Akron Beacon Journal

Measles cases in Ohio on track to surpass last year

58 in US so far equal the same amount in all of ’23

- Max Filby mfilby@dispatch.com @MaxFilby

The number of measles cases reported in 2024 is already on track to surpass last year’s total number of diagnoses nationwide.

At least 58 cases of the measles infection have been reported in the U.S. so far in 2024, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. That’s the same number of cases that were reported for the entirety of 2023, data shows.

Seventeen states, including Ohio, have this year reported cases of measles, a virus that can cause a fever, cough, runny nose and a rash, among other symptoms.

Can you get measles as an adult?

Throughout Ohio, five cases have been reported so far, including two in Montgomery County, two in Miami County and one in Richland County, according to the Ohio Department of Health. Each of those cases were reported in people who were either unvaccinat­ed or did not know if they had been inoculated.

Anyone can contract the measles, whether they’re an adult or a child, if they haven’t been vaccinated.

“The Ohio Department of Health strongly encourages vaccinatio­n, as two doses of the measles, mumps and rubella (MMR) vaccine is 97% effective against measles,” Ken Gordon, a state health department spokesman said via email.

A vaccine for measles first became available in 1963, according to the CDC. Today it’s given in two doses, with the first being administer­ed to babies 15 months of age and younger and the second recommende­d to be administer­ed between ages 4 and 6.

What’s the difference between chickenpox and measles?

While measles and chickenpox are sometimes confused with each other for the rashes they can result in, they’re caused by different viruses, according to the CDC. Unlike the measles, a vaccine for chickenpox wasn’t introduced until 32 years after the measles vaccine in 1995.

Although Columbus and Franklin County have been spared so far by measles this year, central Ohio did suffer a measles outbreak that began in October 2022 and saw its last case recorded in early 2023, according to Columbus

Public Health.

A total of 85 cases were reported locally as part of that outbreak, data shows. Of those 85 cases, 80 were unvaccinat­ed, four had only received one dose of the vaccine and one person did not confirm their vaccinatio­n status, according to Columbus Public Health.

Is measles serious?

Although a vaccine has existed for decades now, the measles is considered a serious disease, said Columbus Public Health spokeswoma­n Kelli Newman.

Prior to the vaccine, nearly all U.S. children contracted the measles by the age of 15 and 3 million to 4 million people fell ill with the disease each year, according to the CDC. At the time, it’s estimated between 400 and 500 people a year died of measles while 48,000 were hospitaliz­ed, and 1,000 suffered brain swelling.

“Measles is a highly contagious illness, but it is preventabl­e,” Newman told The Dispatch. “To protect your children from measles, make sure they receive timely MMR vaccines, which are safe and highly effective at preventing measles.”

 ?? GETTY IMAGES ?? The U.S. is already on track in 2024 to surpass the total number of measles cases reported nationwide during all of 2023. So far, five cases have been reported in Ohio, according to the Ohio Department of Health.
GETTY IMAGES The U.S. is already on track in 2024 to surpass the total number of measles cases reported nationwide during all of 2023. So far, five cases have been reported in Ohio, according to the Ohio Department of Health.

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