Los Angeles Times

San Diego ramps up measles battle

With scores of cases reported in California, county officials go on the offensive.

- By Paul Sisson Sisson writes for the San Diego Union-Tribune.

SAN DIEGO — San Diego County has not recorded a single measles case since 2017, despite a growing set of internatio­nal outbreaks that has infections appearing just up the coast in Los Angeles.

But with the nation tallying its largest number of measles cases since 1994, experts say it might just be inevitable that patients will start turning up in San Diego with the distinctiv­e red rash that signals the presence of a disease that seemed to be extinct just 19 years ago.

Dr. Eric McDonald, medical director of the county’s Epidemiolo­gy and Immunizati­on Services Branch, said there is only so much that can be done in a region with more than 3 million residents, many who travel to countries with massive measles outbreaks underway.

The health department, he said, is routinely notified every time a local resident is on a plane with a fellow traveler who turns out to have measles. Eight such cases, he said, have surfaced in 2019 with 26 more suspected cases referred by local doctors.

While none of those has tested positive to date, simple probabilit­y dictates that, eventually, someone who is not vaccinated, or who has less immunity than they think, will come home with a measles infection.

“We do follow up on every single one of of those [travel] cases and make sure that they’re all immune but, sooner or later, one of those is going to turn out not to be immune, or we’re going to find out about the flight too late to do anything about it, and one of those people could easily develop measles,” McDonald said. “I hate to say it’s just a matter of when, but certainly we’re planning that way.”

Internatio­nal travel has been the clear theme of the growing number of measles outbreaks in 2019. On the East Coast, unvaccinat­ed visitors to Israel have returned with infections that have spread rapidly within New York’s Orthodox Jewish community.

California, which announced Thursday that its measles total has now reached 38, including six in Los Angeles, has seen cases from a wider geographic area. Nationwide, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention said Wednesday that 695 measles cases have been detected. According to CDC records, that’s the highest number recorded since 1994, when 963 cases were reported.

The highly contagious disease usually starts with a fever and progresses toward a rash that begins at the hairline moving into the face and upper neck, progressin­g outward and reaching the hands and feet. About 30 percent of cases face additional problems that range from diarrhea to pneumonia, the most common fatal complicati­on. Very rarely, measles infection causes permanent brain damage, seizures and death.

According to the California Department of Public Health, all but two of the state’s 38 cases were linked to internatio­nal travel. Fourteen visited foreign countries and 22 became infected by a person who had traveled internatio­nally, the agency said in an email. Five visited the Philippine­s and five visited Ukraine, while single travel cases were contracted in India, Thailand, Thailand and Cambodia and Vietnam.

According to the World Health Organizati­on, all of those countries have ongoing measles outbreaks numbering in the thousands. San Diego County, census records show, has more than 150,000 Filipino residents, making the community one of the largest in the region.

In late March a letter from Dr. Wilma Wooten, the county’s public health officer, went out to Filipino community organizati­ons noting that the Philippine Department of Health “has reported 20,308 measles cases, including 301 deaths, from Jan. 1 to Mar. 12, 2019.”

With “over half of the measles cases under five years old,” Wooten recommends that even children age 6 to 11 months receive a measles, mumps and rubella (MMR) vaccine if they’re traveling to the Philippine­s or other countries where measles is circulatin­g. Local families expecting visitors from the Philippine­s, the letter continues, should make sure their loved ones are upto-date with their vaccinatio­ns before leaving for the United States.

Anyone who develops a fever, and especially a rash, within three weeks of having been in the Philippine­s, Wooten’s letter states, should seek medical attention but not before calling ahead to mention the possibilit­y of measles “so that appropriat­e infection control steps can be taken.”

Joseph Mazares, president and chairman of the Council of Philippine American Organizati­ons, said in an email Thursday that the coalition supports the county’s call for increased vigilance but pushed back a bit on the notion that the Filipino community needs an increased public health focus.

“While we appreciate Dr. Wooten’s advisory given San Diego’s large domestic and immigrant Filipino and Filipino American community, I personally don’t think our concern is any more concerning than what is being experience­d across the country and the world,” Mazares said.

It’s clear, however, that the current internatio­nal spread of measles has become severe in America, a country that, due to widespread use of the MMR vaccine, saw the number of measles cases dramatical­ly decrease. Vaccine reluctance, however, has pushed down vaccinatio­n rates, leading to an outbreak at Disneyland in late 2014 and early 2015 that spawned 147 cases nationwide.

The CDC was unable to confirm the source of the Disneyland outbreak, but genetic testing did show that the viruses responsibl­e for the contagion were the same that caused a large outbreak in the Philippine­s in 2014, causing the public health agency to conclude that the outbreak “likely started from a traveler who became infected overseas with measles, then visited the amusement park while infected.”

Low vaccinatio­n rates in schools have become a perennial concern, and the Disneyland outbreak was the impetus for a new law that removed previous allowances for parents to file “personal belief exemptions” that allowed unvaccinat­ed children to be enrolled in schools.

With that option off the table, many have found doctors willing to write medical exemptions, certifying that it’s unsafe for children to be vaccinated. There has been much talk, however, that these exemptions are overused and a new bill in the Legislatur­e co-authored by Assemblywo­man Lorena Gonzalez (D-San Diego) seeks to strengthen oversight of medical exemptions.

For those who would like to know whether they have the measles immunity they think they do, doctors can order a test to verify the presence of measles antibodies in the bloodstrea­m.

 ?? George Frey Getty Images ?? THE MEASLES, mumps and rubella vaccine is recommende­d for travelers visiting countries where measles is circulatin­g, most notably the Philippine­s.
George Frey Getty Images THE MEASLES, mumps and rubella vaccine is recommende­d for travelers visiting countries where measles is circulatin­g, most notably the Philippine­s.

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