Friday, September 13, 2013

It"s Looking Like a Very Bad Year for Measles


(Newser) – Back in 2000, health experts thought they’d eradicated measles in the US. They were wrong. As of August 24 there have been 159 cases this year, putting the country on pace for its worst year since 1996, the CDC revealed yesterday. The causes: travel, and vaccination foes. All of the outbreaks can be traced to someone bringing the disease from a foreign country, NPR reports. But nearly two-thirds of cases occurred in three communities where religious or philosophical objections to vaccination are common, according to CNN.


Eighty-two percent of those infected hadn’t been vaccinated, and another 9% didn’t know if they had been, CBS reports. The CDC believes discredited fears about the vaccine, like the myth that it causes autism, are contributing to the problem. “This is very bad. This is horrible,” says one infectious disease expert. “The complications of measles are not to be toyed with, and they’re not altogether rare.” And because babies under a year old can’t be vaccinated, vaccination foes are potentially endangering their neighbors’ babies. “None of us lives in isolation,” the expert says.




Health from Newser



It"s Looking Like a Very Bad Year for Measles

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