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			 A similar pattern unfolded three months later and nearly 3,000 miles 
			(4,800 km) away when a person who visited Eastern Europe returned to 
			a community with strong ties to a local church group in Vancouver, 
			Washington. More than 50 people fell ill there. 
 In both instances, U.S. travelers picked up measles in foreign 
			countries where the highly contagious disease was running rampant 
			and brought it back to places where vaccination rates were too low 
			by U.S. public health standards, setting off the worst outbreaks 
			seen in those states in decades.
 
 The U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention says New York's 
			outbreak marks the highest tally of imported cases since measles was 
			declared eradicated in the United States in 2000.
 
 The two outbreaks appear to be winding down, health officials say, 
			after concerted efforts to pinpoint the origins and isolate and 
			inoculate those who were exposed but unprotected and educate parents 
			who had resisted vaccines.
 
			
			 
			
 The disease has spread mostly among school-age children whose 
			parents declined to get them vaccinated. Most cited philosophical or 
			religious reasons, or concerns - debunked by medical science - that 
			the three-way vaccines against measles, mumps and rubella (MMR) 
			could cause autism, authorities said.
 
 New York State Health Commissioner Dr. Howard Zucker said another 
			key factor was mere "complacency" in an age where the potential 
			ravages of measles are unfamiliar to parents who came of age after 
			the vaccine was introduced in 1957.
 
 In Rockland County, the suburb north of Manhattan accounting for the 
			bulk of cases, the state has vaccinated 15,000 children since the 
			outbreak began there last autumn, Zucker said. The Brooklyn borough 
			of New York City was another hot spot.
 
 Still, officials say the measles crisis in New York and Washington 
			states offer a lesson about the importance of maintaining a minimum 
			level of "herd" immunization against dangerous, preventable diseases 
			such as measles.
 
 It also highlights the global nature of disease control, in which a 
			hot spot of infection in one country can ignite a distant outbreak 
			in an immunization-weak spot of another, said Dr. Scott Lindquist, 
			Washington's top epidemiologist.
 
 Here are some key facts about measles and immunization, according to 
			public health experts and the CDC.
 
			
            [to top of second column] | 
 
			WHAT IMMUNIZATION RATES ARE IDEAL?
 A 95 percent rate of immunization is required to provide sufficient 
			"herd" protection in a given population. Rates as low as 60 percent 
			were found in parts of New York where measles spread, Zucker said.
 
			HOW BAD CAN MEASLES GET?
 Symptoms typically include high fever, cough, runny nose and watery 
			eyes, followed by tiny white spots inside the mouth and a red rash 
			that can cover the body.
 
 Serious and potentially fatal complications, especially in young 
			children and pregnant women, can include pneumonia and swelling of 
			the brain. Ear infections occur in about 10 percent of children with 
			measles and can lead to permanent hearing loss.
 
 One rare but fatal complication is subacute panencephalitis (SSPE), 
			which can attack the central nervous system seven to 10 years after 
			a person has recovered from measles.
 
 HOW CONTAGIOUS IS MEASLES?
 
 Measles is spread through casual contact with the virus, which can 
			linger and remain infectious in the air of an enclosed space for up 
			to two hours after it is breathed out by someone carrying the 
			disease. The rate of transmission from an infected person to another 
			individual nearby who lacks immunity is about 90 percent.
 
			
			 
			
 ORIGINS OF LATEST OUTBREAKS?
 
 Health authorities say the strain of the virus identified in 
			Washington state matches the one circulating widely in Ukraine since 
			last year. The New York outbreak has been tracked back to separate 
			flare-ups of measles in Israel and in Eastern Europe.
 
 (Reporting by Steve Gorman in Los Angeles; Editing by Bill Tarrant 
			and Peter Cooney)
 
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