Journal article
Sources, perceived usefulness and understanding of information disseminated to families who entered home quarantine during the H1N1 pandemic in Victoria, Australia: A cross-sectional study
AM Kavanagh, RJ Bentley, KE Mason, J McVernon, S Petrony, J Fielding, AD LaMontagne, DM Studdert
BMC Infectious Diseases | BMC | Published : 2011
Abstract
Background: Voluntary home quarantine of cases and close contacts was the main non-pharmaceutical intervention used to limit transmission of pandemic (H1N1) 2009 influenza (pH1N1) in the initial response to the outbreak of the disease in Australia. The effectiveness of voluntary quarantine logically depends on affected families having a clear understanding of what they are being asked to do. Information may come from many sources, including the media, health officials, family and friends, schools, and health professionals. We report the extent to which families who entered home quarantine received and used information on what they were supposed to do. Specifically, we outline their sources o..
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Grants
Awarded by Australian Research Council
Funding Acknowledgements
This project was funded by an NHMRC Strategic Award, Call for research on H1N1 influenza 09 to inform public policy (#628962), JM is supported by a NHMRC Career Development Award; DS is funded by an ARC Federation Fellowship and RB is a post-doctoral fellow on an NHMRC Capacity Building Grant. We thank Paula Nathan for her work on this project; the schools for participating and providing support for the project; the Catholic Education Office and the Department of Education and Early Childhood Development and the Department of Health in Victoria.