Saturday Star

Family linked to measles outbreak

- ANNA WATERS

THE unpreceden­ted 17 cases of measles that have been confirmed in Gauteng “are not normal”, a senior Department of Health official warned.

Ten of these cases are linked to one family who chose not to be vaccinated for religious reasons. Almost all of the 17 people were not vaccinated.

“This is not normal,” said Dr Chika Asomugha, a senior medical adviser for public health programmes, at the department.

“In Gauteng, even one case of confirmed measles should wake us up. We only had 11 cases over the past year. Now we have 17 in a month.”

Nearly all of the cases are in Joburg, clustering in Lenasia South and Houghton, although three cases were confirmed outside of the city – two in Ekurhuleni and one in Tshwane.

Five of the patients are under five, one is aged 45, and the remainder are between five and 15.

Dr Melinda Suchard‚ head of the Centre for Vaccines and Immunology at the National Institute for Communicab­le Diseases, said more than three cases in one district in a month warranted investigat­ion, “so 17 in one month is definitely exceptiona­l”.

In response to the outbreak, the department has embarked on a mass vaccinatio­n campaign at schools and crèches.

When the first patients were identified, the department sought out everyone who had been in contact with those that took ill, and vaccinated them – though many had already been infected.

Now that the disease has spread to 17 people, Asomugha said just vaccinatin­g the contacts of those infected was not sufficient. This was why the department was now implementi­ng its widespread vaccinatio­n campaign.

All children between six months and 59 months (about five years) will be vaccinated. In Joburg, all children aged between six months and 15 years will be vaccinated.

A similar outbreak in the Western Cape over the first three months of this year, when 35 people were diagnosed with measles, was stopped by a provincial vaccinatio­n campaign similar to the one Gauteng is embarking on, according to Suchard.

A severe outbreak between 2009 and 2011 in South Africa included more than 18 000 confirmed cases, and led to multiple deaths.

The emergency vaccinatio­n campaign began this past Tuesday and will end on May 26. Health officials will visit every school and crèche, and pupils will be offered vaccinatio­ns after their parents have signed consent forms.

Even if children are already vaccinated, the inoculatio­n is not 100% effective, and the department hopes a second vaccinatio­n will protect them further.

The department emphasised it did not force vaccinatio­ns, and parental consent was required.

As so many of the reported cases were linked to the one family that refused vaccinatio­ns for religious grounds, Asomugha said promoting education about the safety and necessity of vaccinatio­n was a “matter of life and death”.

“We need to persuade people that vaccines are safe, and dispel misconcept­ions about negative side effects,” he said.

Last year, a study in the SA Medical Journal, A profile of anti-vaccinatio­n lobbying on the South African internet, 20112013, found South Africans were creating web pages or blogs for anti-vaccinatio­n lobbying.

These web pages claimed that vaccines were ineffectiv­e and that vaccinatio­n was profit driven. Christine Hewlett, who founded Vaccine Awareness SA, previously told the Saturday Star that she believed the number of people who refused vaccines was “very small but there is a growing awareness. They may not all refuse vaccines, but they’re certainly questionin­g vaccines”.

“Many of these anti-vaccinatio­n lobbyists are parents so it’s possible a growing number of young South Africans parents are using a search engine to find informatio­n about vaccinatio­n and are encounteri­ng misinforma­tion instead,” said the study. – Additional reporting by Sheree Bega

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from South Africa