Posted on 08/28/2013 12:23:16 PM PDT by Gamecock
An outbreak of measles tied to a Texas megachurch where ministers have questioned vaccination has sickened at least 21 people, including a 4-month-old infant -- and its expected to grow, state and federal health officials said.
Theres likely a lot more susceptible people, said Dr. Jane Seward, the deputy director for the viral diseases division at the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.
Sixteen people -- nine children and seven adults -- ranging in age from 4 months to 44 years had come down with the highly contagious virus in Tarrant County, Texas, as of Monday. Another five cases are part of the outbreak in nearby Denton County.
All of the cases are linked to the Eagle Mountain International Church in Newark, Texas, where a visitor whod traveled to Indonesia became infected with measles and then returned to the U.S., spreading it to the largely unvaccinated church community, said Russell Jones, the Texas state epidemiologist.
We have a pocket of people that werent immunized, said Jones, noting that vaccination rates typically hover above the 98 percent range in his county.
Infections spread to the congregation, the staff and a day care center at Eagle Mountain International. measles CDC At least 21 people are part of a growing measles outbreak linked to Eagle Mountain International Church in Newark, Texas, health officials said. This Center for Disease Control and Prevention photo depicts the characteristic rash of measles after three days of infection.
The ill people were all linked to the church that is a division of Kenneth Copeland Ministries. That group advocates faith-healing and advises people to first seek the Wisdom of God and then appropriate medical attention in matters of health, according to an online statement.
Terri Pearsons, a senior pastor of Eagle Mountain International Church and Copelands daughter, previously said she had concerns about possible ties between early childhood vaccines and autism, a position that has been refuted by health officials.
In the wake of the measles outbreak, however, Pearsons has urged followers to get vaccinated and the church has held several vaccination clinics, according to its website. Health officials said the church administration has been very cooperative in the outbreak investigation. Pearsons did not return an email from NBC News seeking comment.
We continue to follow up on pending and confirmed cases to help in any way we can to keep the outbreak contained, a church statement said. We ask that others join us in prayers over this outbreak.
Health authorities notified the church of the first cases on Aug. 14; Texas state health officials issued a warning about the outbreak on Aug. 16. In the meantime, hundreds -- perhaps more than 1,000 -- contacts could have been affected by potentially infected people, Seward said.
In this community, these cases so far are all in people who refused vaccination for themselves and their children, she added.
Of the 16 cases in Tarrant County, 11 did not have any measles vaccination. The others may have had at least one measles vaccination, but they couldnt produce documentation, county officials said.
The outbreak raises to 159 the total number of confirmed measles cases in the U.S. this year. The disease that once killed 500 people a year in the U.S. and hospitalized 48,000 had been considered virtually eradicated after a vaccine introduced in 1963. Cases now show up typically when an unvaccinated person contracts the disease abroad and spreads it upon return to the U.S.
Five previous cases in Texas this year were far higher than typical years, but dont appear to be related to the current outbreak, state officials said.
Measles is so contagious that 90 percent of people who are not immune to the disease or vaccinated against it will get sick, health officials warned. It is a respiratory disease spread by sneezing or coughing. The virus can live in the air or on infected surfaces for up to two hours. Symptoms include fever, cough, runny nose and sore throat, plus a characteristic red rash that starts on the face or hairline and spreads to the rest of the body. It can take eight days to two weeks after exposure before an infected person develops symptoms.
Health officials recommend that children receive a Measles/Mumps/Rubella -- MMR -- vaccine at age 12 months and again at 4 to 6 years. Unless adults have previously had measles or are immunized, health officials say they should be vaccinated.
We just want people to be aware and well-informed about the risks of the disease, especially when they travel abroad, Seward said.
This is news?
It’s a good reminder that the foolish beliefs of the anti-vaccine crowd have consequences...
Yes.
But is posted in the religion forum, which is dedicated to all things religion.
Well, so much for health and wealth....
Holy Measles, Let us all pray!
/johnny
That and the fools who campaigned against ddt and diazinon and other pesticides and malaria is now making a comeback.
Don't go near that church and hopefully none of your neighbors go there. These types of religious people who stay away from medical help, make everyone at risk. My husband, Bill, had a brother and brother's wife who were that kind. In my husband's earlier life before I knew him, he had serious pneumonia and his brother had reluctantly taken him to the hospital. At some point, Bill saw his own chart and the brother had written on there that he couldn't have a blood transfusion and no extra measures could be taken to save his life. Bill had a fit and got the doctor to change that. In later years, the brother contracted Hepatitis B from eating some of a contaminated cheese ball and guess what? Off to the doctor/hospital he went to treat that, take his blood or anything else they had to do to keep him alive. When it's his life in jeopardy, he's not quite so "religious".
Idiots.
Hope none are PG women!
“Kenneth Copeland Ministries” = HERETIC
“Terri Pearsons, a senior pastor of Eagle Mountain International Church and Copelands daughter” = female pastor = HERESY
Hey, if you want to inject yourself with the MMR vaccine, go for it. Personally and for my children, I’ll take my chances with the measles. Ingredients in the vaccine: According to the U.S. manufacturer, Merck & Company, Inc., the current MMR vaccine — MMR-II — contains attenuated live measles and mumps viruses propagated in chick embryo cell culture, plus “the Wistar RA 27/3 strain of live attenuated rubella virus propagated in WI-38 human diploid lung fibroblasts.”(1) Principal studies published in the American Journal of Diseases of Children and the American Journal of Epidemiology, reveal that the rubella strain was cultured from an aborted human fetus.(2,3) In addition, the growth medium for the three live viruses that are needed to produce the MMR vaccine is a buffered salt solution “supplemented with fetal bovine serum.”(4) Other ingredients include sucrose, phosphate, glutamate, recombinant human albumin, sorbitol, hydrolyzed gelatin stabilizer, and approximately 25 mcg of neomycin (an antibiotic)
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