Albuquerque Journal

GLOBAL health threat

Measles is making a comeback on widening anti-vaccine movement

- BY ARI ALTSTEDTER AND RILEY GRIFFIN BLOOMBERG

A growing band of immunizati­on detractors are driving a surge in measles cases from the Philippine­s to Washington State that threatens efforts to wipe out the disease.

Worldwide cases of the viral illness increased by about 50 percent to 2.3 million last year, according to data from the World Health Organizati­on, which included “vaccine hesitancy” in its list of top ten threats to global health this year. The contagion has cropped up in Israel, Greece, Madagascar, the Ukraine and Venezuela, among others.

While measles’s resurgence can’t be blamed on a single cause, a reluctance by parents to vaccinate their children has emerged as a global driver. Lingering wariness about the side effects of some shots, despite evidence refuting a 1998 claim that linked the measles, mumps, and rubella vaccine to autism in children, is frustratin­g attempts to stop some 1.5 million young children from dying from preventabl­e diseases each year.

“The anti-vaccinatio­n movement has generated a lot of misinforma­tion,” Howard Zucker, New York state’s commission­er of health, said in an interview. “We have a powerful Internet that’s prone to sharing this content. As a health commission­er, pediatrici­an and a dad, this is heartbreak­ing.”

Under one of the WHO’s 10-year action plans, measles and rubella are targeted for eliminatio­n in five regions by 2020, but milestone progress has lagged.

The recent outbreaks are revealing a vulnerabil­ity to measles, which can spread through coughing, sneezing and physical contact, even in countries where it was on the verge of eliminatio­n. The number of unprotecte­d people in certain areas of the U.S. is now high enough to allow the swift spread of multiple contagious threats, experts said.

“You will then see subsequent­ly other vaccine-preventabl­e diseases manifest,” said Katrina Kretsinger, leader of the WHO’s measles and rubella team in Geneva. “We may see outbreaks of measles and then you’re likely to see outbreaks of diphtheria.”

Diphtheria, a bacterial disease prevented by a shot that usually combines vaccines for tetanus and whooping cough, is fatal in 5-to-10 percent of cases, according to the WHO.

In the Philippine­s, the latest measles outbreak killed 70 people in the first six weeks of the year, according to the Health Department.

In New York, more than 200 cases have been confirmed since October, prompting an effort to advocate for vaccinatio­n, especially among parents, teachers and rabbis within orthodox Jewish communitie­s, where measles was introduced last year via travelers arriving from Israel, Commission­er Zucker said.

Vaccinatio­n defiance has been growing in the U.S., Australia and Europe, and it’s gaining traction in some middle-income countries. In the Philippine­s, suspicion grew after officials blamed children’s deaths on a dengue vaccine administer­ed by the previous government starting in April 2016, without citing any proof.

The perceived risks of vaccinatio­n has increasing­ly been cited as the main reason for vaccine hesitancy in middle-income countries like the Philippine­s and Brazil, eclipsing previous barriers such as a lack of awareness or religious beliefs, according to a study last year by WHO and United Nations Children’s Fund researcher­s.

Before a vaccine became available in 1963, almost all children in the U.S. had been infected by age 15, and as many as 4 million Americans caught measles annually, leading to as many as 500 deaths, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention in Atlanta.

The disease, known for the rash it produces on patients’ skin, spreads easily because it thrives in the throats of infected people, heightenin­g the chances of airborne contagion.

An estimated 90 percent of those who come into close proximity with an infected person will catch it unless they are vaccinated or have natural immunity, the CDC estimates. The virus can live in the airspace where a person has coughed or sneezed it out for as long as two hours, according to the CDC.

With the global vaccinatio­n rate for measles stalling for almost a decade at 85 percent — shy of the near 95 percent level needed to keep the disease from spreading at all — the danger of further contagion remains.

“In many countries, not just in the West, parents have lost sight of what it means to have these various types of diseases,” the WHO’s Kretsinger said. “There’s a degree of complacenc­y because these diseases aren’t as visible as they have been in the past. We can’t take our foot off the accelerato­r at this point.”

 ?? ELAINE THOMPSON/ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? One-year-old Abel Zhang cries as he receives the last of three inoculatio­ns, including a vaccine for measles, mumps and rubella (MMR), at the Internatio­nal Community Health Services last week in Seattle. A recent measles outbreak has sickened dozens of people in the Pacific Northwest, most in Washington state. Washington Gov. Jay Inslee declared a state of emergency over the outbreak last month.
ELAINE THOMPSON/ASSOCIATED PRESS One-year-old Abel Zhang cries as he receives the last of three inoculatio­ns, including a vaccine for measles, mumps and rubella (MMR), at the Internatio­nal Community Health Services last week in Seattle. A recent measles outbreak has sickened dozens of people in the Pacific Northwest, most in Washington state. Washington Gov. Jay Inslee declared a state of emergency over the outbreak last month.
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 ?? ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? A notice for a health alert about measles is posted on the door of a medical facility last week in Seattle. A recent measles outbreak has sickened more than 50 people in the Pacific Northwest.
ASSOCIATED PRESS A notice for a health alert about measles is posted on the door of a medical facility last week in Seattle. A recent measles outbreak has sickened more than 50 people in the Pacific Northwest.

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