"Herd immunity": a rough guide.

Paul Fine; Ken Eames; David L Heymann; (2011) "Herd immunity": a rough guide. Clinical infectious diseases, 52 (7). pp. 911-916. ISSN 1058-4838 DOI: 10.1093/cid/cir007
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The term "herd immunity" is widely used but carries a variety of meanings. Some authors use it to describe the proportion immune among individuals in a population. Others use it with reference to a particular threshold proportion of immune individuals that should lead to a decline in incidence of infection. Still others use it to refer to a pattern of immunity that should protect a population from invasion of a new infection. A common implication of the term is that the risk of infection among susceptible individuals in a population is reduced by the presence and proximity of immune individuals (this is sometimes referred to as "indirect protection" or a "herd effect"). We provide brief historical, epidemiologic, theoretical, and pragmatic public health perspectives on this concept.

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