Regina Leader-Post

Complacenc­y fuels measles' return

The only reason cases are rising is that vaccinatio­n rates are down

- CHRISTOPHE­R LABOS Christophe­r Labos is a Montreal physician, co-host of the Body of Evidence podcast, and author of Does Coffee Cause Cancer?

We eliminated measles from Canada in 1998 because of vaccinatio­n. The U.S. did the same two years later. When the single-dose vaccine was introduced here in 1963, cases fell off dramatical­ly.

But it took the introducti­on of a two-dose vaccine to get rid of measles completely. And while it was eliminated in Canada and the U.S., it was not eradicated globally and continues to actively circulate in other countries.

It is unlikely for a fully vaccinated person to catch measles. Vaccine efficacy is above 90 per cent and the eliminatio­n of measles following vaccinatio­ns proves that a population-wide rollout makes it essentiall­y impossible for the virus to spread in that population.

When there are measles cases in this country, the infections usually happen in travellers abroad who bring the virus back with them. Occasional­ly, outbreaks do happen when the initial case spreads the virus to pockets of unvaccinat­ed individual­s. One such outbreak happened in Quebec in 2011.

Measles is so infectious that estimates predict we need around 95 per cent vaccinatio­n coverage to prevent local spread and a return of endemic measles.

In recent years, our vaccine coverage has been slipping. In 2021, 92 per cent of children under two years of age got at least one dose of the measles vaccine, but only 79 per cent of older children got the required two doses. Basically, we are falling short of our vaccinatio­n targets, which puts us at risk for measles outbreaks.

The situation is more dire now than in the recent past because the rest of the world is doing much worse. Globally measles cases are up 79 per cent from 2022, but in Europe cases have seen a 30-fold increase. In 2022, there were 941 measles cases in Europe. In 2023, there were more than 30,000.

Closer to home, Florida is currently seeing an upswing in cases. Matters are made worse as that state's surgeon general seems to be bucking public health policy and telling parents that it is up to them whether they should send their unvaccinat­ed children to school amid the outbreak, which all but guarantees that cases will go up.

The only reason measles cases are going up is that vaccinatio­n rates are going down. The slowly slipping vaccinatio­n numbers here in Canada are being mirrored globally.

Some of that was pandemic-related disruption to vaccinatio­n campaigns, but some of it is also anti-vaccine sentiment. It's also hard to convince people of the dangers of measles — ranging from pneumonia to brain inflammati­on — when many young people have never seen a case in their lives.

Hence the current travel warning from the Public Health Agency of Canada. Mitigating the spread of measles is important, and anyone infected should self isolate to avoid spreading the virus to others. But prevention is by far easier and more effective than mitigation.

If you have two doses of the measles vaccine you are unlikely to catch measles even if you do travel to a current hot spot. If you are old enough to have had measles as a child, then you are probably OK as well. The worry is the unvaccinat­ed and those who got only one dose.

If there is any doubt in your mind, it is worth digging up your vaccinatio­n records to confirm that you are fully vaccinated and immune. In cases of uncertaint­y, you can also measure antibody levels with a routine blood test at any testing centre if you need absolute confirmati­on.

This was rarely necessary for the general population before and usually only reserved for health-care workers and other high-risk groups. But given the current global situation, it might be worth double checking before you plan your trip for March break.

You might come back with more than a tan.

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