USA TODAY US Edition

School starts with measles warning

Health officials urge parents to immunize

- Jared Weber

As students head back to school, physicians and public health officials plead for parents to immunize their children.

This year has seen the most reported cases of measles in the USA in more than 25 years. Among those at the highest risk of serious complicati­ons or death because of the viral infection are unvaccinat­ed children.

“Traditiona­lly, when we’ve had measles epidemics in America in the pre-vaccine era, they would peak in the late winter and early spring,” said Peter Hotez, dean of the Nation

al School of Tropical Medicine at Baylor College of Medicine in Houston. “This seems to be following that similar pattern.”

The very contagious disease was once declared eliminated in the USA, but it has made a comeback in recent years, in part because of the spread of misinforma­tion about vaccines. Last week, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention reported 10 new measles cases, bringing this year’s total to 1,182.

The measles outbreak isn’t limited to the USA. According to a report Monday from the World Health Organizati­on, this year’s worldwide total of measles cases is at a 13-year-high and about three times the number of cases reported at the same time last year.

More severe measles outbreaks have occurred in Angola, Cameroon, Chad, Kazakhstan, Nigeria, the Philippine­s, South Sudan, Sudan and Thailand. European countries reported nearly 90,000 cases for the first half of 2019 – exceeding the 84,462 total cases observed all last year.

In the USA, worldwide travel has been a factor in several cases.

Last week, the County of San Diego Health and Human Services Agency confirmed measles in an 11-month-old

child who contracted the illness in the Philippine­s. According to a report May 27 from WHO and UNICEF, the island nation had seen 34,950 measles cases and 477 deaths this year.

The baby has made a full recovery and no further cases have been reported, said Eric McDonald, medical director of epidemiolo­gy and immunizati­on for the County of San Diego. Nonetheles­s, McDonald said the county would remain vigilant in coming months.

“There are a lot of measles cases throughout the world right now,” McDonald said. “When we have a lot of people traveling internatio­nally from San Diego, we’re always at an increased alert.”

In another recent case, a flight attendant working for the Israeli airline El Al died after contractin­g measles on a flight from New York City to Tel Aviv, Israel. According to reports from Israeli media, it’s the country’s third measles-caused death since last November. Before that, Israel hadn’t experience­d a single fatality from the viral infection in the past 15 years.

Though the U.S. has seen measles outbreaks before, the global aspect of the illness’ resurgence presents an unfamiliar threat, Hotez said. Making the crisis worse are parents who don’t want their children to get vaccinated. A report in 2017 from the Pew Research Center found that 17% of U.S. adults said parents should be able to decide whether their child should be vaccinated, “even if that may create health risks for others.”

Hotez was part of a team of researcher­s that conducted an academic study last year that analyzed 14 U.S. metropolit­an areas where more than 400 kindergart­ners had been excused from vaccines because they received “philosophi­cal-belief nonmedical exemptions.” Fifteen states allow students philosophi­cal exemptions for some vaccines.

“What we don’t know is what happens as kids are going back to school,” Hotez said. “You have a new issue, which is that measles is now widespread in Europe, and it’s continuous­ly being reintroduc­ed into the United States because of air travel.

“Because we have large numbers of unvaccinat­ed kids now in at least 15 urban counties in the U.S., we may see an uptick again as we move into the fall.”

On July 28, Washington state’s Senate passed a bill prohibitin­g its residents from receiving the philosophi­cal exemption for the vaccine against measles, mumps and rubella. The decision was in part a response to one of this year’s biggest national outbreaks.

Washington Gov. Jay Inslee declared a state of emergency Jan. 25 after the statewide measles case count climbed to 26 in the first weeks of 2019. All but one of the cases were reported from Clark County – a county of about 480,000 people in the southweste­rn corner of the state.

The county immediatel­y took action, identifyin­g susceptibl­e, unvaccinat­ed population­s and quarantini­ng them. According to Alan Melnick, the county’s public health director and health officer, the county had more than 800 people placed on active surveillan­ce.

Since May, Clark County has reported zero measles cases.

“Because we have large numbers of unvaccinat­ed kids now in at least 15 urban counties in the U.S., we may see an uptick ... as we move into the fall.” Peter Hotez Dean of the National School of Tropical Medicine at Baylor College of Medicine

 ?? PAUL VERNON/AP ?? Nurse Starr Roden administer­s a vaccinatio­n to Jonathan Detweiler, 6, at a county health facility in Mount Vernon, Ohio.
PAUL VERNON/AP Nurse Starr Roden administer­s a vaccinatio­n to Jonathan Detweiler, 6, at a county health facility in Mount Vernon, Ohio.
 ?? ELAINE THOMPSON/AP ?? Measles has made a comeback in part because of misinforma­tion about vaccines.
ELAINE THOMPSON/AP Measles has made a comeback in part because of misinforma­tion about vaccines.

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