Six more measles cases reported in
California after Disneyland outbreak
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[January 27, 2015]
By Dan Whitcomb
LOS ANGELES (Reuters) - Six more cases of
measles have been confirmed in California following an outbreak at
Disneyland that began in December, public health officials said on
Monday, raising to 74 the total number of people in the state who have
been infected.
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Previously, 68 people in California had been confirmed to have the
measles, along with 14 others elsewhere: five in Arizona, three in
Utah, two in Washington state, one each in Oregon, Colorado and
Nevada, and one in Mexico.
The latest tally includes 73 cases documented by the California
Department of Public Health and one additional patient reported by
the Ventura County Health Care Agency.
Most, but not all, of the 88 known cases of measles in California
and out of state have been linked to an outbreak that is believed to
have begun when an infected person, likely from out of the country,
visited the Disneyland resort in Anaheim between Dec. 15 and Dec.
20.
Among those infected are at least five Disney employees and a
student from a local high school that has ordered its unvaccinated
students to stay home until Thursday.
Four patients are less than a year old and 11 others are between the
ages of 1 and 4.
The outbreak has renewed debate over the so-called anti-vaccination
movement in which fears about potential side effects of vaccines,
fueled by now-debunked theories suggesting a link to autism, have
led a small minority of parents to refuse to allow their children to
be inoculated.
The California health department has said that unvaccinated
individuals have been a factor in the outbreak, although some of the
infected patients had been inoculated.
The Los Angeles Times blasted the anti-vaccination movement in an
editorial last week for what it called an "ignorant and
self-absorbed rejection of science."
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Homegrown measles, whose symptoms include rash and fever, was
declared eliminated from the United States in 2000. But health
officials say cases imported by travelers from overseas continue to
infect unvaccinated U.S. residents.
The sometimes deadly virus, which is airborne, can spread swiftly
among unvaccinated children.
There is no specific treatment for measles and most people recover
within a few weeks. But in poor and malnourished children and people
with reduced immunity, measles can cause serious complications
including blindness, encephalitis, severe diarrhea, ear infection
and pneumonia
(Reporting by Steve Gorman and Dan Whitcomb; Writing by Dan
Whitcomb; Editing by Peter Cooney)
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