Measles Outbreak in Tucson

Posted on April 3rd, 2008 by blue collar scientist

Of particular interest to me because of the years I spent living in nearby Sierra Vista, Arizona, reports say that Tucson is experiencing an outbreak of measles.

Arizona health officials are concerned a measles outbreak in the Tucson area could spread across the state. There have been nine reported cases of measles in the Tucson area, the Pima County Health Department said Monday in a news release.

Public health officials are concerned because measles is extremely contagious. If you are exposed, and haven’t been vaccinated, the chances are 90% that you’ll get it. It is spread through the air.

Once you catch it, you are contagious for four to twelve days before you start showing symptoms. so you can be spreading it around for better than a week before you ever realize you’ve been infected.

Once you are symptomatic, if you get good health care, your chances of dying of the disease are only 0.1%. If you live in the developing world, your chances of dying are 10%.

So you shouldn’t worry too much about getting killed by measles. You should be concerned about going blind - for measles causes corneal ulcers and scarring. You can also get encephalitis, leading to brain damage. These are serious risks for a small child, the sort of thing that can lead to a lifetime of problems and suffering.

You might ask yourself why, since measles has a vaccine, that an outbreak has occurred in Tucson? It is because of anti-vaccination radicals:

Dr. Karen Lewis, a medical director with the Arizona Department of Health Services, said health officials are concerned that some parents aren’t vaccinating their children because of concerns about links to autism. “People have started to forget how bad of a disease it is and have started listening to people saying vaccines aren’t good,” Lewis told The Arizona Republic.

Fifteen of these peoples’ kids are now at risk for blindness and other lifelong complications of the disease. But worse than that, they have the potential to infect babies who haven’t reached vaccination age.

The health department recommends an accelerated schedule for vaccinating children, with one dose between the ages of 6 and 12 months of age and two more doses starting on the child’s first birthday.

So…. One way of looking at this is that thirty selfish parents who believe in a whacky conspiracy theory that claims vaccines cause autism which just enriches a medical industry that wants it to happen (so they can make more money) have now imposed upon thousands of babies the need to take vaccines earlier and more often. Which carries a small risk, as well as a small expense.

This should be illegal, folks.

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5 Responses to “Measles Outbreak in Tucson”

  1. canuck gal Says:

    Re: “This should be illegal, folks” EXACTLY!!

    Thank you thank you thank you thank you!!

    It amazes me how many intelligent parents are susceptible to being “bamboozled” by pseudo-science quacks who MAKE MONEY promoting their dangerous and life-threatening idiocy.

    Please keep up the good work :o)

    CG

  2. Blue Collar Scientist » Blog Archive » Measles outbreak in Salzburg Says:

    [...] on the heels of an outbreak of measles in Tucson, there are reports of an outbreak of measles in Salzburg, Austria. About 180 people are infected, [...]

  3. Blue Collar Scientist » Blog Archive » Measles outbreak in Salzburg Says:

    [...] on the heels of an outbreak of measles in Tucson, there are reports of an outbreak of measles in Salzburg, Austria. About 180 people are infected, [...]

  4. Blue Collar Scientist » Blog Archive » Measles outbreak in Salzburg Says:

    [...] on the heels of an outbreak of measles in Tucson, there are reports of an outbreak of measles in Salzburg, Austria. About 180 people are infected, [...]

  5. HE&OS » Blog Archive » MORE VACCINE STUFF Says:

    [...] Collar Scientist notes a measles outbreak in AZ and concludes that not vaccinating ought to be [...]

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