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Dive into the research topics where Ismael R. Ortega-Sanchez is active.

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Featured researches published by Ismael R. Ortega-Sanchez.


Pediatrics | 2010

Measles Outbreak in a Highly Vaccinated Population, San Diego, 2008: Role of the Intentionally Undervaccinated

David E. Sugerman; Albert E. Barskey; Maryann G. Delea; Ismael R. Ortega-Sanchez; Daoling Bi; Kimberly Ralston; Paul A. Rota; Karen Waters-Montijo; Charles W. LeBaron

OBJECTIVE: In January 2008, an intentionally unvaccinated 7-year-old boy who was unknowingly infected with measles returned from Switzerland, resulting in the largest outbreak in San Diego, California, since 1991. We investigated the outbreak with the objective of understanding the effect of intentional undervaccination on measles transmission and its potential threat to measles elimination. METHODS: We mapped vaccination-refusal rates according to school and school district, analyzed measles-transmission patterns, used discussion groups and network surveys to examine beliefs of parents who decline vaccination, and evaluated containment costs. RESULTS: The importation resulted in 839 exposed persons, 11 additional cases (all in unvaccinated children), and the hospitalization of an infant too young to be vaccinated. Two-dose vaccination coverage of 95%, absence of vaccine failure, and a vigorous outbreak response halted spread beyond the third generation, at a net public-sector cost of


The Journal of Infectious Diseases | 2011

Health Care–Associated Measles Outbreak in the United States After an Importation: Challenges and Economic Impact

Sanny Y. Chen; Shoana Anderson; Preeta K. Kutty; Francelli Lugo; Michelle McDonald; Paul A. Rota; Ismael R. Ortega-Sanchez; Ken Komatsu; Gregory L. Armstrong; Rebecca Sunenshine; Jane F. Seward

10 376 per case. Although 75% of the cases were of persons who were intentionally unvaccinated, 48 children too young to be vaccinated were quarantined, at an average family cost of


Clinical Infectious Diseases | 2006

Nosocomial Pertussis: Costs of an Outbreak and Benefits of Vaccinating Health Care Workers

Angela Calugar; Ismael R. Ortega-Sanchez; Tejpratap Tiwari; Liisa Oakes; Jeffrey A. Jahre; Trudy V. Murphy

775 per child. Substantial rates of intentional undervaccination occurred in public charter and private schools, as well as public schools in upper-socioeconomic areas. Vaccine refusal clustered geographically and the overall rate seemed to be rising. In discussion groups and survey responses, the majority of parents who declined vaccination for their children were concerned with vaccine adverse events. CONCLUSIONS: Despite high community vaccination coverage, measles outbreaks can occur among clusters of intentionally undervaccinated children, at major cost to public health agencies, medical systems, and families. Rising rates of intentional undervaccination can undermine measles elimination.


Pediatrics | 2005

Cost-Effectiveness of Conjugate Meningococcal Vaccination Strategies in the United States

Colin W. Shepard; Ismael R. Ortega-Sanchez; R. Douglas Scott; Nancy E. Rosenstein

BACKGROUND On 12 February 2008, an infected Swiss traveler visited hospital A in Tucson, Arizona, and initiated a predominantly health care-associated measles outbreak involving 14 cases. We investigated risk factors that might have contributed to health care-associated transmission and assessed outbreak-associated hospital costs. METHODS Epidemiologic data were obtained by case interviews and review of medical records. Health care personnel (HCP) immunization records were reviewed to identify non-measles-immune HCP. Outbreak-associated costs were estimated from 2 hospitals. RESULTS Of 14 patients with confirmed cases, 7 (50%) were aged ≥ 18 years, 4 (29%) were hospitalized, 7 (50%) acquired measles in health care settings, and all (100%) were unvaccinated or had unknown vaccination status. Of the 11 patients (79%) who had accessed health care services while infectious, 1 (9%) was masked and isolated promptly after rash onset. HCP measles immunity data from 2 hospitals confirmed that 1776 (25%) of 7195 HCP lacked evidence of measles immunity. Among these HCPs, 139 (9%) of 1583 tested seronegative for measles immunoglobulin G, including 1 person who acquired measles. The 2 hospitals spent US


Pediatrics | 2005

The Cost of Containing One Case of Measles: The Economic Impact on the Public Health Infrastructure—Iowa, 2004

Gustavo H. Dayan; Ismael R. Ortega-Sanchez; Charles W. LeBaron; M. Patricia Quinlisk

799,136 responding to and containing 7 cases in these facilities. CONCLUSIONS Suspecting measles as a diagnosis, instituting immediate airborne isolation, and ensuring rapidly retrievable measles immunity records for HCPs are paramount in preventing health care-associated spread and in minimizing hospital outbreak-response costs.


Vaccine | 2010

High costs of influenza: direct medical costs of influenza disease in young children.

Gerry Fairbrother; Amy Cassedy; Ismael R. Ortega-Sanchez; Peter G. Szilagyi; Kathryn M. Edwards; Noelle-Angelique Molinari; Stephanie Donauer; Diana Henderson; Sandra Ambrose; Diane Kent; Katherine A. Poehling; Geoffrey A. Weinberg; Marie R. Griffin; Caroline B. Hall; Lyn Finelli; Carolyn B. Bridges; Mary Allen Staat

BACKGROUND In September 2003, 17 symptomatic cases of pertussis among health care workers (HCWs) resulted from a 1-day exposure to an infant who was later confirmed to have pertussis. These HCWs identified 307 close contacts. The hospital implemented extensive infection-control measures. The objective of this study was to determine direct and indirect costs incurred by the hospital and symptomatic HCWs as a result of the September 2003 outbreak and to estimate possible benefits of vaccinating HCWs from the hospital perspective. METHODS We determined costs by interviewing infection-control and hospital personnel, reviewing billing records, and surveying symptomatic HCWs. We calculated the benefits and costs of a vaccination program for HCWs, using a probabilistic model to estimate the number of pertussis exposures that would require control measures annually. Sensitivity and threshold analyses were performed. RESULTS The outbreak cost to the hospital was 74,870 dollars. The total measured cost of the outbreak was 81,382 dollars, including costs incurred by HCWs (6512 dollars). Our model predicted that vaccinating HCWs against pertussis would prevent >46% of exposures from HCWs with pertussis per year and would provide net savings. The benefit for the hospital was estimated to be 2.38 times the dollar amount invested in vaccinating HCWs. The number of exposures prevented and the benefit-cost ratio were sensitive to the number of exposures identified, the incidence of pertussis among HCWs, and HCW turnover. CONCLUSIONS A single nosocomial pertussis outbreak resulted in substantial disruption and costs to the hospital and to HCWs. Our model suggests that cost savings and benefits could be accrued by vaccinating HCWs against pertussis.


The Journal of Infectious Diseases | 2008

An Economic Analysis of the Universal Varicella Vaccination Program in the United States

Fangjun Zhou; Ismael R. Ortega-Sanchez; Dalya Guris; Abigail Shefer; Tracy A. Lieu; Jane F. Seward

Context. The US Food and Drug Administration approved a meningococcal conjugate A/C/Y/W-135 vaccine (MCV-4) for use in persons aged 11 to 55 years in January, 2005; licensure for use in younger age groups is expected in 2 to 4 years. Objective. To evaluate and compare the projected health and economic impact of MCV-4 vaccination of US adolescents, toddlers, and infants. Design. Cost-effectiveness analysis from a societal perspective based on data from Active Bacterial Core Surveillance (ABCs) and other published and unpublished sources. Sensitivity analyses in which key input measures were varied over plausible ranges were performed. Setting and Patients. A hypothetical 2003 US population cohort of children 11 years of age and a 2003 US birth cohort. Interventions. Hypothetical routine vaccination of adolescents (1 dose at 11 years of age), toddlers (1 dose at 1 year of age), and infants (3 doses at 2, 4, and 6 months of age). Each vaccination scenario was compared with a “no-vaccination” scenario. Main Outcome Measures. Meningococcal cases and deaths prevented, cost per case prevented, cost per life-year saved, and cost per quality-adjusted life-year saved. Results. Routine MCV-4 vaccination of US adolescents (11 years of age) would prevent 270 meningococcal cases and 36 deaths in the vaccinated cohort over 22 years, a decrease of 46% in the expected burden of disease. Before program costs are counted, adolescent vaccination would reduce direct disease costs by


Vaccine | 2014

The economic burden of sixteen measles outbreaks on United States public health departments in 2011.

Ismael R. Ortega-Sanchez; Maya Vijayaraghavan; Albert E. Barskey; Gregory S. Wallace

18 million and decrease productivity losses by


PharmacoEconomics | 2009

Willingness to Pay for a QALY Based on Community Member and Patient Preferences for Temporary Health States Associated with Herpes Zoster

Tracy A. Lieu; G. Thomas Ray; Ismael R. Ortega-Sanchez; Ken Kleinman; Donna Rusinak; Lisa A. Prosser

50 million. At a cost per vaccination (average public-private price per dose plus administration fees) of


PharmacoEconomics | 2008

Community and Patient Values for Preventing Herpes Zoster

Tracy A. Lieu; Ismael R. Ortega-Sanchez; G. Thomas Ray; Donna Rusinak; W. Katherine Yih; Peter W. Choo; Irene M. Shui; Ken Kleinman; Rafael Harpaz; Lisa A. Prosser

82.50, adolescent vaccination would cost society

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Jane F. Seward

Centers for Disease Control and Prevention

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Rafael Harpaz

National Center for Immunization and Respiratory Diseases

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Charles W. LeBaron

Centers for Disease Control and Prevention

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Gustavo H. Dayan

Centers for Disease Control and Prevention

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Noelle-Angelique Molinari

Centers for Disease Control and Prevention

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Paul A. Rota

National Center for Immunization and Respiratory Diseases

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Amy A. Parker

Centers for Disease Control and Prevention

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Amy Cassedy

Cincinnati Children's Hospital Medical Center

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Carolyn B. Bridges

National Center for Immunization and Respiratory Diseases

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