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The Stig
05-05-2011, 02:20 PM
Story from AP (http://hosted.ap.org/dynamic/stories/U/US_MED_MEASLES?SITE=AP&SECTION=HOME&TEMPLATE=DEFAULT&CTIME=2011-05-05-05-48-36)


ATLANTA (AP) -- The United States seems to be on track to have more measles cases than any year in more than a decade, with virtually all cases linked to other countries, including Europe where there's a big outbreak.

Already there have been 89 cases reported so far. The U.S. normally sees only about 50 cases of measles in a year thanks to vaccinations.

Health officials are reluctant to make predictions, but acknowledge the pace of reports is unusually hot.

"It's hard to say, but we're certainly getting a lot," said Dr. Greg Wallace, who leads the measles, mumps, rubella and polio team at the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

Europe, especially France, has been hit hard by measles, with more than 6,500 cases reported in 33 nations. International health officials are blaming it on the failure to vaccinate all children.

Just about all U.S. outbreaks were sparked by people bringing it here from other countries. This week, international health officials posted an alert urging travelers everywhere to get the recommended two doses of vaccine before flying overseas.

"The risk of getting infection is very high," said Dr. Cuauhtemoc Ruiz Matus, an immunization expert with the Pan American Health Organization.

In the U.S., the worst year for measles in the last decade was 2008, when 140 cases were reported. There have been no measles deaths this year, but health officials warn the disease can be dangerous.

Measles is highly contagious and up to 90 percent of people exposed to an infected person get sick, experts say. The virus spreads easily through the air, and in closed rooms, infected droplets can linger for up to two hours after the sick person leaves.

"Measles is really the most contagious of the vaccine-preventable diseases. It has a knack for finding those who have not been vaccinated," Wallace said.

The disease's most common symptoms include fever, runny nose, cough, eye inflammation and rash all over the body. It takes about two weeks for the rash to appear from the time of first infection, and people are contagious from four days before a rash to four days after.

A small fraction of people get much sicker, developing pneumonia or even encephalitis. For every 1,000 children who get measles in developed nations, one or two will die.

Since 2003, there have been no measles-related deaths reported in the United States, where children have been getting vaccinated against the virus for almost 50 years. Before the vaccine, nearly all children got measles by their 15th birthday and epidemics cycled through the nation every two to three years - generally peaking in the late winter or spring.

In those days, about 450 to 500 Americans died from measles each year, on average. Vaccination campaigns reduced the toll dramatically, and today, roughly 90 percent of U.S. kids are protected from measles, according to studies of teenagers.

Two doses of a measles-mumps-rubella vaccine are routinely recommended for all children, including a first dose given around a child's first birthday and a second dose around the time of preschool. These vaccinations are believed to last for a lifetime.

Children as young as six months old can get a first dose if they're going to a country where they are at high risk of exposure, health officials say.

"Unfortunately, that's not always done. Parents often don't report to their physician that they are taking their child on an international trip," said Dr. Harry Keyserling, a pediatric infectious diseases specialist at the Emory University School of Medicine.

One dose is considered 95 percent effective, two doses even better. But health officials acknowledge it's not perfect and a few people who are fully vaccinated will still get sick.

Of the 89 cases reported through the end of last week, 79 were people who were unvaccinated or who had no documentation of it, Wallace said.

Outbreaks so far this year have included:

-In Florida, five cases linked to an international helicopter trade show held in Orlando last month, and another three cases in an outbreak in the Gainesville area traced to a traveler who had been to India.

-Nine cases in Utah, reported last month. They were linked to someone who apparently was infected in Poland.

-Twenty-one cases in Minnesota, first reported in February. The illnesses were traced to a Minneapolis-areas child who developed symptoms after returning from a trip to Kenya.

-Six cases in Pennsylvania, first reported in January, origin unknown.

RedJohn
05-05-2011, 02:26 PM
People are getting careless with vaccinations. They don't hear about the diseases, so they thinks that they are gone. One guy travelling from a poor country can kill hundreds.

The Stig
05-05-2011, 02:40 PM
People are getting careless with vaccinations. They don't hear about the diseases, so they thinks that they are gone. One guy travelling from a poor country can kill hundreds.

That's what I was thinking.

You can't help who you come in contact with in the general public, but for God's sake, get your kids vaccinated and be aware of anybody you know that travels to shitty parts of the world.

RedJohn
05-05-2011, 02:51 PM
In Europe, there is an increase in such diseases because the parent think that they do not need to vaccinate the kids anymore. Old diseases are coming back.

The Stig
06-24-2011, 10:25 AM
Original story at Reuters (http://www.reuters.com/article/2011/06/23/us-indiana-measles-idUSTRE75M76L20110623)


Isolated measles outbreak has Indiana officials on alert
By Susan Guyett

INDIANAPOLIS | Thu Jun 23, 2011 4:18pm EDT

(Reuters) - Health officials in Indiana were on alert on Thursday after five measles cases were confirmed in Noble County in the northeastern part of the state.

State Health Commissioner Dr. Gregory Larkin said his department had dispatched workers to seven nearby counties in northern Indiana to identify any additional cases of the highly contagious disease and to prevent its spread.

The workers have also been given additional doses of the measles vaccine. Individuals who have been exposed to an infected person can obtain the vaccine at no cost, according to a statement released by Larkin's office.

"With measles, even one case is considered an outbreak," Larkin said.

Indiana is the latest state to find itself tracking down measles victims as the once rare disease makes its way back into the public.

An outbreak in Northern Utah forced a power plant to turn away workers earlier this week after a local resident was diagnosed. Utah also had an earlier measles outbreak this spring in the Salt Lake City Area.

The Vermont Department of Health issued a measles alert on Tuesday after a suspected case turned up in a young child in Washington County and an alert went out in April in New Jersey.

Measles is highly contagious and can be transmitted even though the person with measles isn't showing a rash.

Measles can cause serious complications, including encephalitis, pneumonia and in rare cases brain damage or death.

Unvaccinated individuals may avoid contracting the disease if they receive the vaccine within 72 hours of the last exposure.

Those with compromised immune systems, infants under 12 months old and pregnant women can receive immune globulin within six days of exposure.

"I cannot stress enough that the best protection against measles is to get vaccinated," Larkin said.

The first sign of measles is usually fever, runny nose, cough and red eyes that appear 7-10 days after exposure. The rash on the face and upper back begins two to four days later.

The measles virus kills nearly 200,000 people each year around the world and is the leading cause of death among children in developing counties.

The United States and Canada reduced the number of measles case to nearly zero in recent decades with childhood vaccinations but that number is starting to rise again, according to the National Institutes of Health.

(Editing by James B. Kelleher

RedJohn
06-24-2011, 09:22 PM
So many new diseases lately. In germany 1 e.coli (45 death) and France 2 e.coli (no death yet) and old forgotten diseases coming back. This is all weird.

piranha2
06-25-2011, 12:58 AM
Don't want to get all tin foil and shit, but google Plum Island. Government test site credited with lyme disease and several other nasties.