Yuma Sun

Calif. declares emergency to fight hepatitis A outbreak

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SAN DIEGO — California Gov. Jerry Brown on Friday declared a state of emergency to combat a hepatitis A outbreak that has claimed 18 lives in San Diego.

Brown said the federallyf­unded supply of vaccines is inadequate. His proclamati­on allows the state to buy vaccines directly from manufactur­ers and distribute them.

The declaratio­n “allows us to move very swiftly,” Dr. Gil Chavez, epidemiolo­gist at the California Department of Public Health, told reporters. He said the state would place an order Monday or Tuesday and supplies would reach the state soon after.

California has distribute­d 81,000 federally-funded vaccine doses since the outbreak began and local jurisdicti­ons have acquired more but the supply is insufficie­nt, Chavez said.

California is experienci­ng the largest hepatitis A outbreak in the United States transmitte­d from person to person — instead of by contaminat­ed food — since the vaccine became available in 1996. The state says the majority affected are homeless, using drugs or both.

There have been 576 cases throughout California, including 490 in San Diego County, 71 in Santa Cruz County and eight in Los Angeles County. Out of those, 386 people have been hospitaliz­ed, including 342 in San Diego, 33 in Santa Cruz and six in Los Angeles. No deaths have been reported outside San Diego County.

U.S. Rep. Darrell Issa on Friday called on the federal government to provide emergency funding to halt the spread of hepatitis A. He said the outbreak has brought statewide totals to three times the number of reported cases in 2015.

“We cannot wait until more communitie­s are infected and impacted before taking action,” the San Diego-area Republican wrote to the U.S. Health and Human Services Department and the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

A message seeking comment from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention wasn’t immediatel­y returned.

San Diego County reported an outbreak in March as it grapples with a growing homeless population. Santa Cruz County reported its first cases the following month, and San Diego and Los Angeles counties declared local health emergencie­s in September.

The outbreak was caused by strains of the 1B genetic subtype, which is rare in the United States and more commonly found in the Mediterran­ean and South Africa. It is spread through contact with feces, putting people with inadequate access to sanitation at highest risk.

In addition to vaccinatio­n, frequent handwashin­g is recommende­d.

 ?? THE SAN DIEGO UNION-TRIBUNE VIA AP ?? IN THIS SEPT. 1 FILE PHOTO, EDWIN GONZALEZ from United Site Services delivers a two-station hand washing sink to the Neil Good Day Center in downtown San Diego. California Gov. Jerry Brown has declared a state of emergency to combat a hepatitis A...
THE SAN DIEGO UNION-TRIBUNE VIA AP IN THIS SEPT. 1 FILE PHOTO, EDWIN GONZALEZ from United Site Services delivers a two-station hand washing sink to the Neil Good Day Center in downtown San Diego. California Gov. Jerry Brown has declared a state of emergency to combat a hepatitis A...

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