At the end of March 2010 an A/H1N1 vaccination campaign was conducted in Afghanistan using donated vaccines. However, no surveillance system for detection of adverse events following immunization was in place. We report a cross-sectional, descriptive survey in 4 provinces of Afghanistan to assess the rate of adverse events among health care staff immunized with A/H1N1 monovalent vaccine 4 weeks after vaccination. Using random sampling proportionate to size, 350 staff (mean age 36 years, range 16-65 years) were surveyed using a questionnaire. The highest self-reported rates of adverse events were pain at the injection site (53{%}), fever in the first 3 days after immunization (40{%}), body pain (39{%}), tiredness (33{%}), swelling at the injection site (29{%}) and redness at the injection site (28{%}). More females than males suffered adverse reactions and the rates varied across different provinces, ranging from 79{%} in Balkh to 23{%} in Kabul.
CITATION STYLE
Mofleh, J. A., Akbarian, Z., Muserat, N., Yosofi, H., Alkozai, A., & Noormal, B. (2012). Study of adverse events of A/H1N1 vaccine among health care staff in selected provinces of Afghanistan, 2010. Eastern Mediterranean Health Journal, 18(9), 946–950. https://doi.org/10.26719/2012.18.9.946
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