HEALTH Washington woman's measles death is first in US since 2003

Housecarl

On TB every waking moment
For links see article source.....
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http://apnews.myway.com/article/20150702/us-washington-measles-death-e0d144f833.html

Washington woman's measles death is first in US since 2003

Jul 2, 5:52 PM (ET)
By MARTHA BELLISLE

SEATTLE (AP) — Measles killed a Washington woman in the spring — the first such death in the U.S. in 12 years and the first in the state in 25, health officials said Thursday.

The case wasn't related to a recent measles outbreak that started at Disneyland and triggered a national debate about vaccinations, according to the Washington State Department of Health. Officials said it was a different strain.

The Washington woman lacked some of the measles' common symptoms, such as a rash, so the infection wasn't discovered until an autopsy, department spokesman Donn Moyer said.

It was the 11th case of measles in Washington — and the sixth in Clallam County — this year, he said.

Measles is highly contagious and spreads when an infected person breathes, coughs or sneezes. However, dying from the illness is extremely rare, Moyer said.

Officials didn't say whether the woman was vaccinated, but they did note she had a compromised immune system. They withheld her age to protect her identity but said she was not elderly.

The Disneyland outbreak started in December and eventually sickened more than 140 people across the country and in Mexico and Canada. No deaths resulted from that outbreak.

The prompt responses by heath care workers across the country have helped stop the measles' spread, but it continues to be imported into the U.S., said Anne Schuchat, director of the National Center for Immunization and Respiratory Diseases at the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. There have been 178 cases in the country so far this year.

Schuchat said the best protection is immunization.

"It's very sad that we have a death from measles in the U.S.," she said in a telephone interview with The Associated Press. "We really rely on people who can be vaccinated to protect those for whom vaccine protection isn't available," such as the woman with a depressed immune system.

Others in this condition include people with leukemia or those getting some cancer treatments, Schuchat said.

"As we see more measles cases, we run the risk of a fatality," she said. "We hope to see the day when no one dies from measles."

The woman was hospitalized for several health conditions in the spring at a facility in Clallam County, which covers the northern part of the Olympic Peninsula. She was there at the same time as a person who later developed a rash and was contagious for measles, Moyer said. That's when the woman most likely was exposed.

She was on medications that contributed to her weakened immune system, he said.

After being treated in Clallam County, the woman was moved to the University of Washington Medical Center in Seattle, where she died. An autopsy concluded the cause of death was pneumonia due to measles.

"This tragic situation illustrates the importance of immunizing as many people as possible to provide a high level of community protection against measles," Moyer said. "People with compromised immune systems cannot be vaccinated against measles. Even when vaccinated, they may not have a good immune response when exposed to disease; they may be especially vulnerable to disease outbreaks."

This week, California Gov. Jerry Brown signed a hotly contested bill to impose one of the strictest school vaccination laws in the country. Those in the U.S. who remain opposed to vaccinations include some religious communities, families practicing alternative medicine and libertarians who shun government interference.

The last active case of measles in Washington was reported in late April.

It's possible to develop measles within three weeks of exposure. Since three weeks have passed since the last measles case, no one who had contact with the known cases is at risk, Moyer said.

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Follow Martha Bellisle at https://twitter.com/marthabellisle
 

Housecarl

On TB every waking moment
For links see article source.....
Posted for fair use.....
http://apnews.myway.com/article/20150703/us-washington-measles-death-aca9a51389.html

Washington woman's measles death is first in US since 2003

Jul 3, 5:07 PM (ET)
By MARTHA BELLISLE

SEATTLE (AP) — A woman killed by measles in Washington state had been vaccinated against the disease as a child but succumbed because she had a compromised immune system, a local health official told a TV station.

The woman's death was the first from measles in the U.S. in 12 years and the first in the state in 25 years.

The case wasn't related to a recent outbreak that started at Disneyland and triggered a national debate about vaccinations, according to the Washington State Department of Health. Officials said it was a different strain.

The Washington woman lacked some of the measles' common symptoms, such as a rash, so the infection wasn't discovered until an autopsy, department spokesman Donn Moyer said Thursday.

Dr. Jeanette Stehr-Green, the Clallam County health officer, told KOMO-TV in Seattle that the woman had been vaccinated as a child, but because she had other health problems and was taking medications that interfered with her response to an infection, she was not protected.

State officials didn't say whether the woman was vaccinated, but they did note she had a compromised immune system. They withheld her age to protect her identity, but said she was not elderly.

Measles is highly contagious and spreads when an infected person breathes, coughs or sneezes. However, dying from the illness is extremely rare, Moyer said.

The Disneyland outbreak started in December and eventually sickened more than 140 people across the country and in Mexico and Canada. No deaths resulted from that outbreak.

The prompt responses by heath care workers across the country have helped stop the measles' spread, but it continues to be imported into the U.S., said Anne Schuchat, director of the National Center for Immunization and Respiratory Diseases at the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. There have been 178 cases in the country so far this year.

Schuchat said the best protection is immunization.

"We really rely on people who can be vaccinated to protect those for whom vaccine protection isn't available," such as the woman with a depressed immune system, she said in a telephone interview with The Associated Press.

Others in this condition include people with leukemia or those getting some cancer treatments, Schuchat said.

The woman was hospitalized for several health conditions in the spring at a facility in Clallam County, which covers the northern part of the Olympic Peninsula. She was there at the same time as a person who later developed a rash and was contagious for measles, Moyer said. That's when the woman most likely was exposed.

After being treated in Clallam County, the woman was moved to the University of Washington Medical Center in Seattle, where she died. An autopsy concluded the cause of death was pneumonia due to measles.

"This tragic situation illustrates the importance of immunizing as many people as possible to provide a high level of community protection against measles," Moyer said.

This week, California Gov. Jerry Brown signed a hotly contested bill to impose one of the strictest school vaccination laws in the country. Those in the U.S. who remain opposed to vaccinations include some religious communities, families practicing alternative medicine and libertarians who shun government interference.

---

Follow Martha Bellisle at https://twitter.com/marthabellisle
 

summerthyme

Administrator
_______________
SEATTLE (AP) — A woman killed by measles in Washington state had been vaccinated against the disease as a child but succumbed because she had a compromised immune system, a local health official told a TV station.

The woman's death was the first from measles in the U.S. in 12 years and the first in the state in 25 years.

The case wasn't related to a recent outbreak that started at Disneyland and triggered a national debate about vaccinations, according to the Washington State Department of Health. Officials said it was a different strain.

So... vaccination isn't quite the panacea they'd like us to believe, huh?

Note, please, that I'm far from being anti-vaccine. I'm strongly against the accelerated schedule of multiple vaccines given to tiny babies (their immune systems aren't even mature enough to really develop antibodies until they're several months old), and I'm ABSOLUTELY against mandatory vaccines. However, we are careful to maintain our tetanus vaccines up to date, and I believe that measles, mumps, rubella, and the TDP (tetanus, diptheria and pertussis) are vitally important. '

However, you couldn't pay me to accept the chicken pox and HPV (cervical cancer) vaccines, and I find the "flu" vaccine to be worse than useless.

But it MUST BE individual choice (with appropriate measures such as forced quarantine if an unvaccinated person deveops active disease).

Summerthyme
 

Kathy in FL

Administrator
_______________
What part of booster shot does the reporter not understand? Just because you were vaccinated against something as a child does not mean that you are automatically immune because you become a legal adult. Honest to Pete. Down playing it with the "compromised immune system" is just ridiculous. Of course she is more at risk because of a compromised immune system but that means more diligence, not less, and means that your neighbors really need to be careful of their own risks.

What? Do people think one shot for tetanus will last you whole life because you got the shot when you were a kid? I wish people would use some sense.
 

LightEcho

Has No Life - Lives on TB
I watched the news report on TV. She did NOT die of measles, but pneumonia. They blamed the measles as the cause... much like a Sandy Hoax event to force vaccinations. The dead woman HAD been vaccinated for measles years before. But because her immune system was weakened, she still got sick. So- the vaccine is not a sure protection. The only real protection is that nobody can have a gun.... ooops.... that is the Sandy Hoax message. The only real protection is that all must be vaccinated.


And, we really don't mind bringing diseased criminal into Amerika from south of the border... calling them all Amerigans, so they can rape, steal, murder and spread disease.
 

Kathy in FL

Administrator
_______________
No one is talking forced vaccination.

Pneumonia is a potential complication of measles and frankly a fairly common one. What will probably appear on the death certificate is all three contributing factors ... the measles, measles complication of pneumonia, and whatever caused the compromised immune system. For instance on my MIL's death certificate peritonitis is what killed her but the peritonitis was caused by a rupture of her colon from the colon cancer she had. One was caused by the other, both are noted on the death certificate as contributing factors.

I still say people who are so uneducated about vaccines that they would think that an MMR in childhood protects through adulthood needs their head examined. One of the reasons that for the last twenty or thirty years colleges are requiring proof of recent MMR for all entering students is to try and prevent the campus wide outbreaks of preventable childhood diseases cropping up.

There is no excuse regardless of origin. We have too much verifiable and scientifically replicable data for people to remain willfully ignorant of the rewards vs risk issues involved.
 

raven

TB Fanatic
What part of booster shot does the reporter not understand? Just because you were vaccinated against something as a child does not mean that you are automatically immune because you become a legal adult. Honest to Pete. Down playing it with the "compromised immune system" is just ridiculous. Of course she is more at risk because of a compromised immune system but that means more diligence, not less, and means that your neighbors really need to be careful of their own risks.

What? Do people think one shot for tetanus will last you whole life because you got the shot when you were a kid? I wish people would use some sense.

A single does of the measles vaccine is about 90% effective (feel free to research the number). It is well known that up to 10% of people who receive the vaccine do not attain immunity. This is why there is a booster - it is not really a booster - in that it does not "boost" anything. It is a second vaccination. However, they do not target this second vaccination to individuals for which the first vaccine was ineffective. Everyone gets it. However, the effectiveness of this second single dose remains at 10%. You see, they utilize statistics to increase the success rate of the vaccine. However, even with the second dose, about 5% of the population remains with no immunity. 5 percent of the US population is about 16 million.
One should really consider this number. Sixteen million. Five percent of the population. How do they justify this? They borrowed a term from animal husbandry - herd immunity which basically means that the herd is protected - protected from epidemic. They accept that a few may contract the disease because the farmer herd is protected from an epidemic and you are part of the herd. you are cattle - but that is a different discussion. However, with 16 million people who lack immunity in spite of vaccination, a few more that refuse vaccination is statistically insignificant.
At one time, the US was free from the measles. It is a virus. It does not simply spring forth from the proper chemicals in the environment in some evolutionary method. It must be brought into the population from an external source. This is the real problem which the government does not want to address because it negatively impacts the political policy of illegal immigration. The policy of illegal immigration only works if vaccination for immigrants is ignored. Isn't it interesting that citizens who do not carry the measles virus and who refuse vaccination are castigated while non citizens who bring the virus and refuse vaccination are completely ignored?
 

raven

TB Fanatic
By the way, the omission of the woman's age makes the case suspect.
You see, if you were born before 1957, you are immune. Why? Because the CDC says so. The CDC asserts that anyone born before the introduction of the measles vaccine is immune because they assume that they would have contracted the disease.
The article says the woman was not "elderly" but if one was born in 1957 they would be younger than 60. And last time I checked, being in your '50s is not considered elderly.
 

Codeno

Veteran Member
No one is talking forced vaccination.

Forced vaccination is exactly what they are talking about, and nothing less. Articles like this are means to an end and should be easily recognizable to anyone who has carefully watched the dismantling of this country, and the machinations employed time and again to accomplish the task.
 

Kathy in FL

Administrator
_______________
A single does of the measles vaccine is about 90% effective (feel free to research the number). It is well known that up to 10% of people who receive the vaccine do not attain immunity. This is why there is a booster - it is not really a booster - in that it does not "boost" anything. It is a second vaccination. However, they do not target this second vaccination to individuals for which the first vaccine was ineffective. Everyone gets it. However, the effectiveness of this second single dose remains at 10%. You see, they utilize statistics to increase the success rate of the vaccine. However, even with the second dose, about 5% of the population remains with no immunity. 5 percent of the US population is about 16 million.
One should really consider this number. Sixteen million. Five percent of the population. How do they justify this? They borrowed a term from animal husbandry - herd immunity which basically means that the herd is protected - protected from epidemic. They accept that a few may contract the disease because the farmer herd is protected from an epidemic and you are part of the herd. you are cattle - but that is a different discussion. However, with 16 million people who lack immunity in spite of vaccination, a few more that refuse vaccination is statistically insignificant.
At one time, the US was free from the measles. It is a virus. It does not simply spring forth from the proper chemicals in the environment in some evolutionary method. It must be brought into the population from an external source. This is the real problem which the government does not want to address because it negatively impacts the political policy of illegal immigration. The policy of illegal immigration only works if vaccination for immigrants is ignored. Isn't it interesting that citizens who do not carry the measles virus and who refuse vaccination are castigated while non citizens who bring the virus and refuse vaccination are completely ignored?

Unless you got the booster in your late teens to early 20s it is doubtful that there was enough of a reaction to create immunity. On the other hand there are people like me that get the MMR and then within a 12 to 18 month period return to a negative resistance. I keep an eye on my resistance numbers and depending on whether I would be working with children or an at risk population is how I decide whether (and the timing) to get my next booster.

People need to be responsible for their own risks as well as the risks they present to others.

I have had in excess of 12 MMRs in my life and have never had an adverse reaction to any of them. That doesn't mean that I don't believe it is possible to have adverse reactions to vaccines. I do however believe that risk factors need to be weighed in any personal decision and if you choose not to vaccinate that you are required to understand that there will likely be consequences to that.
 

raven

TB Fanatic
Unless you got the booster in your late teens to early 20s it is doubtful that there was enough of a reaction to create immunity. On the other hand there are people like me that get the MMR and then within a 12 to 18 month period return to a negative resistance. I keep an eye on my resistance numbers and depending on whether I would be working with children or an at risk population is how I decide whether (and the timing) to get my next booster.

People need to be responsible for their own risks as well as the risks they present to others.

I have had in excess of 12 MMRs in my life and have never had an adverse reaction to any of them. That doesn't mean that I don't believe it is possible to have adverse reactions to vaccines. I do however believe that risk factors need to be weighed in any personal decision and if you choose not to vaccinate that you are required to understand that there will likely be consequences to that.

Agree. The issue of how long vaccine immunity lasts is another issue with the vaccine. If you contract measles, then you are supposed to have immunity for life. However, with the vaccine, you are supposed to get the initial in the first year and then again at age 5 (before beginning school) and then again around age 18 (before going to college). However, after that the literature kinda trails off. As far as child care providers including teachers, contracting measles would be a consideration not for the well being of the children - it is for your health - adults older than age 20 (as this woman was) are more susceptible to complications - you are the at risk population.
 

Housecarl

On TB every waking moment
As I see it, an even bigger question/concern is that the woman was exposed at a medical facility to this virus. A question that needs to be answered is by what mechanism, cross contact from medical staff, visitors, or airborne through the ward air or HVAC?
 

FarmerJohn

Has No Life - Lives on TB
And, we really don't mind bringing diseased criminal into Amerika from south of the border... calling them all Amerigans, so they can rape, steal, murder and spread disease.

Mexico and Central America mostly have better vaccination rates than California. All it takes is a pool of people who think that eating organic food or some such nonsense will protect them, their family and their neighbors and all you need is one returning tourist and there you have your perfect storm.
 

naturallysweet

Has No Life - Lives on TB
I wonder what strain she has? Will they tell us when they find out it was shed from someone who was recently vaccinated?
 

Kathy in FL

Administrator
_______________
I wonder what strain she has? Will they tell us when they find out it was shed from someone who was recently vaccinated?

The only potential vaccine related shedding problem for a person with a weakened immune system is the polio virus. And I quote from the Immune Deficiency Foundation
Close contacts of patients with compromised immunity should not receive live oral poliovirus vaccine because they might shed the virus and infect a patient with compromised immunity. Close contacts can receive other standard vaccines because viral shedding is unlikely and these pose little risk of infection to a subject with compromised immunity.
 

naturallysweet

Has No Life - Lives on TB
The only potential vaccine related shedding problem for a person with a weakened immune system is the polio virus. And I quote from the Immune Deficiency Foundation
Wrong again! The MMR is a live virus vaccination. Which is why children will sometimes get the measles from the shot. And why people with compromised immune systems are told to avoid children after they are vaccinated with it.
 
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