Sobal J, Loveland F C
Public Health Rep. 1982 Jan-Feb;97(1):66-72.
The influenza epidemic of 1978 was studied on a college campus, since a college is a type of "total institution" in which work, residence, and recreation are all concentrated in one organization with clearly delineated social boundaries and a unique social structure, A survey of a sample of 418 persons (378 students, 40 faculty members) revealed that more than 48 percent of the students contracted influenza and that the intersemester vacation was a social factor that may have aided in the disease's penetration of the institution's boundaries. The vacation exposed the students to the distase, and the resumption of classes allowed influenza to spread rapidly in the student population, which was concentrated within the boundaries of the educational institution. The faculty exhibited relative immunity to the disease compared with the students, having only a 5 percent attack rate. There were no significant differences in the incidence or duration of illness among the students by sex, year in school, residence area, floor of residence, fraternity or sorority membership, or participation in fraternity or sorority recruitment activities.
1978年的流感疫情在一所大学校园里进行了研究,因为大学是一种“全控机构”,工作、居住和娱乐都集中在一个组织中,有着明确划定的社会界限和独特的社会结构。对418人(378名学生、40名教职员工)的样本进行的一项调查显示,超过48%的学生感染了流感,学期间的假期是一个社会因素,可能有助于疾病突破该机构的界限。假期使学生接触到这种疾病,而复课则使流感在集中于教育机构范围内的学生群体中迅速传播。与学生相比,教职员工对这种疾病表现出相对免疫力,发病率仅为5%。在学生中,按性别、年级、居住区域、居住楼层、兄弟会或姐妹会成员身份或参与兄弟会或姐妹会招募活动划分,疾病的发病率或患病持续时间没有显著差异。