Jobs
My ads
My job alerts
Sign in
Find a job Career Tips Companies
Find

Public health alert: measles

Gold Coast
Western Queensland Primary Health Network
Posted: 13 June
Offer description

Measles outbreaks are occuring in a number of overseas countries, with cases notified in travellers to Victoria, New South Wales, Western Australia, Northern Territory, ACT, and now in Queensland.There has been one recently confirmed case of measles in a person who visited Brisbane, Gold Coast, and Sunshine Coast regions. Further cases may be presnt in Queensland.Clinicians should be alert for signs and symptoms of measles, particularly in returning overseas travellers or those potentially exposed to measles.Suspected cases should be tested, advised to isolate, and notified to local public health.THINK measles in patients who present with:generalised maculopapular rash (usually begins on the face, before spreading to the rest of the body) ANDfever (usually at least 38 o C) present at rash onset ANDcough or conjunctivitis or koplik spotsWho is most at risk?Infants under 12 months who are too young to be vaccinated against measles, other members of the community who are not fully vaccinated and people with a weakened immune system.Measles transmission can occur in healthcare settings.When a patient with suspected measles attends a healthcare facility, contacts (other patients/staff at the facility) are at risk of acquiring the infection.The following recommendations will minimise the risk of transmission within facilities:Avoid keeping patients with fever and rash in shared waiting areas. Consider how the patient may be examined in an area that minimises exposure to others.Ensure the patient is wearing a surgical mask.Staff to use airborne transmission-based precautions for all patient care.Leave all rooms that were used to assess the patient vacant for at least 30 minutes afterwards.Ensure all staff in contact with the patient are fully vaccinated (2 documented doses of measles containing vaccine) or have serologically confirmed immunity to measles.Contact your local public health unit or your facility Infection Prevention and Control team for further advice.Advise patients to call the pathology service prior to presenting.Notify the local Public Health Unit immediately on clinical suspicion to allow timely follow up of high-risk contacts.Non-immune people who have been exposed to measles should receive an MMR vaccine (or MMRV in some instances) for post-exposure prophylaxis, ideally within 72 hours of exposure.MMR-containing vaccines are contraindicated in pregnant women. Normal human immunoglobulin (NHIG) may be recommended by public health authorities.PreventionAnyone born during or since 1966 are recommended to have two documented doses of measles containing vaccine four weeks apart.Travellers who are not immune or are unsure of their vaccination history should be vaccinated before they leave Australia. Consider an individual risk assessment for infants aged

Send an application
Create a job alert
Alert activated
Saved
Save
Similar jobs
jobs Gold Coast
jobs Queensland
Home > Jobs > Public Health Alert: Measles

About Jobstralia

  • Career Advice
  • Company Reviews

Search for jobs

  • Jobs by job title
  • Jobs by sector
  • Jobs by company
  • Jobs by location

Contact / Partnership

  • Contact
  • Publish your job offers on Jobijoba

Legal notice - Terms of Service - Privacy Policy - Manage my cookies

© 2025 Jobstralia - All Rights Reserved

Send an application
Create a job alert
Alert activated
Saved
Save