USA TODAY International Edition

Once eliminated in U.S., measles makes comeback

Unvaccinat­ed children help accelerate spread

- Ken Alltucker

Measles outbreaks in New York and Washington state have public health officials scrambling to contain a disease that was eliminated in the USA nearly two decades ago.

Washington state declared a public emergency after an outbreak in Clark County that has infected at least 53 people, most of them children. Four cases have been confirmed in neighborin­g Multnomah County, Oregon. Another case has been identified in King County, which includes Seattle.

Clark County public health officials have feared that a measles outbreak could spread rapidly given the county’s cluster of non-vaccinated children.

Nearly one in four Clark County kindergart­en students in the 2017-18 school year did not get all their immunizati­ons, according to data from the Washington Department of Health. At three schools in the county, more than 40 percent of kindergart­ners did not receive all recommende­d shots before school.

“When you have large numbers of unimmunize­d people and you introduce measles into that population, it’s like putting a lighted match into a can of gasoline,” said Alan Melnick, Clark County’s public health director. “It will just spread pretty quickly.”

More danger than people know

In general, Melnick said, public health department­s want to immunize up to 95 percent of the population against measles to create what is known as herd immunity. Such widespread vaccinatio­n protects against the highly contagious virus, which can be spread through the air. It also protects people who are unable to get vaccinated because they have other medical conditions.

State laws generally require parents of school-age children to show proof of immunizati­on or claim an exemption before beginning school.

All but three states – California, Mississipp­i and West Virginia – allow parents to reject vaccinatio­ns for nonmedical reasons, such as religious or personal beliefs, according to the National Conference of State Legislatur­es.

“You need a high enough vaccinatio­n rate to prevent measles from spreading,” Melnick said.

The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention has reported 79 cases of measles in the United States. Beyond Washington and Oregon, cases have been reported in California, Colorado, Connecticu­t, Georgia, Illinois, New Jersey, New York and Texas.

The New York outbreak is the state’s largest in decades, said Jill Montag, a New York State Department of Health spokeswoma­n.

More than 200 cases have been reported in Rockland and Orange Counties and four Brooklyn neighborho­ods since October. The majority of those cases were identified last year, but some new cases continue to trickle in. There have been two dozen in Rockland and Orange Counties since Jan. 1. Two Brooklyn neighborho­ods reported three cases in the past week.

The Brooklyn cases are concentrat­ed in the Orthodox Jewish community. The outbreak began when a child who was not vaccinated was infected on a visit to Israel. Israel is itself experienci­ng a large outbreak, according to the New York City Department of Health.

New York health officials have excluded thousands of unvaccinat­ed children from 29 schools and day care centers where other children might have been exposed to the virus. They have also launched vaccinatio­n drives.

“We will continue our aggressive, multi-pronged response until it is clear the outbreak has been contained,” Montag said.

There has been a surge of parents seeking vaccines for their children in Clark and Multnomah Counties.

Paul Offit, director of the vaccine education center at Children’s Hospital of Philadelph­ia, said the refusal of parents to vaccinate has allowed the highly contagious disease to return.

In 2015, an overseas traveler infected with measles visited Disneyland, triggering an outbreak that spread to several states and infected 147 people. In 2017, an outbreak among the Somali-American community in Minnesota infected 75 people, according to the CDC.

“People aren’t scared about measles,” Offit said. “It is not just that we’ve largely eliminated these diseases. We’ve eliminated the memory of these diseases. People don’t realize how sick it can make you.”

“When you have large numbers of unimmunize­d people and you introduce measles ... it’s like putting a lighted match into a can of gasoline.” Alan Melnick, Clark County public health director

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