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Home
Plague
Plague
Statutory notification
The plague is a notifiable infectious disease in Western Australia.
Alert:
cases must be reported urgently by telephone to the
Public Health Unit
within a few hours of first suspicion of diagnosis.
See
notifiable communicable disease case definitions (Word 1.29MB)
.
Notifications should be made using the communicable disease notification form for
metropolitan residents (PDF 209KB)
or
regional residents (PDF 209KB)
.
For notification of regional residents see
contact details of public health units (Healthy WA)
.
See also description of
Statutory medical notifications
for WA Health.
Public health action
Important information
Infectious agent
:
Yersinia pestis
.
Transmission
: Bite from infected fleas or handling tissues of infected animals in regions where bubonic plague is endemic. Rarely from airborne droplets from human patients or household cats with plague pneumonia.
Yersinia pestis
is not endemic in Australia.
Incubation period
: From 1 to 7 days.
Infectious period
: Patients are usually no longer infectious after receiving 48–72 hours of appropriate antibiotic treatment.
Case exclusion
: Hospitalise the patient and use appropriate infection control procedures while patient is undergoing antibiotic therapy.
Contact exclusion
: Chemoprophylaxis and surveillance for seven days; those who refuse chemoprophylaxis should be maintained in strict isolation with careful surveillance for seven days.
Treatment
: Antibiotic treatment as recommended by the doctor.
Immunisation
: Vaccines have been developed but vaccination is not routine. If travelling to a plague endemic area, refer to a doctor of your choice to determine if vaccination is recommended.
Case and contact follow up
: Is conducted by Public Health Units and the Communicable Disease Control Directorate.
Public health action
Notifiable infectious disease dashboard
Infectious disease data
Produced by
Public Health