Ga. Syrogiannopoulos et al., CHILDHOOD BACTERIAL-MENINGITIS IN SOUTHWESTERN GREECE - A POPULATION-BASED STUDY, Clinical infectious diseases, 21(6), 1995, pp. 1471-1473
During the 5-year period from 1990 through 1994, we investigated the i
ncidence of childhood bacterial meningitis (beyond the neonatal period
) in southwestern Greece. Thirty-seven cases of bacterial meningitis w
ere identified. Fifty-one percent of the cases were caused by Neisseri
a meningitidis, 41% by Haemophilus influenzae type b (Hib), and 8% by
Streptococcus pneumoniae. Fifty-eight percent and 73% of cases of meni
ngococcal and Hib meningitis, respectively, involved children younger
than 2 years of age. The average yearly incidences of meningococcal an
d Hib meningitis were 9.7 and 8 cases, respectively, per 100,000 child
ren <5 years of age. The main difference between findings in this stud
y and those in other studies in Western European countries is the lowe
r incidence of Hib meningitis observed in our area. This low incidence
of Hib meningitis cannot be attributed to the use of vaccine because
the Hib vaccine was first introduced in May 1994 and used infrequently
through December 1994.