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re: 2 confirmed cases of Measles in New Orleans area
Posted on 2/22/24 at 10:20 am to dewster
Posted on 2/22/24 at 10:20 am to dewster
quote:
Generally kids get the final vaccination for Measles around the age of 5. The first vaccination usually between 12-18 months old.
My first year of college in fall of 1989, there was a nationwide outbreak of measles, mainly at colleges. They suggested that all incoming freshman get a second round (back then children only received one round as a baby) of the measles vaccine that year. I did, but didn't know anyone that first year in college who got the measles.
History of Vaccines - 1989 Basketball Tournament
quote:
In 1989, the Committee of Infectious Disease of the American Academy of Pediatrics (AAP) recommended a second dose of the MMR (measles, mumps, and rubella) vaccine be given to children entering middle school (around 11 or 12 years of age). Because many outbreaks of measles were being observed in colleges and universities at the time, the recommendation expanded to include students at those institutions. This recommendation did not arrive in time for the 1989 college basketball playoffs. That spring, several colleges and universities had to hold games in empty arenas or prohibit students exposed to measles from entering sporting venues.
Siena and the University of Hartford went into a quarantine over measles cases at their respective campuses in February 1989. However, Hartford was to host the North Atlantic Conference Tournament at that time, so the only options were to cancel the tournament or play without fans.
The worry was measles would spread through the spectators and then be carried back to the fans’ respective campuses. The disruptions to the basketball games lasted well into March as more cases were identified, resetting the 21-day clock on the quarantine period.
Siena would win the conference title with “no crowd to go wild” when a last-second basket clinched the championship.
1989 was a record year for measles in the United States. The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) reported 17,840 cases, “a 423% increase [in 1989] over the 3411 cases reported for 1988.” This was the largest number since 1978, and the 41 deaths in US residents associated with measles were the highest since 1971. On average, there is one death from measles for each 1,000 cases in the United States.
Reasons for the epidemic that lasted from 1989 to 1991 include the one-shot recommendation, and budget cuts to childhood vaccination programs in the United States. Those cuts left many children without access to vaccination, something the United States Congress reversed with the creation of the Vaccines for Children program in 1993.
Unfortunately, the Vaccines for Children program was created too late for many children. Then there was the matter of vaccine hesitancy among parents... In 1991, nine children in Philadelphia died from measles. The courts had to get involved to immunize children whose parents would not immunize on religious grounds:
Soon after the United States and other developed nations adopted the two-dose recommendation, other nations followed suit. This led to a dramatic reduction in cases and deaths from measles worldwide.
Today, most deaths from measles are reported in developing African and Asian nations, with many of those deaths associated with comorbidities like malnutrition or poor healthcare infrastructure.
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