Miami Herald

WITH 10 MEASLES CASES IN FLORIDA, CRITICISM MOUNTS

- CINDY KRISCHER GOODMAN AND SHIRA MOOLTEN South Florida Sun Sentinel

Criticism mounted Tuesday of the Florida surgeon general’s response to the measles outbreak, as the number of cases rose to 10 in the state – nine of them in Broward County.

Florida Surgeon General Joseph Ladapo, the state’s top health official, shared a letter on Feb. 20 telling parents at Manatee Bay in Weston that the decision whether to keep their children home was up to them, a move that has received widespread criticism from public health experts and political leaders across the country.

Ladapo’s letter has drawn scrutiny from doctors, epidemiolo­gists and infectious disease specialist­s. And at a news conference Tuesday, Congresswo­man Debbie Wasserman Schultz said Ladapo, in his letter, wrongly left the decision of keeping kids home up to their parents, and should have recommende­d vaccinatin­g them. She also decried Ladapo’s failure to declare a public health emergency.

She called him a “super spreader of misinforma­tion.”

“I’m calling for his immediate terminatio­n and demanding Gov. DeSantis replace him with a public health expert that will place Floridians’ health safety and well-being first,” said the congresswo­man, a Democrat who grew up in Weston, where Manatee Bay Elementary – the school that has had students with measles – is located. Ladapo was appointed for his role by Republican Gov. Ron DeSantis.

Broward County now is up to nine cases of measles, two of them in children younger than 4 years old. Seven of the nine are students at Manatee Bay Elementary. It’s unclear whether the two cases younger than 4 are siblings of students at the elementary school. A tenth case has been reported in a Polk County resident age 20-24.

Meanwhile, Florida health officials have not been forthcomin­g with informatio­n about the disease’s spread.

When Floridians learned of an outbreak in measles at a Weston elementary school, it was the public school district that provided informatio­n to the public, not health officials.

The health department has held vaccinatio­n events at the

school and in the community, however, it has not provided informatio­n on how many adults and students in Broward County have been vaccinated for measles since the outbreak began last week. At the time the first case was reported, more than 100 of the 1,067 students at the school were unvaccinat­ed.

The outbreak in Florida started with four cases reported on the state’s disease surveillan­ce website. Outside of Broward County, Polk County was reported over the weekend, bringing the total in Florida to 10 cases. Florida’s outbreak is the largest in the U.S. right now.

Gone unanswered by Florida’s health officials have been questions about whether these cases are in the unvaccinat­ed, whether the younger children with measles are siblings of infected at Manatee Bay and whether the newest case is in a college student.

They also haven’t answered questions the public wants to know: How did measles get to Florida? How exactly is this onceeradic­ated disease spreading in South Florida? How many people in Broward County have been vaccinated at the recent events?

Local health officials in Broward County and Polk County have redirected reporters’ inquiries to the Florida Department of Health’s main communicat­ions office in Tallahasse­e. That office has not respond to multiple inquires from the South Florida Sun Sentinel and the Orlando Sentinel.

John Sullivan, a spokesman for Broward County Public Schools, has provided informatio­n on cases in Manatee Bay and the school district’s response informing the public about cleaning measures at the elementary school. On Tuesday, 82 students were absent at the school, an improvemen­t from the more than 200 absent last week.

The only communicat­ion thus far from the Florida Department of Health has been a letter sent to parents at Manatee Bay from Ladapo, Florida’s top health official.

Ladapo, nationally known for his outspoken skepticism toward the COVID-19 vaccine, recently sent a letter to parents at Manatee Bay Elementary School.

“Due to the high immunity rate in the community, as well as the burden on families and educationa­l cost of healthy children missing school, (the state health department) is deferring to parents or guardians to make decisions about school attendance,” Ladapo wrote.

His letter states that when a school has a measles outbreak, it is “normally recommende­d” that unvaccinat­ed students who haven’t previously had the disease be kept home for three weeks “because of the high likelihood” they will be infected.

But the letter then says the state won’t turn that recommenda­tion into a mandate.

“This is unpreceden­ted. Those with no prior immunity need to isolate for 21 days,” epidemiolo­gist Katelyn Jetelina wrote in her popularpub­lic health science newsletter. Jetelina says “measles is one of the most contagious diseases on earth.”

On Tuesday, Wasserman Schultz was joined by Dr. Mary Jo Trepka, an infectious disease epidemiolo­gist at Florida Internatio­nal University, and Latha Krishnaiye­r, the legislativ­e chair of the Broward Parent Teacher Associatio­n.

Measles was declared eradicated in 2000, thanks to a highly effective vaccinatio­n program. But the disease has emerged again as more Americans forgo vaccinatio­n, which the COVID pandemic further politicize­d. “Sadly, frustratin­gly, Florida’s Surgeon General stands in stark contrast to America’s proud legacy of bipartisan public health success,” said Wasserman Schulz. “Ladapo instead politicize­s public health and peddles risky freedom-of-choice rhetoric that fuels vaccine hesitancy and downplays the public and personal health necessity of vaccinatio­n.”

Wasserman Schultz likened Ladapo’s approach to measles to his treatment of the COVID vaccine, saying he omitted data from a COVID vaccine study that would have shown the risk of catching the virus was greater than the risk of getting vaccinated, as reported by the Tampa Bay Times.

“It’s one thing if he was concerned about what was then considered a relatively new vaccine, with COVID,” Wasserman Schultz said. “But now he didn’t even recommend in the letter he released that people get their children vaccinated for measles. I mean, never mind not declare an emergency, never mind leaving the decision on whether to send their child to school if they were unvaccinat­ed to the parents. That’s dangerous. And it’s clearly getting more and more kids sick.”

Even those who have not been vaccinated could drasticall­y reduce their chances of getting sick or having severe illness, experts say.

Children who have been exposed should vaccinate before symptoms appear, Trepka said; the vaccine lessens the severity of symptoms. Adults who are not vaccinated are at risk of more serious disease than children.

It is unclear how many children at the school have been vaccinated since the outbreak. No one had that informatio­n at the news conference.

In response to questions on whether Florida has reported how many measles shots have been given out since the state’s outbreak began and whether the reported cases are in the unvaccinat­ed, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention spokespers­on Lisa George said Florida health officials would be who could provide that informatio­n.

“State and local health department­s have the lead in investigat­ing measles cases and outbreaks when they occur,” a written statement from the CDC said. “The CDC will continue to closely monitor reported cases.”

Jetelina, the epidemiolo­gist, also pointed out that Ladapo’s letter failed to recommend kids without immunity get vaccinated. “Many parents don’t know that unvaccinat­ed kids can still get protection from a vaccine within 72 hours of exposure. (Also, the standard of care is that if they get vaccinated within 72 hours, they can return to school as long as they don’t develop symptoms.)”

She believes Ladapo’s recommenda­tions put more children at risk. “Measles has a long incubation period. It takes 5-21 days from exposure for symptoms to develop. So even if a child, especially an unvaccinat­ed one, doesn’t have symptoms, they may be contagious and spread it to others, including in the community,” she said.

Krishnaiye­r also voiced support for the vaccine on behalf of the PTA, which she said has a “strong history of advocating for universal measles vaccinatio­ns for children, as it has proven to be an effective tool in preventing the disease.”

She commended the Broward school district for its approach, saying that “all informatio­n should be disseminat­ed to parents, families: the protocols, the suggestion­s, all of the medical informatio­n must be accessible to all parents in the community, and also be available to parents with disabiliti­es and other languages.”

Wasserman Schultz made it clear that Ladapo was the focus of her criticism. Krishnaiye­r said that state health officials had recently visited the school with the superinten­dent.

The absence of informatio­n comes as Florida falls short of the national 95% vaccinatio­n goal with only 91.7% of the state’s kindergart­ners immunized with the measles, mumps and rubella vaccine. Florida allows students to opt out of required vaccinatio­ns with medical or religious exemptions.

Measles, which is identified by fever, cough and a rash that starts near the hairline and spreads, often can be treated at home with over-the-counter medication. However, it does bring serious health risks. For people without immunity, 1 in 5 will be hospitaliz­ed, 1 in 20 will develop pneumonia (the most common way measles kills young kids), 1 in 1,000 will develop encephalit­is (infection of the brain, sometimes causing permanent brain damage), and 1 to 3 in 1,000 will die.

The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention reported that as of Friday there have been at least 35 measles cases in 15 states in 2024 – most related to internatio­nal travel.

The National Foundation for Infectious Diseases (NFID) and the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) recommend that adults born in 1957 or later who do not have evidence of immunity should receive at least one dose of the Measles-Mumps-Rubella vaccine, also known as the MMR vaccine. Many insurance plans cover the cost of MMR immunizati­on.

On Monday, the Associatio­n of State and Territoria­l Health Officials put out this statement:

“Vaccinatio­n is the best and safest way to protect children. Two doses of measles vaccine are more than 97% effective in preventing the disease entirely, and vaccinated people may continue to engage in routine activities even if they are exposed to someone with the disease. When community vaccinatio­n rates drop below 95%, however, outbreaks become more common because the disease can spread from one vulnerable person to another.”

The associatio­n’s recommenda­tion is the opposite of what Ladapo advised parents: “Because of the risk of severe disease from measles and the high likelihood of transmissi­on to others even before symptoms are evident, well-establishe­d public health practice recommends that unvaccinat­ed persons exposed to measles stay home for at least 21 days to prevent further growth of the outbreak.”

 ?? JOE CAVARETTA South Florida Sun Sentinel ?? U.S. Rep. Debbie Wasserman Schultz , D-Fla., called for Florida Surgeon General Joseph Ladapo to resign during a news conference in her office in Sunrise Tuesday. Looking on is Dr. Mary Jo Trepka of FIU, left, and Latha Krishnaiye­r of Broward County PTA.
JOE CAVARETTA South Florida Sun Sentinel U.S. Rep. Debbie Wasserman Schultz , D-Fla., called for Florida Surgeon General Joseph Ladapo to resign during a news conference in her office in Sunrise Tuesday. Looking on is Dr. Mary Jo Trepka of FIU, left, and Latha Krishnaiye­r of Broward County PTA.
 ?? JOE CAVARETTA South Florida Sun Sentinel ?? Exterior view of Manatee Bay Elementary School in Weston where a measles outbreak has occurred.
JOE CAVARETTA South Florida Sun Sentinel Exterior view of Manatee Bay Elementary School in Weston where a measles outbreak has occurred.
 ?? JOE CAVARETTA South Florida Sun Sentinel ?? Florida Surgeon General Joseph Ladapo and Gov. Ron DeSantis at a news conference in West Palm Beach, Florida, on Jan. 6, 2022.
JOE CAVARETTA South Florida Sun Sentinel Florida Surgeon General Joseph Ladapo and Gov. Ron DeSantis at a news conference in West Palm Beach, Florida, on Jan. 6, 2022.

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