Los Angeles Times

Travelers opened door to measles

U.S. cases are tied to Americans who were exposed to the virus abroad, officials say.

- By Soumya Karlamangl­a

Los Angeles County officials dealing with a measles outbreak say they expect that more people will be diagnosed with the illness in the coming weeks, while the nation stares down what will likely be its worst measles year in decades.

But where are these cases coming from? The U.S. declared measles eliminated in 2000, and the virus does not regularly circulate here.

Officials say that every person diagnosed with measles in the U.S. either contracts it abroad or from someone who got it abroad. In the last few years, American tourists have become more likely to encounter measles because of massive outbreaks in other countries, experts say.

The World Health Organizati­on reported that measles cases worldwide increased 300% in the first three months of 2019 compared with the previous year. In countries such as the Philippine­s, Ukraine and India, tens of thousands of people come down with measles each year, according to the agency.

The problem is compounded when unvacci

American travelers bring measles back to communitie­s with low vaccinatio­n rates, where the disease can rapidly spread, experts say.

The nation’s biggest outbreak this year began when travelers to Israel contracted measles, which then gained a foothold in an unvaccinat­ed segment of New York’s ultra-Orthodox Jewish community.

“This is a worldwide problem, this isn’t just a U.S. problem,” said California state Sen. Richard Pan (DSacrament­o), a pediatrici­an who advocates for stricter vaccinatio­n laws. “It also shows that we are constantly being bombarded by these diseases — they’re looking for a crack, or a way to get in.”

Hundreds are still under quarantine

L.A. County officials declared a measles outbreak last week, which led to more than 1,000 people being told to stay home because they may have been exposed to the virus.

As of Monday afternoon, 27 UCLA students and 221 Cal State L.A. students and staff remained under quarantine, according to university officials. If they don’t have measles symptoms, the UCLA students will be released Tuesday and the Cal State L.A. students Thursday, county officials say.

The problems began when an L.A. County resident visited Vietnam this year and contracted measles, said L.A. County health officer Dr. Muntu Davis. That person then spread measles to three other people in L.A. County.

A fifth case of measles popped up in L.A. County after a resident took a trip to Thailand, he said.

“There’s a high number of cases in many other countries and people are traveling more,” Davis said in a call with reporters. “We expect that we may see more cases of measles inside Los Angeles County.”

Of the five people sick with measles in L.A. County, one is a Cal State L.A. student and one is a UCLA student, but Davis would not specify further for privacy reasons.

Officials advised that anyone leaving the country has the two recommende­d doses of the measles vaccine, which are together estimated to be 97% effective. None of the five people had both doses, they said.

“If you’re traveling internatio­nally, your risk is much, much higher right now,” said L.A. County acute communicab­le disease control director Dr. Sharon Balter.

In California, 14 of 38 people with measles this year became sick while visiting other countries, including India, Thailand, the Philippine­s, Vietnam, Cambodia and Ukraine, state health officials said. Four of those people infected 22 others in the state, most of whom weren’t vaccinated, they said.

Measles is one of the most contagious diseases in the world, so just one case can lead to hundreds more, experts say.

The lower the vaccinatio­n rates in the neighborho­od where measles appears, the more people who will end up catching it, said Dr. Mark Roberts, chair of health policy and management at the University of Pittsburgh Graduate School of Public Health.

“What matters is not the case that starts it, what matters is how many people that one case infects,” Roberts said.

L.A. County officials said that one measles case could spread to 600 people within a few weeks if steps were not taken to quarantine people who were exposed. As of Monday, officials had not reone ported that any quarantine­d people had shown measles symptoms.

California tends to have higher-than-average vaccinatio­n rates, which may have spared the state from the big outbreaks elsewhere in the country. The state has one of the strictest vaccinatio­n laws in the country, passed after a measles outbreak at Disneyland in 2014.

“We do see things popping up,” said Pan, who authored the vaccine law. “So far, it seems like none of these individual instances have really taken hold in a way where they have blossomed into an outbreak of 50 or 100 people.”

Vaccinatio­n key to stopping spread

California’s biggest outbreak is in Butte County, about 90 miles north of Sacnated ramento. That cluster, which now includes 16 people, began when a man visited the Philippine­s, state health officials said. (The Disneyland outbreak from 2014 is also thought to be linked to the Philippine­s.)

The Philippine­s is in the midst of a massive measles outbreak, fueled by fears of the side effects of vaccines, according to the World Health Organizati­on.

For the first time, the agency in 2019 named vaccine hesitancy one of the world’s greatest health threats.

In the first three months of this year, 355 people died of measles in the Philippine­s and an additional 25,000 were diagnosed with the illness, according to the agency.

By contrast, in the U.S. — a country three times bigger than the Philippine­s — no has died of measles this year and 704 people have been diagnosed with the illness so far.

Still, it’s imperative that as many people as possible in the United States become vaccinated to protect those who cannot be immunized or for whom immunizati­on does not work, said Clare Rock, an infectious disease professor at Johns Hopkins University.

Not long ago, the nation’s vaccinatio­n rates were high enough that measles could not spread here at all, she said. But now clusters of unvaccinat­ed people can allow the disease to take hold, she said.

“It seems like now we’re in a situation where we don’t have the same levels of vaccinatio­n that we’ve had in the past, and that means a lot of our population is vulnerable,” she said.

 ?? Noel Celis AFP/Getty Images ?? THE PHILIPPINE­S is facing a massive measles outbreak, fueled by fears of vaccines, according to the World Health Organizati­on. In the first three months of this year, 355 people in the Philippine­s died of the virus. Above, a child in Manila receives a vaccine in February.
Noel Celis AFP/Getty Images THE PHILIPPINE­S is facing a massive measles outbreak, fueled by fears of vaccines, according to the World Health Organizati­on. In the first three months of this year, 355 people in the Philippine­s died of the virus. Above, a child in Manila receives a vaccine in February.

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