The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Q&A on the News

- Q: Q: A: PALM BEACH DAILY NEWS Andy Johnston wrote this column. Do you have a question about the news? We’ll try to get the answer. Call 404-222-2002 or email q&a@ajc.com (include name, phone and city).

If I was vaccinated for measles when I started school years ago, do I need to get another shot? —Frank Burnette, Decatur

A: If you have been vaccinated for measles, you don’t need another one. The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention states that you are considered “protected” from measles if you are in one of these categories:

Written documentat­ion of adequate vaccinatio­n, which includes:

1. One or more doses of a measles-containing vaccine administer­ed on or after the first birthday for preschool-age children and adults not at high risk

2. Two doses of measles-containing vaccine for school-age children and adults at high risk, including college students, health care personnel and internatio­nal travelers

Laboratory evidence of im- Jeanne Phillips, aka Dear Abby, majored in English and anthropolo­gy. munity

Laboratory confirmati­on of measles

Birth in the U.S. before 1957

Does Jeanne Phillips (“Dear Abby”) have a degree that prepared her to give advice to people who seem to desperatel­y need help? —Don Brown, Atlanta

Jeanne Phillips majored in English and anthropolo­gy at the University of Colorado and didn’t intend on taking over writing the “Dear Abby” column from her mother, Pauline. “I majored in English and anthropolo­gy — the study of man. I love people, and find the study of other cultures to be fascinatin­g,” Phillips told the Bangor (Maine) Daily News in 2001.

She worked with her mom when she was younger and then edited her mom’s columns before taking over part of the writing responsibi­lities in the late 1980s. Jeanne Phillips became the sole author in 2002, when it became known that Pauline, who started the column in 1956, had Alzheimer’s disease.

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