CDC Warns of Measles Outbreaks in the U.S.

CDC Warns of Measles Outbreaks in the U.S.
photo by: Gracie and Viv
The Nemours Foundation

No one gets measles anymore, right? Think again. Government health officials are reporting cases in nine states. And only one of the people recently infected with the highly contagious disease — usually considered very rare in the United States — had been vaccinated against it.

According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), 64 people contracted measles from January through April 2008 — the highest rate since this same time in 2001. Among those were 14 babies who were simply too young to get the combination measles, mumps, and rubella (German measles) vaccine (called MMR).

And many of the kids infected hadn't been immunized because their parents "claimed exemption from vaccination due to religious or personal beliefs."

Although it doesn't occur very often in the United States, measles still affects 20 million people worldwide every year, says the CDC. And, despite the common perception that the disease just causes a nasty rash, measles can actually be very serious and even deadly — globally, it killed 311,000 kids under age 5 in 2005 alone.

Another epidemic of the disease broke out in the United States between 1989 and 1991 when lapsing rates of immunizations among preschoolers led to a sharp increase in the number of measles cases, deaths, and children with permanent measles-related brain damage.

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