in 10 states among persons reporting drug use and/or homelessness and their contacts. This Health Alert Network (HAN) notification alerts health care providers, facilities, and programs providing services to affected populations, about these outbreaks of HAV infection and provides guidance to assist in identifying and preventing new infections.
To date, Delaware does not have any reported HAV infections associated with this outbreak or with person-to-person transmission, but DPH is heightening surveillance and providing CDC recommendations to medical providers.
HAV infection is a vaccine-preventable illness. The primary means of HAV transmission in the United States is typically person-to-person through the fecal-oral route. Symptoms include fever, fatigue, loss of appetite, nausea, vomiting, abdominal pain, dark urine, clay-colored bowel movements, joint pain, and jaundice. Although rare, atypical extra hepatic manifestations include rash, pancreatitis, renal disease, arthritis, and anemia. Severe infections can result in cholestatic hepatitis, relapsing hepatitis, and fulminant hepatitis leading to death. Average incubation of HAV is 28 days, but illness can occur up to 50 days after exposure. An HAV-infected person can be viremic up to six weeks through their clinical course and excrete virus in stool for up to two weeks prior to becoming symptomatic, making identifying exposures particularly difficult. Illness from HAV is typically acute and self-limited; however, when this disease affects populations with already poor health (e.g., hepatitis B and C infections, chronic liver disease), infection can lead to serious outcomes, including death.
From January 2017 to April 2018, the CDC received more than 2,500 reports of HAV infections associated with person-to-person transmission from multiple states. Of the more than 1,900 reports for which risk factors are known, more than 1,300 (68 percent) of the infected persons report drug use (injection and non-injection), homelessness, or both. As of July 6, health departments in 10 states reported 3,793 cases, including 2,445 hospitalizations and 57 deaths. State response to the outbreaks increased vaccine demand resulting in constrained supplies but vaccine is now more readily available. The CDC and vaccine manufacturers continue to monitor demand for adult hepatitis A vaccine.
DPH is increasing surveillance, monitoring high risk populations, contacting homeless shelters to advise them of the outbreak and implementing a risk-based plan for vaccination.
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