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Measles can spread with 'extraordinary efficiency, hanging in the air for hours even after a carrier leaves a room.' (NPR graphic from The Lancet created by Alice Design from The Noun Project) |
Despite a measles outbreak, including the death of an unvaccinated child in Gaines County, Texas, anti-vaccination proponents in Seminole, Texas, a small town just 80 miles from Lubbock, resist the measles vaccine for adults or children.
"The life-threatening measles outbreak in West Texas starkly illustrates the stakes of slipping immunization rates and the ascension of vaccine skeptics," report Fenit Nirappil and Elana Gordon of The Washington Post. "And it has revealed how fear and the scientifically false claims of the anti-vaccine movement have seeped into communities. . .hardening attitudes about vaccines. . . in the face of a dangerous, preventable disease."
The measles outbreak in Texas is the state's "worst measles eruption in three decades, which has surged to 146 known cases, with the true toll likely much higher, exposing how under-vaccinated communities are unnecessarily vulnerable to one of the world’s most contagious diseases," the Post reports. The child that died was "6 years old and otherwise healthy."
The initial outbreak began in West Texas and rapidly spread from there. Nirappil and Gordon explain, "It spread across nine West Texas counties and crossed the border into New Mexico. . . . The outbreak spurred hundreds in the region to vaccinate themselves and their children as the threat of the virus became immediate. But it has made others dig in their heels, arguing that measles is no worse than chicken pox or the flu."
Even though science does not support the belief, anti-vaccination advocates believe immunization reactions are more dangerous than the diseases the shots prevent. The Post reports, "Medical experts and the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention say harm from vaccines is rare and is vastly outweighed by the risk of preventable disease. Two doses of the measles vaccine are 97% effective against the virus."
And while many children readily recover from a case of measles, it can have dire outcomes. "As many as 1 in 20 develop pneumonia, according to the CDC. One in 1,000 experience swelling of the brain, which can leave a child deaf or with an intellectual disability," Nirappil and Gordon add. "For every 1,000 children with measles, one or two die."
Measles can spread with "extraordinary efficiency, hanging in the air for hours even after a carrier leaves a room," the Post reports. "If it infiltrates a community with pockets of unvaccinated people, it’s like throwing a torch into a parched forest and igniting a wildfire."
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