The U.S.
faces the biggest measles outbreak in seven years, the federal Centers for
Disease Control and Prevention said on Thursday.
According to CDC, there were 64 cases from January through
April 25, more than in all of 2006 and the highest number during that
four-month period since 2001 (116 cases). Moreover, four outbreaks are ongoing
in Arizona, New York,
Michigan and Wisconsin. Fourteen people have been
hospitalized as a result of the outbreak. However, no death has been reported
so far.
“I am concerned. This is different from what we have been
seeing in the last few years,” said Anne Schuchat, director of the CDC’s National Center for Immunization and Respiratory
Diseases, according to the Washington Post.
Measles can be a severe illness that causes symptoms like
rash, high fever, cough, runny nose and red, watery eyes. In rare cases,
patients face more serious complications, including pneumonia, encephalitis and
even seizure and death.
The federal officials have long been stressing the
importance of immunizing children against measles, mumps or rubella, but many
parents refuse to vaccinate their children for religious reasons or because
they think the shots may cause autism or other health problems.
These findings add to others revealed by another federal
report released at the beginning of this week, according to which, one in four
children does not comply with official vaccination recommendations because of
missed doses of vaccines or vaccine lapses.
“We are concerned…about the population of people who are
choosing not to be vaccinated, and whether we may be on the verge of facing
larger-scale outbreak in the United
States,” said Jane Seward of the CDC’s
division of viral diseases, according to Reuters.
Sixty-three of the measles cases occurred in people who were
unvaccinated or whose vaccination status was unknown. Unvaccinated persons are
at risk of acquiring measles themselves and also transmitting the disease to others,
including children who are too young to be vaccinated.
The outbreaks seem to have been triggered by 10 cases
imported into the U.S. from
other countries, particularly Switzerland
and Israel,
which are fighting very large outbreaks, Schuchat said. Forty-four other cases
have been directly linked to the imported cases. The ages of those infected
ranged between 5 months and 71 years.
“We do expect many more cases this year than in 2001, based
on what’s going on today. We have multiple near-simultaneous outbreaks with
different importation sources. And we have gone on the third, fourth or
possible fifth generation of transmission in some of these circumstances. So I
think that there is reason for concern that we haven’t seen the end of this,”
Schuchat warned.
Before the measles vaccination program, about 3–4 million
persons in the U.S.
were infected each year, of whom 400–500 died, 48,000 were hospitalized, and
another 1,000 developed a chronic disability from measles encephalitis.