Understanding the current measles outbreak
Q: Why is there a measles outbreak in Minneapolis? Doesn’t that state have a high vaccination rate? – Kevin Q., Rochester, Minn.
A: Minneapolis has had a large community of Somali immigrants since the 1990s, refugees who have fled their civil war. Measles kills about 10,000 children a year in Somalia, so when the refugees arrived here, they were glad to have access to the measles vaccine and gave it to their children.
Then between 2010 and 2011, the Somali Americans thought they were experiencing a high rate of autism among their kids. They asked local and national authorities to investigate. Researchers from the University of Minnesota, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention and the National Institutes of Health found that autism rates in Minneapolis’ Somali community were higher than the national average. However, the rate was identical to autism rates in Minneapolis’ white population. But that data came too late to prevent antivaccine activists from swooping in with a misinformation campaign.
In fact, the Washington Post reported that one of the antivaccine movement’s founders, Andrew Wakefield (the doctor who was alleged to be have reported data in a biased way and stripped of his medical license after he published a study with fake data linking vaccines and autism), was among those who had met with Somali parents. Local health authorities in Minnesota are still dealing with antivax activists spewing misinformation about vaccines and with the resulting measles outbreak, with 44 cases reported as of this writing.
So let’s help set the record straight: the cause of autism continues to elude the scientific community, but we know it’s not vaccinations. We spent a month reviewing every study on vaccine safety and interviewing 150 experts on all sides of the issue. Our conclusion: vaccines aren’t perfectly safe, but the chance that a vaccine will effectively and safely prevent disease is more than 40,000 times greater than the chance it’ll cause any serious side effect.
Read about it in “YOU: Raising Your Child” and at www. doctoroz.com/article/bookexcerpt-you-having-babyvaccines.