Thursday, January 29, 2015

Measles threat looms over Super Bowl weekend


REDWOOD CITY, California - A measles outbreak that started in Disney parks in Southern California in December has now spread to Arizona where it could threaten this weekend’s Super Bowl festivities.

Health officials there say about a thousand people in the Phoenix area, including 200 children, could have been exposed to measles at a medical center that was visited by one of the states’ eight confirmed measles patients.

It’s a major health concern that comes just days before millions of Seattle Seahawks and New England Patriots fans descend upon Phoenix for the Super Bowl.

Elsewhere, at least 79 cases of measles are now confirmed in California.

Cases linked to the outbreak have also been found in Mexico, Utah, Washington, Colorado, Oregon, Michigan, and Nebraska.

New cases were reported this week in Illinois and Minnesota.

“We’re concerned because it can be a very, very serious disease. It can, not in most instances, not in the vast majority, but it can be fatal, because you can get severe complications from the actual viral illness itself — developing a pneumonia, neurological complications, heart complications, etc.," explained Dr. Rachel Rubin of Cook County Department of Health.

According to doctors, measles outbreaks have worsened in recent years, partly because of a growing movement by parents who choose not to vaccinate their children, citing personal beliefs.

Last year, there were 644 confirmed measles cases in the country. It’s the highest number of cases since the highly contagious disease was eliminated in the US 14 years ago.

The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention linked many of those measles cases to unvaccinated people who were infected while traveling in the Philippines during an outbreak there.

Doctors in Phoenix ask those who have not been vaccinated against measles to stay home for 21 days or wear masks if they have to go out in public.

Read more from Balitang America.

source: www.abs-cbnnews.com