Texas
Related: About this forum'I'm worried it's getting worse': Texas measles outbreak grows as families resist vaccination
Cases tied to the large outbreak have spread to at least three states.
The measles outbreak that began in Texas before spreading to at least two other states swelled to 355 confirmed cases on Friday — and officials say there is no sign it’s slowing.
“I’m worried it’s getting worse,” Katherine Wells, director of public health for Lubbock, told NBC News.
Many people aren’t getting tested for measles, and efforts to increase vaccination in the affected areas have gotten a lukewarm response, Wells said during a media briefing by the Big Cities Health Coalition on Tuesday.
Wells said she thought it could be a year until the outbreak is controlled.
Read more at: https://www.nbcnews.com/health/health-news/-worried-getting-worse-texas-measles-outbreak-grows-families-resist-va-rcna196873

sop
(13,441 posts)dchill
(41,838 posts)When you fervently believe in Trump, you cannot believe in science.
magicarpet
(17,925 posts)mercuryblues
(15,520 posts)And televise the funerals of the dead kids, people might be more receptive to vaccines. Nah, this is MAGA we're talking about.
tanyev
(45,954 posts)and I remember when it first got reported they said the family had traveled to one of the outbreak counties in West Texas—maybe even had ties to the Mennonite community there.
What they did not report, but I wondered, was whether they had traveled there deliberately, like a modern day measles party. Apparently that is happening in some circles in the outbreak counties.
Paladin
(29,983 posts)Duncanpup
(14,242 posts)PoindexterOglethorpe
(27,670 posts)It's an amazing account of the origin and continuation of that disease. Simply put, measles will never go away, until such time as every single human on the planet is immune. An up side to measles, if there is one, is that immunity from the vaccine is permanent. So is the immunity from having and surviving it.