I have
been writing this health care blog since 2007, and have published over 465
articles in the last eight years—sort of a Health Care 101 on all types of
health care issues. For the most part, not too many of those have been updated
with a follow up report—until this one. In 2012, I wrote an article about
measles. With the recent outbreak in the US of this disease, just about wiped
out fifteen years ago with only a few cases reported per year, has merited that
this health care issue be re-examined.
Late
last year, new cases of this very infectious disease started showing up. Since
then, the number of measles cases in the United States has reached 141 patients
in 17 states and the District of Columbia, federal health officials from the CDC
have reported. The outbreak began at two Disney theme parks in southern
California in December, the CDC says, and it's believed that the source of the
infection was likely a foreign visitor or a U.S. resident returning from
abroad.
Measles
is still common in many parts of the world, including some countries in Europe,
Asia, the Pacific and Africa, according to the U.S. Centers for Disease Control
and Prevention (CDC). The majority of people who've gotten measles in the
current outbreak were unvaccinated. This is not good. Despite the
United States having declared measles eliminated in 2000, the virus has awoken
anew, and with all the grace and predictability of a large bear coming out of
sedation.
According
to the UK Independent, Though best known for its telltale dappled rash, measles
is a wildly infectious upper respiratory disease. Like the flu, it's airborne
– and successful. It has a near-perfect infection rate: Put your baby in a
room with a measles patient, and nine times out of 10, measles is coming home
with you. In the space shared between you and a coughing, sneezing
measles-ridden sap, the sweet oxygenated room air and unavoidable door handles
are thought to remain infectious for up to two hours.
And measles delivers a double whammy because a person
becomes infectious before they even know they have it. Four days prior to the
rash is when most people become able to spread the love. Here's how the virus
pulls it off.
Symptoms start out like standard-issue wintertime
gunk: fever, cough, runny nose, red eyes. A few days of that misery and the
decorative stage of the illness starts with a carpet of red lesions. Koplik's
spots may appear before the rash – that's when the bright, beefy red of the
inner cheeks become studded with lots of tiny, blue-white dots.
Complications
from measles arise in almost one in three reported cases, and range from diarrhea
(8 per cent) and pneumonia (6 per cent) to encephalitis (0.1 per cent) and
death (0.2 per cent). It gets worse. For more details about how measles
develops, visit this site: http://www.independent.co.uk/life-style/health-and-families/features/measles-makes-its-mark-all-over-again-one-of-humanitys-oldest-foes-is-back-on-the-increase-10054872.html#
According to
the CDC it’s possible
that measles could become endemic (constant presence of a disease in an area)
in the United States again, especially if vaccine coverage levels drop. This
can happen when people forget to get vaccinated on time, don’t know that they need a vaccine
dose (this is most common among adults), or refuse vaccines for religious,
philosophical or personal reasons. The
measles vaccine is very effective. One dose of measles vaccine is about 93%
effective at preventing measles if exposed to the virus, and two doses are
about 97% effective.
Research shows that people who refuse vaccines tend to group
together in communities. When measles gets into communities with pockets of
unvaccinated people, outbreaks are more likely to occur. These communities make
it difficult to control the spread of the disease and make us vulnerable to
having the virus re-establish itself in the US. High sustained measles vaccine
coverage and rapid public health response are critical for preventing and
controlling measles cases and outbreaks.
People who
received two doses of measles vaccine as children according to the U.S.
vaccination schedule are considered protected for life and do not ever need a
booster dose. Adults need at least one dose of measles vaccine, unless they
have evidence of immunity.
Adults who
are going to be in a setting that poses a high risk for measles transmission,
including students at post-high school education institutions, healthcare
personnel, and international travelers, should make sure they have had two
doses separated by at least 28 days. If you’re not sure whether you were
vaccinated, talk with your doctor. Significant amounts of material about
measles is available at the this CDC site: http://www.cdc.gov/measles/
.
Children
are especially susceptible to measles. According to this website: http://kidshealth.org/parent/infections/lung/measles.html,
infants are generally protected from measles for 6 months after birth due to
immunity passed on by their mothers. Measles vaccine usually is not given to
infants younger than 12 months old. But if there's a measles outbreak, or a
child will be traveling outside the United States, the vaccine may be given
when a child is 6-11 months old, followed by the usual MMR immunization at
12-15 months and 4-6 years of age.
The
measles vaccine sometimes causes side effects in kids who don't have underlying
health problems. The most common reactions are fever 6-12 days after
vaccination (in about 15% of kids vaccinated) and a measles-like rash, which
isn't contagious and fades on its own (in about 5% of vaccinated kids). As with
all immunization schedules, there are important exceptions and special
circumstances. Your doctor will have the most current information about vaccine
recommendations. The measles vaccine should not be given to these
at-risk groups:
--Pregnant
women
--Kids
with untreated tuberculosis, leukemia, or other cancers
--People
whose immune systems are weakened for any reason
--Kids who
have a history of severe allergic reaction to gelatin or to the antibiotic
neomycin, as they could have serious reactions to the vaccine
According to Forbes Magazine, it doesn’t take
much for this disease to spread through a population that isn’t immune from
previous exposure or through vaccination. Or, to put it another way, in an
unvaccinated population, each person infected with the measles will transmit
the disease to 12 to 18 other people. However, no vaccine can protect 100% of
those who receive it; vaccines can fail.
The antibodies your body creates can wane, or your body
may not have sufficiently responded to the vaccine in the first place. But
those who are unvaccinated are at a greater risk by far. An unvaccinated person
is 35 times more likely to catch measles than a vaccinated person.
Protection against measles is delivered within the MMR
(measles-mumps-rubella) vaccine. The second dose of the vaccine brings its
effectiveness up to 99%. It’s a live vaccine, which ramps up the fear factor
for some people, but it’s a vaccine we’ve been using since 1971. There is
almost five decades of data with hundreds of millions of vaccinated
individuals, and the medical community knows precisely the possible side
effects of the vaccine.
The most common ones are a fever in one of six people, a
mild rash in one of 20 people, and swollen glands in the cheeks or neck in one
of 75 people. In one of every 3,000 doses, a child can experience a seizure
caused by high fever, but febrile seizures do not cause any long-lasting
damage, and they can be caused by illness (including measles) as well. A
condition of low platelets, called ITP, can also occur in one out of 30,000
doses but usually goes away on its own. Any other severe occurrences that have
been reported after the vaccine are, according to the CDC, “so rare that it is
hard to tell whether they are caused by the vaccine.”
Measles is not a harmless childhood disease. It can kill
and leave others with lifelong disabilities. Even if a person has an
uncomplicated course of the disease, it’s still just a really miserable way to
spend your time – a high fever, cough, sore throat and rash covering your
entire body.
The problem is, there’s not much anyone can do for you
when you’re sick except to help keep you hydrated. Doses of Vitamin A can
reduce the severity of the symptoms, but is not a cure. More detailed
information about the effects of measles on the population is available at this
site: http://www.forbes.com/sites/tarahaelle/2015/01/20/five-things-to-know-about-the-disneyland-measles-outbreak/
.
So, what is the answer? Initially, and very importantly,
consult your doctor if you think you or your child have contracted the disease
or may be symptomatic. Secondly, get vaccinated if you can at all possible. The
benefits and effects of vaccination for measles far outweigh the risks. Third,
stay away from anyone who has measles. Practice smart health. It’s simply best
for you and your family.
Until next time.
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