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Hundreds quarantined as South Carolina measles outbreak accelerates

The Washington Post reports:

By Kelly Kasulis Cho

“A state epidemiologist said the spike in cases came in the wake of Thanksgiving travel and a lack of vaccinations. At least 16 cases were traced to a church.

South Carolina’s measles outbreak is “accelerating” in the wake of Thanksgiving travel and a lack of vaccinations, an epidemiologist for the state’s Department of Public Health (DPH) warned Wednesday, after authorities traced a sizable outbreak to a church in the state’s northwest.

Of the 111 measles cases recorded in that area, known as the Upstate region, 105 involved people who were unvaccinated while three involved those who were partially vaccinated, state epidemiologist Linda Bell said at a news briefing. One dose of the vaccine is 93 percent effective against measles, while the full two-dose regimen is 97 percent effective, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

At least 254 people had been placed in quarantine as of Tuesday, 16 of whom are in isolation, the DPH said in a news release.

Bell said that 27 new cases had been reported since Friday, bringing the total reported to the DPH this year to 114.
“Accelerating is an accurate term. That is a spike in cases we are concerned about,” she said in response to a question from a reporter, adding that South Carolina has “lower than hoped for” vaccination coverage.

At least 16 of those new cases were traced back to a recent outbreak at the Way of Truth Church in Inman, which Bell said has since been “very helpful” in cooperating with the health department’s recommendations.

The worsening situation unfolding in South Carolina shows how the country is still reeling from the resurgence of a preventable, highly contagious disease that has spread beyond a large outbreak in West Texas this year and illustrated the consequences of vaccine hesitancy.

Nationally, the CDC has recorded at least 1,912 cases of measles — a highly contagious and potentially deadly virus — across 42 states as of Tuesday. More than half of them occurred among children.

In South Carolina, 20 of the Upstate cases involve children under age 5, while 75 of the cases were detected in children between the ages of 5 and 17. Across the state, the rate of students with vaccines required by schools dropped from nearly 96 percent in 2020 to 93.5 percent in the 2025 school year, DPH data shows.

Measles spreads with extraordinary efficiency through respiratory droplets, infecting 90 percent of unvaccinated people who are exposed. People are infectious up to four days before they develop a rash, and viral particles remain airborne up to two hours after they leave a room. Rare breakthrough cases in partially or fully vaccinated people are more likely to happen during a large outbreak, according to epidemiologists, because so many become exposed as the virus rips through unvaccinated people.

The United States declared measles eliminated in 2000, meaning the disease had not spread domestically for more than 12 months.

In the news conference Wednesday, Bell pointed out that milestone and noted that “high vaccine coverage was responsible for eliminating ongoing transmission in this country.”

“And so now that we are … at the brink of seeing continued transmission in the United States for almost a year now, we’ve run the risk of losing that designation as a country,” Bell said.

“What we’d like people to see is that picture: to consider the effectiveness of the vaccine and having this disease essentially go away,” she said.

By July 7, the U.S. had recorded the highest number of cases — 1,277 — since the virus was declared officially eliminated. Officials say the true toll is much higher because many families are not testing their children and some physicians may not recognize the once-rare condition, The Washington Post has reported.

The national inoculation rate for the measles, mumps and rubella (MMR) vaccine has dropped in recent years, particularly since the beginning of the pandemic and an uptick of vaccine misinformation that, at times, has propagated on social media and among some public officials, including President Donald Trump and his pick for health secretary, Robert F. Kennedy Jr.

Even a small decline in vaccination can significantly increase the likelihood of an outbreak. Measles can “easily cross borders” into any community where vaccination rates are below 95 percent, according to the CDC.

There is no specific treatment for measles. One or two in every 1,000 children who contract measles are projected to die, the CDC said in 2019, with pneumonia being the most common cause of death after infection.

Two otherwise healthy girls died this year after contracting measles during the West Texas outbreak. Authorities also suspect a New Mexico man died of measles.

Bell said that she expects measles transmission in South Carolina to “go on for many more weeks,” adding that this spread could be avoided if more people decide to get vaccinated.”

My comments:

Let’s all be sure and thank Donald J. Trump, Robert F. Kennedy, Jr, and Senator Bill Cassidy (Rep. — LA) for all they did to make preventable communicative diseases GREAT AGAIN!

Demented Donnie for nominating RFK, Jr without properly vetting him and realizing that Kennedy was completely unfit to lead the HHS, Kennedy for his baseless, unhinged stupidity and his lying, and Cassidy for leading the Red Wave of ignorant Republicans in the Senate to confirm Kennedy.

Less than a year into Demented Donnie’s misadministration and look at the damage they have already committed.

This is criminal and none of them have accepted any responsibility for the roles they played!
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Diotrephes · 70-79, M
I got the measles when I was in Navy Boot Camp at San Diego in 1965. I had just came out of the swimming pool when I saw it. I spent some time in the hospital.
whowasthatmaskedman · 70-79, M
Good. Thats what happens when you dont get vaccinated. But thats what they voted for..And just in time for Christmas. And the post Christmas sales. Sure.. Thats not going to spread..And dont worry about masks. You Muricans are free!😷
Convivial · 26-30, F
This is what happens when emotion overrides science
@Convivial This is just “the very tip of the very tip of the very, very big iceberg that is headed our way. I have expounded on many of the dangerous & ignorant horrible decisions Kennedy has thrust upon our populace.

It will get far worse ruining the health of our children, our grandchildren, our great grandchildren unless checkmated very soon.

 
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