Santa Fe New Mexican

From the doctor: A measles outbreak keeps me up at night

- HELEN W. BOUCHER Dr. Helen W. Boucher is dean and professor of medicine at Tufts University School of Medicine and chief academic officer at Tufts Medicine. This piece originally ran in Salon.

Since the beginning of this year, measles cases have been reported in 11 states spanning both coasts and heartland. The situation warrants enough concern that the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention issued a warning to doctors about renewed measles risk.

Unfortunat­ely, vaccine skepticism is threatenin­g to undo one of the great public health achievemen­ts of the modern era: the effective victory over this highly contagious and sometimes fatal viral infection, which is particular­ly dangerous for children and infants.

Many children who catch measles develop pneumonia. Other complicati­ons include brain inflammati­on and, in rarer cases, subacute sclerosing panencepha­litis — a deadly neurologic­al disorder.

Measles is highly contagious — so much so that if one person has it, up to nine out of 10 people around them will also become infected if not adequately protected. Further, measles is transmitte­d in the air and can remain in a room where a contagious person has been for up to two hours.

Parents nationwide need to take this threat seriously. The best way to protect your children from measles, and all preventabl­e infectious diseases, is to follow the CDC’s recommende­d immunizati­on schedule.

It has been nearly a quarter-century since the United States eliminated measles — meaning there has been no continuous transmissi­on of the disease for 12 months or more.

The reason for measles’ dangerous comeback is clear: a decline in vaccinatio­n rates in recent years. According to one investigat­ion, at least 8,500 schools across the country have vaccinatio­n rates below 95%, the level the CDC deems necessary for effective prevention of measles spread.

Research has shown that the decline is linked directly to growing public skepticism about the safety of vaccines. Yet the measles vaccine is one of the safest and most thoroughly studied public health measures in the world — and has been for decades.

The benefits of widespread vaccinatio­n are undeniable. In 2019 alone, the routine childhood vaccine schedule, which includes two doses of the measles vaccine, prevented an estimated 24 million cases of illness in the United States. Assuming a roughly even distributi­on across the population, that’s equivalent to preventing an illness in one in 13 people.

Make no mistake: Measles is dangerous. We risk underestim­ating the threat it poses precisely because widespread vaccinatio­n has been extremely effective in providing herd immunity.

We haven’t seen measles at its worst in the United States for over a half-century. Before the vaccine was introduced in 1963, measles was infecting 4 million Americans annually and killing about 450. Even now, the disease leads to well over 100,000 deaths per year worldwide, almost exclusivel­y in regions with low vaccinatio­n rates.

Vaccines are a critical tool for fighting off both primary and secondary infections. Measles is a fate no child deserves — and, thanks to modern medicine, it’s one no child needs to face. We have the tools to ensure that the eliminatio­n of measles is permanent. All we have to do is use them.

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