Vaccines and Preventable Diseases:
Rubella Disease In-Short (German Measles)
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Description
An acute viral disease that causes fever and rash
Symptoms
Rash and fever for two to three days (mild disease in children and young adults)
Complications
Birth defects if acquired by a pregnant woman: deafness, cataracts, heart defects, mental retardation, and liver and spleen damage (at least a 20% chance of damage to the fetus if a woman is infected early in pregnancy)
Transmission
Spread by contact with an infected person, through coughing and sneezing
Vaccine
Rubella vaccine (contained in MMR vaccine) can prevent this disease.
Who Needs It?
As a child, do I need it? (immunization schedule)
As an adult, do I need it? (immunization schedule)
You do NOT need the measles, mumps, rubella vaccine (MMR) if:
- You had blood tests that show you are immune to measles, mumps, and rubella.
- You are a man born before 1957.
- You are a woman born before 1957 who is sure she is not having more children, has already had rubella vaccine, or has had a positive rubella test.
- You already had two doses of MMR or one dose of MMR plus a second dose of measles vaccine.
- You already had one dose of MMR and are not at high risk of measles or mumps exposure.
You SHOULD get the MMR vaccine if you are not among the categories listed above, and
- You are a college student, trade school student, or other student beyond high school.
- You work in a hospital or other medical facility.
- You travel internationally, or are a passenger on a cruise ship.
- You are a woman of childbearing age.
Return to main Rubella Vaccination page
Content last reviewed on January 16, 2007
Content Source: National Center for Immunization and Respiratory Diseases
