Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Outbreaks can be prevented

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Your child has a cough, runny nose, sore throat and a high fever. The symptoms point to a cold. Then white spots appear in the mouth and red spots on the face, and your family pediatrici­an says its measles. Distressed, you say, “I thought measles were a thing of the past.”

Measles were a thing of the past in the United States, just like polio, which destroyed many lives until Jonas Salk in the early 1950s discovered a vaccine. Measles also were fought vigorously back then because the consequenc­es were so deadly.

Before measles vaccines became commonplac­e in the early 1960s, an estimated 3 million to 4 million Americans a year contracted measles, and 400 to 500 died. Survivors often suffered blindness, deafness and neurologic­al disabiliti­es. Measles were not taken lightly; people wanted a vaccine because too many families suffered too much.

That’s why the resurgence of measles and other preventabl­e illnesses is so distressin­g. Parents who miss scheduled inoculatio­ns or believe the myth that vaccines cause autism are erasing decades of medical progress and putting us all at risk. How misguided, dangerous and selfish that is when history shows us a safe vaccine is available. The measles outbreak at Disneyland last month should sound an alarm that vaccinatio­ns aren’t optional.

The irony is that the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention declared measles eradicated in the United States in 2000. In 2001, there were about 100 measles cases nationally; last year there were 644 in 27 states, including Texas. Infections are certain to surpass last year’s total and cost millions of dollars in health care. Vaccinatio­ns could have prevented this hard-to-control spread.

Opposition to vaccines is turning back the clock to a time we should never want to see again, and it’s not just measles staging a comeback. In 2012, whooping cough cases in the United States were the worst since 1955. There were nearly 50,000 reported cases and 20 deaths, most of them babies younger than 3 months old. Do we really want to return to those dark, desperate days?

Getting vaccinated is a responsibi­lity, not a choice. Get your children vaccinated.

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