Miami Herald

Florida’s top doctor should rethink his measles advice

- BY THE MIAMI HERALD EDITORIAL BOARD

Is there one mainstream piece of public health advice — no matter how long-standing — that Florida’s top doctor won’t buck?

Joseph Ladapo, Gov. Ron DeSantis’ anti-vaxx surgeon general, has spread misinforma­tion about COVID-19 and has advised against coronaviru­s vaccines, citing debunked claims.

Perhaps Ladapo saw, in the novelty and divisivene­ss of the pandemic, an opportunit­y to become the go-to, Ivy League-educated doctor for vaccine deniers. Now, he’s turned his focus to a long-known virus — up until now, largely non-controvers­ial, but highly contagious and dangerous for children: measles.

CASES CONFIRMED

Following an outbreak at Manatee Bay Elementary in Weston, where six measles cases were confirmed last week, Ladapo sent a letter to parents that pediatrici­ans, immunologi­sts and infectious disease experts have criticized. The letter acknowledg­ed what has been common practice to contain measles outbreaks — that unvaccinat­ed children or those without immunity should remain home during the incubation period of the virus, or up to 21 days.

Ladapo, then, however, wrote that, “due to the high immunity rate in the community,” the Department of Health “is deferring to parents or guardians to make decisions about school attendance.”

This should have been Ladapo’s opportunit­y to tell parents, “Get your children vaccinated — now!”

The MMR vaccine, approved by the federal government more than 50 years ago, offers 98% protection against measles after two full doses. That’s a widely known statistic that not even Ladapo can deny — he acknowledg­es it in his letter but stops short of recommendi­ng the vaccines.

Since Ladapo’s letter, the number of confirmed cases climbed to eight in Broward County, as of

Monday.

NOT IMMUNIZED

Instead, Florida’s top doctor is telling parents it’s OK to send kids to school sans immunizati­on, even though they could contract a potentiall­y lethal virus or spread it to others who are also not immunized. Worse, the Broward County school outbreak could spread to other communitie­s. The measles virus can live on surfaces or in the air for up to two hours after an infected person coughs or sneezes.

Ladapo’s letter even notes that “up to 90% of individual­s without immunity will contract measles if exposed.” But he knows the administra­tion he works for. Advising children without immunity to stay home would certainly be a bad look for DeSantis, who made his antilockdo­wn stance a hallmark of his response to the COVID-19 pandemic and political brand.

Can you imagine the headlines on Fox News calling the DeSantis administra­tion a Dr. Fauci sellout?

SURGE IN CASES

The U.S. declared measles eliminated in 2000 but, in past years, cases have begun to surge, largely because of lower vaccinatio­n rates.

Most of the 23 measles cases the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention identified in the country between December and January were among teens and children who had not been vaccinated.

The vaccine skepticism that gained force during the pandemic, thanks in part to public figures like DeSantis and Ladapo, is a threat to not only publicheal­th efforts to keep

COVID at bay but other diseases we thought belonged in a bygone era.

In his letter, Ladapo mentions the “cost of healthy children missing school,” but what about the cost of treating a sick child from a disease so easily prevented?

AT-HOME LEARNING

Broward County Public Schools, by the way, has offered parents at

Manatee Bay Elementary at-home learning options, the Sun Sentinel reported.

Ladapo left at least some hope that common sense might prevail at some point, writing that his “recommenda­tion may change as epidemiolo­gical investigat­ions continue.”

But can Floridians trust that our surgeon general will put decades of publicheal­th guidance above his own ambitions and that of a state government that politicize­d a pandemic that killed hundreds of thousands of Floridians?

We’ll have to see it to believe it.

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