Kharabsheh S, Al-Otoum H, Clements J, Abbas A, Khuri-Bulos N, Belbesi A, Gaafar T, Dellepiane N
Primary Health Care, Ministry of Health, Amman, Jordan.
Bull World Health Organ. 2001;79(8):764-70. Epub 2001 Oct 24.
In September 1998, more than 800 young people in Jordan believed they had suffered from the side-effects of tetanus-diphtheria toxoid vaccine administered at school; 122 of them were admitted to hospital. For the vast majority, their symptoms did not result from the vaccine but arose from mass psychogenic illness. The role played by the media, the children's parents, and the medical profession in the escalation of this mass reaction appeared, at first sight, to be unusual and even unique to the circumstances in Jordan at the time. A review of the literature showed, however, that this mass reaction was similar in many ways to previous outbreaks, even though the underlying causes varied. There are about 200 published accounts of mass responses to situations involving suspected poisoning or other events. Because such mass reactions are relatively rare and the triggers so diverse, individuals faced with responding to them are unlikely to have prior experience in how to handle them and are unlikely to take bold steps to prevent their escalation. Indeed they may be unaware that such events have been recorded before. The lessons learned from this incident in Jordan may help other immunization programme managers to handle crisis situations elsewhere.
1998年9月,约旦800多名年轻人认为自己遭受了在校接种破伤风-白喉类毒素疫苗的副作用影响;其中122人住院治疗。对绝大多数人来说,他们的症状并非由疫苗引起,而是群体性癔症所致。乍一看,媒体、儿童家长以及医疗行业在这起群体性反应升级过程中所起的作用似乎不同寻常,甚至是约旦当时的特殊情况所独有的。然而,文献回顾表明,尽管根本原因各不相同,但这种群体性反应在许多方面与之前的疫情爆发相似。大约有200篇已发表的关于对疑似中毒或其他事件的群体性反应的报道。由于此类群体性反应相对罕见且触发因素多种多样,面对此类情况的个人不太可能有处理它们的先前经验,也不太可能采取大胆措施来防止其升级。事实上,他们可能没有意识到此类事件以前已有记录。从约旦这起事件中吸取的教训可能有助于其他免疫规划管理人员应对其他地方的危机情况。