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Of Herds and Harlots, Measles is Back
Charting Course ^ | 1/29/15 | Steve Berman

Posted on 01/29/2015 2:16:24 PM PST by lifeofgrace

herd

Come, let us reason together.  Mark Twain famously quoted British PM Benjamin Disraeli, “there are three kinds of lies:  lies, damned lies, and statistics.”  Generally, this is true, but sometimes statistics don’t lie.  In the case of measles, the statistics speak truth.

The measles vaccine was developed in 1963, and combined with the mumps and rubella vaccines in 1971, known as the MMR vaccine.  Children are given the first shot between 12-15 months old, and another between 4 and 6 years old.  Thus has it been for well over 40 years.  In the 52 years since the measles vaccine as developed, the number of cases in America went from 400,000 to under 100 (from .2% to .00003%), asymptotic to zero, as statisticians would say.  That’s the story of an effective vaccine.

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Yet people are herd animals, and we follow the rear end of whatever we’ve got our nose behind.  A whole bunch of Americans have chosen to follow anti-vaccine activists like former Playboy bunny Jenny McCarthy, believing that they can be exceptions to the rule.  They believe a pernicious and discredited report that links MMR to autism.  The honest answer is that we don’t know what causes autism.  We do know, however, what causes measles, and we also know exactly what defends against it.  In poorer countries without adequate health services, measles remains a killer, especially of children.  According to WHO:

The disease remains one of the leading causes of death among young children globally, despite the availability of a safe and effective vaccine. Approximately 145,700 people died from measles in 2013 – mostly children under the age of 5.
Yet in California, like 19 states which allow vaccination opt-out without a reason, vaccination rates can drop significantly below the U.S. national rate of 92%.  At 90-95%, what epidemiologists call “herd immunity” kicks in, and it’s the most important protection we have for our children, for two reasons.  First, babies under a year old aren’t immunized, and are at maximum risk of contracting the disease.  Second, the vaccine is not 100% effective, which is why two shots are given.  After the first shot, only 93-95% have sufficient immunity, and after the second, that number rises to 97%.  So 3% of vaccinated children and even adults remain susceptible to measles.  The key is having enough immunity as a whole that there are less people who contract and spread the disease to those who are vulnerable.

The math just works out.  It always has.

Consider Disneyland.  It’s in California, where the vaccinated rate is well under herd immunity levels, at a small space with lots of foreign visitors, who may not be vaccinated, and populated by children of all ages.  If researchers designed a large-scale epidemiological experiment station to test the measles statistical model, Disneyland is the perfect fit.  And in December, visitors to the Happiest Place on Earth became unwitting participants in the experiment—totally by chance—when 52 of them contracted measles.

So how does that explain what happened in Disneyland? If you have a group of 1,000 people concentrated in a small space—like oh, say, hypothetically, an amusement park—about 90 percent of them will be vaccinated (hopefully). One person, maybe someone who contracted measles on a recent trip to the Philippines, moves around, spreading the virus. Measles is crazy contagious, so of the 100 people who aren’t vaccinated, about 90 will get infected. Then, of the 900 people who are vaccinated, 3 percent—27 people—get infected because they don’t have full immunity.

Now the Disneyland numbers—six vaccinated infections out of the 34 cases with known records—start to make more sense. (And considering the 16 million or so visitors the park gets every year, we might reasonably expect that number to go up.) Once vaccination levels dip below 90 or 95 percent, there aren’t enough protected people to keep the disease in check—the herd immunity that epidemiologists like to talk about so much. In the US, we’ve been doing pretty well keeping those numbers up. “But there are some fluctuations,” says Cristina Cassetti, program officer at the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, “and if vaccination levels dip down a little, you get a situation like Disneyland.”

Herd behavior matters.  If we allow our vaccination rates to fall below the herd immunity level, measles cases go up.  And not just up, but up exponentially, because measles is virulent to the max.  In 2014, measles infected between 635 and 644 in the U.S., a 400-fold increase over previous years.  This has profound health and societal consequences.  In Palm Springs, 66 high school students were sent home until February 9th unless they confirm they’ve received MMR vaccines or show they are immune to measles.  Does this make sense?  Let’s do the numbers:  if up to 3% of the high school students are susceptible, and 1,980 students attend, then one infected student could yield up to 60 cases.  And those 60 cases could infect children and babies who lack immunity.

This isn’t the first time an advanced western democracy with a solid healthcare system has failed to protect against measles either.  The United Kingdom let its immunization rate fall to under 80%, and between 2012 and 2013, they’ve seen 1,200 children infected—a threefold increase.

If you’re one of the holdouts on vaccination, reconsider where you’re leading, and who you’re following.  Because following the herd behind a harlot, whose qualifications to set health policy are exactly zero, into the dark night of daftness is no way to live in a first-world society.

(images credit Shutterstock, The Economist)


TOPICS: Conspiracy; Health/Medicine; Science; Society
KEYWORDS: antivax; antivaxxers; benjamindisraeli; disneyland; jennymccarthy; marktwain; measles

1 posted on 01/29/2015 2:16:24 PM PST by lifeofgrace
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To: lifeofgrace
In 2014, measles infected between 635 and 644 in the U.S., a 400-fold increase over previous years.

Likely a combination of Mexicans and bloggers.

2 posted on 01/29/2015 2:19:10 PM PST by humblegunner
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To: lifeofgrace
jenny mccarthy photo: dirty pony ride dirtyloveponywalljpeg.jpg

Thanks Jenny McCarthy.

3 posted on 01/29/2015 2:22:22 PM PST by Snickering Hound
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To: lifeofgrace

Please take note of what the writers of this article did not: All of the Whooping Cough, Measles, Entero V68, Refugee Flu, etc. all took of when His Arrogance opened the border. Forget the distraction and fraud about a foreign visitor to Disneyland but consider the millions of Obama illegals brought into the country where the medical personnel hired by Homeland Security are required to sign “confidentiality agreements” about the disastrous medical conditions of the “refugees”.


4 posted on 01/29/2015 2:56:03 PM PST by RetiredTexasVet (Benghazi Clinton killed 4 & injured a dozen as SOS, imagine what she could do as CinC.)
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To: lifeofgrace

Better, big-picture charts and info:

http://healthimpactnews.com/2015/the-truth-about-measles-the-mainstream-media-is-suppressing/#


5 posted on 01/29/2015 3:57:10 PM PST by Secret Agent Man (Gone Galt; Not averse to Going Bronson.)
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To: RetiredTexasVet

A kid from disney land went to an urgent care when he got back to Az. The urgent care had 13 other unvaccinated kids. These aren’t ‘anti-vaxxers’. These are illegals and legals from the third world.


6 posted on 01/29/2015 3:58:38 PM PST by demshateGod (The fool hath said in his heart, There is no God.)
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To: Secret Agent Man

Thanks for the link. I’m sick of the post-positivist paradigm that tells us we have to believe everything that’s called science.


7 posted on 01/29/2015 4:15:03 PM PST by demshateGod (The fool hath said in his heart, There is no God.)
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To: demshateGod

Anti-vaxxers should be sterilized.


8 posted on 01/29/2015 4:22:15 PM PST by Clemenza (Lurking)
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To: demshateGod

what gets me is that conservatives are skeptical of everything govt except govt med agencies and their revolving door relationships with big pharma.

i don’t get the disconnect. there’s no justification for it.


9 posted on 01/29/2015 4:32:42 PM PST by Secret Agent Man (Gone Galt; Not averse to Going Bronson.)
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To: lifeofgrace; All

Information to mull over:

I was born in 1960 so I probably got the vaccine between 4 and 6 and have the scar to prove it (you older folks will know what I am talking about). There might have been another round and will ask my Mom about that.

In 1990, at the age of 30, I got the Measles when there was an outbreak in Texas. One, this is not a new thing. An outbreak happened in 1990. Two, the vaccine, for me, had an expiration of effectiveness. Three, there is a week or so of my life I have very little recollection of since I was so sick. :-)

After being infected I thought that vaccines are so new, how do we know how long the effectiveness will be, will new strains develop, etc.


10 posted on 01/29/2015 4:43:58 PM PST by Wiz-Nerd
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To: Clemenza

Just keep buying the line the liberal media tells you.


11 posted on 01/29/2015 5:13:02 PM PST by demshateGod (The fool hath said in his heart, There is no God.)
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To: Wiz-Nerd

As pointed out in the above link, the vaccine you got was proven to be unsafe and is no longer used. Many people who got vaccine got symptoms that would have otherwise been diagnosed as measles. Since they had the vaccine, it was diagnosed as something else.

Don’t believe the left wing media or the left wing scientists. Their certainty and vitriol is inversely related to the truth in their arguments.


12 posted on 01/29/2015 5:16:52 PM PST by demshateGod (The fool hath said in his heart, There is no God.)
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To: Secret Agent Man

No kidding. Everything Big Media says it bunk until it comes to this one issue. Follow the money, who’s funding the research, who’s funding the university departments, and which industry represents every other commercial during these ‘news’ broadcasts.


13 posted on 01/29/2015 5:19:15 PM PST by demshateGod (The fool hath said in his heart, There is no God.)
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To: demshateGod

“Harlots, Measles is Back, demshateGod wrote:

As pointed out in the above link, the vaccine you got was proven to be unsafe and is no longer used. Many people who got vaccine got symptoms that would have otherwise been diagnosed as measles. Since they had the vaccine, it was diagnosed as something else.

Don’t believe the left wing media or the left wing scientists. Their certainty and vitriol is inversely related to the truth in their arguments.”

I have a questions.

Why do you believe the article above when they say that the dose I got was unsafe (I am still healthy today) if you consider them to all be inversely related to the truth?


14 posted on 01/29/2015 5:46:18 PM PST by Wiz-Nerd
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To: demshateGod

No, I believe in hard science, not the insane rumblings of twats who put all of our health at risk.


15 posted on 01/29/2015 7:26:25 PM PST by Clemenza (Lurking)
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To: Clemenza

Hard science like global warming and evolution. I hear ya. Science, like everything, is socially situated and motivated. Does the earth rotate? Probably. Are GMO’s safe? Probably not.


16 posted on 01/29/2015 7:58:52 PM PST by demshateGod (The fool hath said in his heart, There is no God.)
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To: humblegunner

>> In 2014, measles infected between 635 and 644 in the U.S., a 400-fold increase over previous years.

> Likely a combination of Mexicans and bloggers.

Mix in a bunch of liberal crunchy-granola anti-vaxx selfish dipwads who refuse to vaccinate their little Maxxon and Periwinkle, and you’ve got the perfect cocktail of Measles Outbreak Powered by Idiocy.


17 posted on 01/31/2015 10:46:18 AM PST by VictoryGal (Never give up, never surrender! REMEMBER NEDA)
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To: Secret Agent Man

OMG, seriously?? Your linked article is FULL of misinformation, especially dwelling on deaths only regarding measles.

Especially this:
“...by 1963 considered a mild childhood illness” — I call BULLCRAP.

My childhood best friend was partially blind her whole life due to corneal scarring common to measles. Today, measles is leading cause of blindness in Afrida. Here are some other serious complications of measles:

- As many as one out of every 20 children with measles gets pneumonia, the most common cause of death from measles in young children.
- About one child out of every 1,000 who get measles will develop encephalitis (swelling of the brain) that can lead to convulsions and can leave the child deaf or mentally retarded.
- For every 1,000 children who get measles, one or two will die from it.

If it was JUST YOU or YOUR CHILDREN you are rolling the dice for by not getting vaccinated, I’d say good luck and God bless. But it isn’t! Your selfish decision to not vaccinate imperils babies too young to be vaccinated, those with compromised immune systems (like kids with leukemia), among others. I’d rather tell YOU and your unvaccinated Typhoid Marys to stay in your house rather than tell parents they can’t take their babies anywhere.


18 posted on 01/31/2015 11:15:10 AM PST by VictoryGal (Never give up, never surrender! REMEMBER NEDA)
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To: VictoryGal

I don’t have an obligation to put my health or my kids’ at risk for yours. ANd you don’t either.

You are not only selfish you’re a frigging totalitarian.

GO over to DU. Where they love laws forcing people to do things they do not want to do even when there’s plenty of good reason not ot do it.

We are done here.


19 posted on 01/31/2015 12:58:59 PM PST by Secret Agent Man (Gone Galt; Not averse to Going Bronson.)
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