Saturday, 30 August 2008

Fear of Vaccine Fuels Measles Outbreak





Measles cases in the U.S. ar at the highest degree in more than a decade, with nearly half of those involving children whose parents rejected inoculation, health officials reported Thursday.




Measles, best known for a red skin rash, is a potentially deadly, highly infectious virus that spreads through contact with a sneezing, coughing, infected person.



It is no longer autochthonal to the United States, but every year cases enter the country through and through foreign visitors or Americans returning from abroad. Measles epidemics have exploded in Israel, Switzerland and some other countries. But high U.S. childhood vaccination rates have prevented major outbreaks here.



In a typical year, only one outbreak occurs in the United States, infecting perchance 10 to 20 people. So far this year through July 30 the country has seen seven outbreaks, including one in Illinois with 30 cases, said Seward, of the CDC's Division of Viral Diseases.



None of the 131 patients died, but 15 were hospitalized.



Childhood measles vaccination rates get stayed higher up 92 percent, according to 2006 data. However, the recent outbreaks suggest potential pockets of unvaccinated children are forming. Health officials worry that vaccination rates have begun to fall � something that won't show up in the data for a couple of years.










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