Environmental and Global Health Issues
Environmental & Global Health Issues
Communicable disease outbreak: Measles
Until recently, it was thought that measles had been entirely eradicated in the United States, thanks to the success of the national vaccination program. According to the CDC, "measles was declared eliminated from the United States in 2000" (Measles outbreaks, 2012, CDC). However, that proud statement has been amended, as cases of measles have once again begun to reassert themselves slowly within our nation's borders. On average, every year 60 people in the United States contracts the measles. In 2011, that figure skyrocketed to 222. 40% of these cases originated outside the U.S. "They brought the disease to the United States and spread it to others. This caused 17 measles outbreaks in various U.S. communities" (Measles outbreaks, 2012, CDC). Of the countries implicated in the spread of the illness, France, Italy, Romania, Spain, and Germany were responsible for 90% of the transmissions. To be classified as a case of measles, the patient must exhibit the classic rash for three days or more, a temperature above 101F and a cough or have a laboratory confirmation of measles (McLean 2011).
Thus, there is an alarming trend as measles has reasserted itself as a communicable illness thanks to continued fears about childhood vaccinations. 86% of the patients that contracted the measles were unvaccinated or had unknown vaccination status. (A small percentage of vaccinated persons can still contract the disease). A "drop in MMR vaccination coverage in a community can increase the risk for large, sustained measles outbreaks, as experienced recently in Canada and France, or reestablishment of endemic transmission, as experienced...
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