Senin, 22 April 2019

US will soon break record for measles cases in a year | TheHill - The Hill

The U.S. will soon break the record for the number of confirmed measles cases this year after health officials found dozens of new measles cases in the last week.

As of April 19, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) has identified 626 cases of measles in 22 states across the country, an increase of 71 cases and two additional states in the past week.

This is the greatest number of cases reported in the U.S. in the last five years, and the second highest number since measles was eliminated in 2000. The worst year for measles since then was 2014, when there were 667 cases.

In the coming weeks, 2019 confirmed case numbers will likely surpass 2014 levels, the CDC said.

The states that have reported cases to the CDC are Arizona, California, Colorado, Connecticut, Florida, Georgia, Illinois, Indiana, Iowa, Kentucky, Maryland, Massachusetts, Michigan, Missouri, Nevada, New Hampshire, New Jersey, New York, Oregon, Texas, Tennessee and Washington.

The outbreaks are linked to unvaccinated travelers returning to the U.S. from countries where large measles outbreaks are occurring, such as Israel and Ukraine.

Public health officials, especially in New York City, have said they expect a spike in the number of cases confirmed in the next week because people traveled and spent time with extended family during Easter and Passover.

“Because of measles’ long incubation period, we know this outbreak will get worse before it gets better,” New York Health Commissioner Oxiris Barbot said last week.

New York City is home to the largest measles outbreak in the country, and cases primarily centered among Orthodox Jews living in certain neighborhoods in Brooklyn and Queens. As of Thursday, there have been 359 confirmed cases of measles in those areas.

The outbreak has prompted New York City May Bill de Blasio (D) to order mandatory vaccinations for required people living in specific ZIP codes in Brooklyn. If people don't comply, they are subject to a $1,000 fine. 

The current outbreak has primarily afflicted unvaccinated people and has led states to try to rewrite their laws regarding religious and personal vaccine exemptions.

For example, the majority of cases in New York are children under 18 years of age, and 45 cases are adults. Most of these measles cases were unvaccinated or had only one dose of the vaccine.

The anti-vaccine movement has been spreading disinformation about vaccines among vulnerable populations like New York’s Orthodox community, which has led to high rates of vaccine refusal and overall hesitancy.

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https://thehill.com/policy/healthcare/439994-us-will-soon-break-record-for-measles-cases-this-year

2019-04-22 15:00:04Z
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U.S. measles cases surge as officials scramble to stop near-record outbreak - Washington Post


Measles, mumps and rubella vaccines. (Eric Risberg/AP)

The United States is on track to surpass the record number of measles cases in a single year since the disease was declared eliminated in 2000, according to figures reported Monday. For the fourth week in a row, health officials have added dozens of new cases to the year’s list of confirmed ones, bringing the total to 626 — already the highest number in the past five years.

The number of people sickened by the highly contagious, potentially deadly disease increased by 71 during the third week of April, with 22 states reporting cases. In 2014, the United States had a record 667 cases, including one large outbreak primarily among unvaccinated Amish communities in Ohio that accounted for more than half of the cases that year.

Health officials said they expect 2019′s case counts to jump in the coming weeks because of increased disease spread during Easter and Passover gatherings. Officials in New York City, location of the largest outbreak in the country, are especially worried. At least 303 cases have been reported this year, virtually all in Brooklyn. New York City Health Commissioner Oxiris Barbot said she is bracing for an increase.

“Because of measles’ long incubation period, we know this outbreak will get worse before it gets better," she said last week.

The CDC figures, updated Monday, report cases as of April 18, before the start of the holidays.

The states that have reported cases to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention are Arizona, California, Colorado, Connecticut, Florida, Georgia, Illinois, Indiana, Iowa, Kentucky, Maryland, Massachusetts, Michigan, Missouri, Nevada, New Hampshire, New Jersey, New York, Oregon, Tennessee, Texas and Washington.

The outbreaks are linked to travelers who brought measles back from countries such as Israel, Ukraine and the Philippines, where large measles outbreaks are occurring.

The majority of people who have fallen ill were unvaccinated, officials said. In some communities, anti-vaccine activists have spread false claims about the measles, mumps and rubella vaccine, fueling refusal or hesitancy among parents about immunizing their children. When many people in a community have not been vaccinated, the disease can spread quickly. It can cause serious complications among all age groups, especially young children, adults with weakened immune systems and the very elderly.

The CDC defines an outbreak as three or more cases. In addition to New York City, there are outbreaks in California; Rockland County, N.Y.; New Jersey; and Michigan, where almost all 43 cases are linked to one man who traveled to the Detroit area from Brooklyn, unaware that he had measles.

California has 23 cases, including four in San Mateo County, which include an adult who visited Google headquarters in Mountainview, and 13 cases in Butte County in northern California, the region devastated by the most destructive wildfire in history.

In Washington state, 74 people contracted the infection, including 63 who were unvaccinated. Health officials are expected to declare that outbreak over if no more cases are reported by Wednesday. That’s two incubation periods (42 days) without new cases.


Read more:

Unaware he had measles, a man traveled from New York to Michigan, infecting 39 people

Parents of 3 NYC children face $1,000 penalty for violating measles order

They went to Mexico for surgery. They came back with a deadly superbug infection.

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https://www.washingtonpost.com/health/2019/04/22/us-measles-cases-surge-officials-scramble-stop-near-record-outbreak/

2019-04-22 13:49:49Z
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New device to treat ADHD without drugs while kids sleep - KTRK-TV

LOS ANGELES, California -- The FDA has approved a new medical device to help treat ADHD in children.

The authorization was granted to the life sciences company NeuroSigma based in Los Angeles.


The device is designed for kids ages 7 to 12 who are not taking a prescription for the disorder.

Children wear a small adhesive patch while they sleep. It then delivers a low-level electrical pulse to parts of the brain responsible for ADHD symptoms.


It's called the Monarch external Trigeminal Nerve Stimulation (eTNS) System.

The device is not currently covered by insurance and could cost just over $1,000.

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https://abc13.com/health/new-device-to-treat-adhd-without-drugs-while-kids-sleep/5263975/

2019-04-22 11:37:57Z
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When Is Snoring A Sign Of A Serious Health Issue? : Shots - Health News - NPR

When is a snore just annoying and when is it a sign of sleep apnea? Luckily, they sound pretty different. Aleksandra Shutova / EyeEm/Getty Images/EyeEm hide caption

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Aleksandra Shutova / EyeEm/Getty Images/EyeEm

An estimated 40 percent of adults in the U.S. snore. And, men: You tend to out-snore women. (Yes, this may explain why you get kicked or shoved at night!)

And despite the myth that snoring is a sign of deep sleep, there's really no upside to it.

"Snoring really does not demonstrate anything good, " says Erich Voigt, an ear, nose, and throat doctor and sleep specialist at New York University Langone Health. "You can have beautifully deep sleep in a silent sleep."

Snoring is never great news, but often it's harmless (other than the pain your sleeping partner may feel). In some cases though, it's a sign of something serious.

When we sleep, if the air that moves through our noses and mouths has a clear passage — we can sleep silently. But when the airways are narrowed, that's when we snore.

"Snoring is basically a vibration of the tissues inside of the airway," Voigt explains — that is, the roof of the mouth and the vertical folds of tissue that surround the tonsils.

A lot of factors can contribute to snoring, says Voigt. We can control some of the underlying triggers. For instance, drinking alcohol is linked to snoring. Alcohol tends to make the tissues within our mouths swell a bit and alcohol can also change the quality of sleep.

"Your brain is sedated from alcohol, so the combination can make you snore worse," Voigt says.

Being overweight can also increase the likelihood of snoring. So, when people lose weight, this can reduce the amount they snore.

Other factors that contribute to snoring may be outside our control. There are physical obstructions, such as a large uvula or a deviated septum. In addition, allergies and upper respiratory infections can cause the tissues in the roof of the mouth to become floppy, swollen, or stretched out, Voigt says.

So, when is snoring just annoying, and when is it a sign of a potentially serious problem? A light, rhythmic snore — that stays pretty steady — is common and tends to be harmless. "It might be bad for the bed partner, but it's not a big health problem," Voigt says.

But when snoring becomes loud and erratic, this can signal a problem. So, if you're concerned about the person you sleep with, what should you listen for?

"A crescendo where the snoring is getting louder and louder," Voigt explains, is the first sign. The crescendo is typically followed by periods of no sound, and then a gasp that can sound like a snort.

This pattern of snoring can be a sign of obstructive sleep apnea which is a serious condition that can increase the risk of heart disease. What happens to people with this condition is that the airway will collapse in on itself and close. "And as the person is trying to breath in, the air will not pass. That's what the apnea is," Voigt explains.

You can watch and listen to this YouTube video for a good demonstration of the sounds made by someone with sleep apnea.

Listen to what normal snoring sounds like at the beginning of this video. At minute 1:10 you can hear the snoring and gasping that is characteristic of sleep apnea.

David Oleniacz Videos YouTube

"During the first minute he has regular rhythmic snoring," Voigt says. "Then, in the second minute he has a pause, (apnea) or no breathing, followed by a big gasp for air."

Often, people with sleep apnea don't wake to consciousness, so they don't know they have a problem. So, if you sleep with someone who snores, you're in a good position to help flag the issue. Then, it's best to get it checked out by a doctor who can diagnose the problem.

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https://www.npr.org/sections/health-shots/2019/04/22/714249236/beyond-annoying-how-to-identify-the-sounds-of-a-troublesome-snore

2019-04-22 09:01:00Z
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Minggu, 21 April 2019

El Al Flight Attendant in Deep Coma After Contracting Measles on NY to TLV Journey - The Jewish Voice

A 43-year-old El Al Airlines flight attendant was rushed to a hospital with measles, and has reportedly lapsed into a deep coma after coming down with a fever on March 31.

By: Andrew B. Mayfair

The woman is now said to be suffering from encephalitis and breathing with the assistance of a respirator at Israel’s Meir Medical Center, according to CNN.

Israeli health officials said the woman may have been infected with measles in New York, Israel or a flight between the two locations, both of which are experiencing active measles outbreaks. No other passengers appear to have contracted measles, CNN added.

“She’s been in a deep coma for 10 days, and we’re now just hoping for the best,” Dr. Itamar Grotto, associate director general of Israel’s Ministry of Health, told CNN in an interview.

It has been reported by CBS News that the flight attendant had been vaccinated against measles as a child but only received a single dose.

The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) has recommended that all children get two doses of the measles, mumps and rubella (MMR) vaccine since 1989.

The New York City Board of Health is issuing civil summonses for three parents who didn’t comply with the mandatory measles vaccination order. They are subject to fines of up to $1,000 apiece.

The continuing order for vaccinations applies to children ages 6 months and older with fines for non-compliance. City officials announced an emergency vaccination order for four ZIP codes in Brooklyn last week to stem the measles outbreak.

“A lawsuit challenging the order mandating measles vaccinations in Williamsburg, Brooklyn, was dismissed by a state Supreme Court judge on Thursday. The suit was filed by five anonymous parents who claimed the order was unnecessary and infringed on religious rights, also claiming vaccines are dangerous,” reports Fox News.

According to the latest measles statistics coming out of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, from January 1 to April 11 there were 555 reported measles cases in 20 states. In the past week alone, the CDC has received reports of 90 new cases, mainly in New York state.

“That means there have already been more measles cases in 2019 than any year in the last five years. And given that it’s only April, we’re well on track to set a record for the highest number of cases in the US since the disease was eliminated here two decades ago,” says vox.com.

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http://thejewishvoice.com/2019/04/21/el-al-flight-attendant-in-deep-coma-after-contracting-measles-on-ny-to-tlv-journey/

2019-04-21 07:47:21Z
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Sabtu, 20 April 2019

Born In The 1960s? The CDC Says You May Need A Measles Shot Before Traveling - Forbes

Many American adults are unsure which, if any, measles vaccination they received.

Getty

Adults who received the measles vaccine between 1963 and 1967 may not be protected from the virus, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC). That's because when the measles vaccine first became available, in 1963, there were two versions and only one was effective.

The first version of the early vaccine was inactivated, also known as "killed" measles vaccine. The other version was live attenuated measles vaccine, which was a weakened form of the virus. The killed vaccine was discontinued in 1967 when it was determined that it did not, in fact, protect against measles virus infection.

In 1968, a new version of the live measles vaccine hit the market and is still in use today. Since 1971, the measles vaccine has been combined with the mumps and rubella vaccines in the three-in-one MMR vaccine.

If you were vaccinated between 1963 and 1967 but you're unsure of which version you received, you should try to check your vaccination records. Unfortunately, there is no national organization that maintains vaccination records and they can be hard to track down. 

If you do not have written documentation, or if you have not had a blood test to prove that you're immune, the CDC recommends biting the bullet and getting another dose or two. "The MMR vaccine is safe, and there is no harm in getting another dose if you may already be immune to measles, mumps, or rubella," the agency says on its website.

A heightened risk for travelers

This year is on track to be the worst year for measles outbreaks in 27 years, according to CDC data. From January 1 to April 11, there were 555 individual confirmed cases of measles in 20 states.

Elsewhere in the world, there are currently measles outbreaks in Brazil, Israel, Japan, Ukraine and the Philippines.

There have been several recent cases of travelers contracting and spreading measles, including:

The CDC says international travelers are at high risk for exposure and transmission of the virus and recommends the following:

  • Infants 6 months through 11 months of age should receive one dose of MMR vaccine. Infants who get one dose of MMR vaccine before their first birthday should get two more doses (one dose at 12 through 15 months of age and another dose at least 28 days later).
  • Children 12 months of age and older should receive two doses of MMR vaccine separated by at least 28 days.
  • Teenagers and adults who do not have evidence of immunity against measles should get two doses of MMR vaccine separated by at least 28 days.

Risk assessment: When were you born?

Born before the 1957? You probably were not vaccinated against measles but you're safe anyway. "Before vaccines were available, nearly everyone was infected with measles, mumps, and rubella viruses during childhood," according to the CDC website.

For two decades after 1968, most people vaccinated against measles received only one dose. The CDC's Measles FAQ page says one dose of measles vaccine is about 93 percent effective at preventing measles if exposed to the virus. Two doses are about 97 percent effective.

It wasn't until 1989 that health officials started recommending two doses of the live vaccine. There was a catch-up program in 1989, so some grade-school students received the second shot at that time, but guidelines varied by state.

The upshot: If you're unsure which measles vaccine you received, or how many doses, it's better to be safe than sorry and roll up your sleeve.

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https://www.forbes.com/sites/suzannerowankelleher/2019/04/20/born-in-the-1960s-the-cdc-says-you-may-need-a-measles-shot-before-traveling/

2019-04-20 17:07:00Z
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For three years her skin ulcers and pain would flare, then vanish, stumping doctors. Her daughter, a nurse, finally figured it out. - Laredo Morning Times

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For three years her skin ulcers and pain would flare, then vanish, stumping doctors. Her daughter, a nurse, finally figured it out.  Laredo Morning Times

Kimberly Ho, a newly minted nurse at Children's National Medical Center just off a 12-hour overnight shift, struggled to focus on a presentation about working ...

View full coverage on Google News
http://www.lmtonline.com/news/article/For-three-years-her-skin-ulcers-and-pain-would-13782689.php

2019-04-20 17:03:00Z
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For three years her skin ulcers and pain would flare, then vanish, stumping doctors. Her daughter, a nurse, finally figured it out. - The Washington Post

Kimberly Ho, a newly minted nurse at Children’s National Medical Center just off a 12-hour overnight shift, struggled to focus on a presentation about working with sexually traumatized children and adolescents.

As the picture of a skin infection flashed on the screen, the 22-year-old snapped to attention.

The instructor was recounting the story of a teenage patient who had been given an incorrect diagnosis by a doctor in training — a breach of hospital protocol that had caused an uproar. The lecture, aimed at new staff members, emphasized the importance of working within the chain of command. The girl’s actual diagnosis was largely beside the point — except to Ho.

“I thought, ‘Whoa, that looks a lot like my mom,’ ” Ho said she remembers thinking as she typed the name of the disease into her phone.

For more than two years Ho’s mother, Tuyet Le, now 56, had been battling a series of perplexing and painful symptoms, including recurrent genital ulcers similar to those pictured in the slide. Despite various diagnoses, none of the prescribed treatments seemed effective. Le’s symptoms would flare, then vanish, only to recur weeks or months later.

Ho’s attendance at the September 2017 lecture would prove to be instrumental in diagnosing her mother’s illness, a process complicated by a language barrier. (Le, who emigrated from Vietnam, speaks little English.)

“What was hard is that I went to work and could do all these things for other families, but not for my own mother,” said Ho, who accompanied her mother to most medical appointments, often acting as interpreter and advocate.

Overcoming embarrassment

Her mother’s first symptom — genital ulcers — occurred in July 2015, Ho said, while her parents were vacationing in California.

Ho, then in nursing school at Towson University, said that her mother, who was in considerable pain, overcame her embarrassment and called her older daughter for advice.

Ho suggested her mother try soothing baths, called sitz baths. When they didn’t help, Le consulted a gynecologist in California, who tentatively diagnosed a herpes infection and prescribed acyclovir, an anti-viral drug used to treat outbreaks of herpes, shingles and chicken pox.

The drug worked and the ulcers disappeared.

A few months later, Ho said, the genital ulcers recurred, even though Le had been taking acyclovir. A blood test revealed that Le had been infected with herpes simplex virus 1, a common infection that causes cold sores. It is chiefly transmitted by oral-to-oral contact but can be transmitted during oral sex, causing genital herpes. HSV-2 is usually transmitted sexually and causes genital ulcers.

Le saw her gynecologist, who performed a biopsy. The results were inconclusive, so the doctor referred Le to a dermatologist. When the ulcers disappeared a few weeks later, Le decided there was no point seeing the specialist.

Several months later, she confronted a new problem: Her right elbow was suddenly swollen and painful. Le, who has worked for more than two decades in a factory that makes airplane parts, struggled to perform her job.

She consulted a rheumatologist who diagnosed her with rheumatoid arthritis, an autoimmune disease that causes painful, swollen joints. After several weeks, the swelling disappeared, but the genital ulcers returned.

Le’s modest mother found the recurrent ulcers — and the need to involve her daughter in discussions of them with doctors — particularly upsetting.

“It’s a weird thing for me to talk about this because it’s my mom’s stuff,” said Ho, who was born several years after her parents arrived in the United States. “And a lot of medical terms are hard to translate into Vietnamese.”

Ho said her mother was especially worried about the mushrooming cost of tests and treatments not covered by insurance that strained the family budget.

‘Do I have cancer?’

In the fall of 2016, six months after the elbow problem had resolved, Le woke up with a badly swollen left ankle. “It looked like it was broken,” Ho recalled. The ankle was hot to the touch, suggesting inflammation or a possible infection.

Le assured her daughter that she hadn’t fallen or suffered an injury. Unable to walk or drive for several weeks, she was forced to stop working temporarily.

Her primary care doctor, Huyanh Ton, ordered blood tests. Two markers that signal inflammation — erythrocyte sedimentation rate (ESR) and C-reactive protein (CRP) — were elevated and considerably higher than those seen in people with rheumatoid arthritis.

Because high levels can indicate a serious disorder, including some forms of cancer, Ton referred her to a hematologist.

The hematologist said he wasn’t sure what was wrong. Ho said he recommended a hip bone biopsy and ordered “a ton of labs” — mostly specialized blood and urine tests. Le refused the bone biopsy; the blood and urine tests showed nothing unusual. By now, she was battling a new problem that made her especially miserable: oral ulcers pocked her tongue and the inside of her mouth.

“Once one symptom went away, another would appear,” Le said in a statement she dictated to her daughter. “My mouth ulcers had gotten so large I could only eat soup because I was in so much pain.”

Ho said her mother’s episodic, debilitating illness was taking a toll on the family. She often ducked out of class to call doctors, while her normally active mother grew depressed, worried about her health and the family’s mounting medical bills.

“She was kind of freaking out,” Ho recalled. “She kept asking, ‘Do I have cancer?’ ”

Ho confided in several professors, asking if they had any suggestions about what might be wrong. While sympathetic, none did.

“All the time I was watching her suffer, no one could tell me what was going on,” Ho said.

A passing reference in a class would change that.

An instructive case

The case, Ho recalled, involved a teenager who had been told by a resident that she had genital herpes.

“The family freaked out and asked how she got it,” Ho said.

After a work-up, the girl’s ulcers were found to be a symptom not of herpes but of a rare disorder known as Behcet’s syndrome or Behcet’s disease. The chronic disorder causes inflammation in blood vessels in various parts of the body. Attacks flare, then subside. Oral and genital sores are among the most common symptoms. Without treatment, inflammation can worsen causing blindness, a stroke or, rarely, death.

Ho called her cousin, who had recently graduated from medical school, and asked him if he’d ever heard of Behcet’s, which is believed to result from a combination of genetic and environmental factors. He hadn’t, but advised her to do some research.

The similarity of her mother’s symptoms, their episodic nature and the fact that Behcet’s is common in parts of Asia bolstered Ho’s suspicion.

A few weeks later, Le developed a quarter-size boil on her calf. The genital and oral ulcers returned.

“I remember thinking, ‘I really feel she has this disease,’ ” Ho recalled.

Ho persuaded her mother to see a new dermatologist. But by the time the appointment rolled around several weeks later, the sores were gone.

A few months later when they recurred, mother and daughter saw Ton, the internist.

“I showed him all the pictures I’d taken and said ‘I think she had Behcet’s,’ ” Ho recalled.

Ton remembers feeling less convinced. There is no test for the disease, which is rare in the United States, affecting about 16,000 people. Diagnosis is based on the presence of hallmark symptoms and on ruling out other illnesses. At the time, Ton noted, Le did not have eye pain or uveitis, a form of eye inflammation frequently seen in Behcet’s patients.

“In order to diagnose it you have to have heard of it and think of it,” Ton said. He had never seen a case of Behcet’s. But Ton said he had heard of it because his mentors during his residency were rheumatologists.

Several months later, during another flare, Le returned to Ton, who had concluded that Behcet’s sounded likely. He prescribed prednisone, a corticosteroid that is a mainstay treatment for the disease.

Ho said that she and the internist agreed that a formal diagnosis would hinge on a visit to a second rheumatologist, with whom Ton conferred in advance.

Le saw the specialist in May 2018. The doctor diagnosed Behcet’s and tweaked Le’s medication regimen. In the past year, Ho said, her mother’s health has improved and she had not suffered a flare.

“It was a long and frustrating process,” Ho said of her mother’s search for a diagnosis. “I give Dr. Ton a lot of credit.”

Even with decent medical insurance, Ho estimates, her mother’s out-of-pocket bills totaled about $25,000.

Le said she is “so thankful that my daughter is a nurse and was able to attend class at the hospital that day.” Without it, she continued, “I am not sure if I would have a diagnosis right now.”

Ho said that her mother’s case has made her more sensitive to some of the obstacles her patients may face.

“It made me put myself in the place of a family who is non-English speaking,” Ho said. “Even with translators, it’s difficult.”

Submit your solved medical mystery to sandra.boodman@washpost.com. No unsolved cases, please. Read previous mysteries at wapo.st/medicalmysteries.

Read more

A toddler’s vanishing voice and a mother’s heavy burden.

This family’s frequent nosebleeds weren’t the result of bone-dry air.

Was a kayaking injury responsible for her searing nocturnal pain?

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https://www.washingtonpost.com/national/health-science/for-three-years-her-skin-ulcers-and-pain-would-flare-then-vanish-stumping-doctors-her-daughter-a-nurse-finally-figured-it-out/2019/04/19/b8b4da38-5481-11e9-9136-f8e636f1f6df_story.html

2019-04-20 15:02:37Z
CAIiEJfV2K_y_a9sm7Ks9wzxJgEqGAgEKg8IACoHCAowjtSUCjC30XQwzqe5AQ

Involuntary Commitment For Addiction Treatment Raises Troubling Questions : Shots - Health News - NPR

The Massachusetts Alcohol and Substance Abuse Center in Plymouth houses men for court-mandated addiction treatment. Robin Lubbock/WBUR hide caption

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Robin Lubbock/WBUR

Robin Wallace thought her years of working as a counselor in addiction treatment gave her a decent understanding of the system. She has worked in private and state programs in Massachusetts and with people who were involuntarily committed to treatment.

So in 2017, as her 33-year-old son, Sean Wallace, continued to struggle with heroin use — after years of coping with mental health issues and substance use — she thought she was making the right choice in forcing him into treatment.

"His behavior was erratic," Robin says. "I think he had some mental health issues that were worsened by his use."

Now she worries that her decision contributed to Sean's taking his own life.

The law known as Section 35

Robin had become one of several thousand Massachusetts residents each year who ask the courts to force a loved one into addiction treatment under a state law known as Section 35.

The law allows a family member, physician or police officer to ask the courts to involuntarily commit someone to substance use treatment. Dozens of states have civil commitment laws, but Massachusetts is believed to use it more aggressively than most states.

In the last fiscal year, more than 6,500 Massachusetts residents were ordered into treatment this way.

After a court clinician in Hyannis, Mass., reviewed Robin's request, a judge agreed that Sean's substance use was dangerous and ordered him committed to up to 90 days of residential treatment.

Sean had begged his mother in court that day not to go that route. He was being sent to a program, he told her, where he would be locked up and not allowed to continue taking the medication that was helping him with his addiction — methadone.

"I thought he misunderstood," says Robin. "Because I couldn't conceive that there would be an opioid treatment program that would not provide medication-assisted treatment."

It turns out Sean was right. Although many providers say medication is the gold standard in addiction treatment, Sean was sent to a program in a state prison in Plymouth, Mass., that does not provide the medicine.

When we spoke with Sean in 2017 — shortly after he'd spent about a month committed, he said that the conditions were inhumane and that he was often placed in segregation, or "the hole" — though he had not committed any crime.

"I was punished for not eating," Sean told us. "That's how I ended up in the hole. If you refuse your tray, they consider it a behavioral issue. I didn't know that — I was just sick."

He spiraled to suicide

Sean also said in that interview that he was having trouble adjusting to life after his time in the Plymouth prison.

"I just feel different," he said. "I have a lot more anxiety. I feel scared. I feel like I'm going to wake up and be back there."

Less than a year after that interview, Sean killed himself. His mother says that after that stint in civil commitment, Sean could no longer hold a job. He ended up in a psychiatric hospital and was later jailed on charges of trying to break into a house. Robin believes being locked up for addiction treatment contributed to his suicide.

"I think that his trauma was very much triggered by him being in the cell" at the local jail, she says. "And he just felt like he couldn't take it anymore."

If you or someone you know may be considering suicide, contact the National Suicide Prevention Lifeline at 1-800-273-8255 (en Español: 1-888-628-9454; deaf and hard of hearing: 1-800-799-4889) or the Crisis Text Line by texting HOME to 741741.

The sheriff wouldn't comment, but documents at the local jail confirm that Sean tried to take his own life there; he later died from those injuries.

Sean's longtime partner, Heather McDermott, says he was never the same after his civil commitment.

"He was like a big, sad, depressed tumor that I was trying to bring back to life," McDermott says. "We had a home. I can't even believe we got here, and then — then he died."

Massachusetts is one of a few states that use prisons and jails to involuntarily commit men to addiction treatment — and Massachusetts uses the approach more than most states do.

In an emailed statement, the Massachusetts Department of Correction said that its mission is to promote public safety by providing a secure treatment environment. And there is so much demand for involuntary treatment for addiction in Massachusetts that 100 more beds opened in another jail last year.

Hampden County Sheriff Nick Cocchi says that many traditional treatment centers aren't willing to take patients who don't want to be there and that, with a declining inmate population, jails have room for these men.

"This is a very dangerous, acutely sick and — I would say — not so well-behaved population," Cocchi says.

Many states are going down the same road as Massachusetts — strengthening their civil commitment laws to hold people against their will so they will get treatment. And some researchers, such as Leo Beletsky of Northeastern University, say more families are choosing to have loved ones locked up because it's the only way to get immediate help.

"Limiting someone's civil rights should be the last resort and only reserved for those cases that are truly dire," he says.

Denise Bohan believes involuntary commitment saved her 33-year-old son's life. Families are desperate, she says, and can't reason with a loved one in the throes of addiction.

"This is a last resort," Bohan says. "It's not something you do, like, just on a whim. This is a desperate act of just trying to save your child's life."

Several Massachusetts officials are signaling that the law may change so that correctional facilities will not be used for men committed to involuntary addiction treatment — primarily because addiction is now widely considered a disease that requires medical treatment.

Already, a class action lawsuit against the state has been filed, charging gender discrimination — because Massachusetts stopped sending involuntarily committed women to prisons in 2016, in response to a different lawsuit.

A longer version of this story originally appeared in WBUR's CommonHealth. Deborah Becker is a senior correspondent and host at WBUR. Her reporting focuses on mental health, criminal justice and education.

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https://www.npr.org/sections/health-shots/2019/04/20/712290717/prison-for-forced-addiction-treatment-a-parents-last-resort-has-consequences

2019-04-20 11:10:00Z
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Congo's Ebola response threatened by conspiracy theories, rumors - NBC News

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By Gabe Joselow and Linda Givetash

People who have contracted Ebola are opting to die at home rather than seek treatment as conspiracy theories fuel distrust of the government and of health workers grappling with the crisis in the Democratic Republic of Congo, according to the workers and aid groups.

Nearly 20 new cases of the deadly illness are being identified daily in two northeast provinces of the country. Both areas are opposition strongholds where political tensions run high.

Many of the victims are being discovered outside treatment centers after they refuse to seek help, officials said. The epidemic has left more than 700 dead and affected more than 1,000 people.

Dec. 19, 201802:42

In addition to combating a lethal virus, health workers are having to dispel rumors that the disease is manufactured and that the millions of dollars spent on the response are part of a money-making scheme derisively referred to as the “Ebola business.”

"We have lost the trust of the community," Tariq Riebl of the nonprofit International Rescue Committee told NBC News from Goma.

A study conducted in September, less than two months into the outbreak, found that 25 percent of people surveyed in the affected areas did not believe Ebola was real, while 36 percent thought it was fabricated to destabilize the region.

“It’s all about money, that we’re getting bonuses for cases we find, that prolonging the response helps the business side,” Riebl said, listing some of the lies that have been spreading among local communities.

Health workers inside the "red zone" of an Ebola treatment center in Butembo.John Wessels / AFP - Getty Images

Anifa Vahavi is a demographic researcher working in Butembo, which is one of the worst-affected areas.

She has encountered skepticism about Ebola's existence and origins, and questions about why aid workers take extra precautions when treating it compared to malaria or cholera.

Ebola treatment centers established by the central government in conjunction with international aid groups have been met with suspicion. Designed to isolate and treat suspected cases of Ebola and staffed by health workers wearing bulky “space suits,” the centers come with an increased presence of police and military forces.

Some people in Butembo even believe that "when you go there they inject you with the disease," according to Vahavi, 30, who collects data for a Congolese nonprofit.

The Ebola outbreak is also taking place in a part of the country that has suffered regular violence at the hands of armed groups. Health workers have increasingly come under threat, causing further setbacks to the emergency response.

On Friday, the World Health Organization said an Ebola doctor was killed in an attack on Butembo University Hospital.

Hours later attackers armed with machetes tried to burn down another treatment center, the city's deputy mayor said Saturday.

Two centers run by Doctors Without Borders, along with the Ministry of Health, were attacked three days apart in February, forcing health workers to suspend operations.

Speaking after the second attack, Doctors Without Borders President Joanne Liu described the “great hostility” against the Ebola response, adding “the use of security forces and police only deepens the suspicion of those who believe Ebola is being used as a political tool.”

Deeply entrenched opposition to the government in the areas affected by the epidemic means that even the arrival of foreign aid is treated with apprehension.

Red Cross workers carry the coffin of woman who was killed by Ebola in Butembo. Baz Ratner / Reuters

"The government is seen as profoundly untrustworthy," said Phil Clark, a political scientist at SOAS University of London.

He described the timing and location of the outbreak as an "unfortunate coincidence."

Ebola was confirmed by the World Health Organization on Aug. 1, months before the country was set to head to the polls. Former President Joseph Kabila, who intended to step down after two terms in office, announced in December that he would postpone voting in the Ebola-hit communities to prevent the spread of the disease.

That has triggered rumors that the government was behind the outbreak — either infecting opposition communities with the virus or exaggerating its spread — to allow Kabila's choice of a successor to win at the polls, Clark said.

Health Minister Oly Ilunga Kalenga recently returned from a visit to the affected area of Butembo and told NBC News that "community mistrust" had even been fueled by candidates running for office.

"When the outbreak started in August, it was during the electoral period, so unfortunately some local politicians deliberately spread lies to boost popularity ahead of elections," he said.

He’s more optimistic now that the elections have taken place, saying that a vaccination campaign — which reached more than 100,000 people in the Ebola-effected region — has been effective.

"Things are improving,” he added.

Aid agencies have also taken unprecedented steps to try to assuage local doubts about the Ebola response, including changing how they conduct burials of the dead.

Eva Erlach, who heads the regional community engagement program for the International Federation of the Red Cross and Red Crescent Societies, said the organization has procured transparent body bags for the first time “to show the family that it is actually their loved one that is being buried and it’s not stones or empty coffins.”

A health worker at an Ebola treatment center in Beni, Congo.Baz Ratner / Reuters

The decision was not random, but based on reams of data that IFRC volunteers have collected during home visits with local communities to better understand their concerns. Some 800 volunteers working across eastern Congo have collected over 150,000 comments so far, which are put into a database to share with other organizations on the ground.

“Our role is really to make sure that in anything we’re doing, we are in dialogue with the communities and there is an understanding of what our role is and what is being implemented,” Erlach said.

Riebl, with the International Rescue Committee, said the situation still couldn't be compared to the 2014 outbreak in West Africa that killed more than 11,000 people in six countries in the region, with cases also popping up overseas.

But he still has his concerns. “Ultimately, if you don't connect with communities it doesn’t matter how efficient the treatment system is," Reibl said.

Saphora Smith contributed.

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https://www.nbcnews.com/news/world/congo-s-ebola-response-threatened-conspiracy-theories-rumors-n994156

2019-04-20 07:00:00Z
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Jumat, 19 April 2019

A Generic Version of Opioid Overdose Antidote Naloxone Just Landed FDA Approval - Gizmodo

Photo: Spencer Platt (Getty Images)

One of the most important tools for managing the opioid crisis may soon be a lot more available. On Friday, the Food and Drug Administration announced it had granted approval for a generic version of the naloxone nasal spray, a drug used to rapidly reverse potentially fatal opioid overdoses.

The new generic is by Teva Pharmaceuticals, an Israeli-based company that specializes in generic drugs. The spray will be approved for use by anyone to help with an overdose, regardless of their medical training.

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“In the wake of the opioid crisis, a number of efforts are underway to make this emergency overdose reversal treatment more readily available and more accessible,” Douglas Throckmorton, deputy center director for regulatory programs in the FDA’s Center for Drug Evaluation and Research, said in a statement. “In addition to this approval of the first generic naloxone nasal spray, moving forward we will prioritize our review of generic drug applications for naloxone.”

Though naloxone has been off-patent since the 1980s, various companies have patented and gotten FDA approval for different versions of drug delivery. Teva’s product is the first naloxone nasal spray generic approved for community use with no medical training, for example, but the brand-name version (Adapt Pharma’s Narcan) is already approved for that same use, as is a branded auto-injectable version (Kaleo’s Enzio).

These brand-name products are invariably more expensive than a generic would be, and their higher (and growing) list prices have limited the ability for law enforcement agencies, community groups, hospitals, and those close to people living with opioid use disorder to easily stock supplies of naloxone.

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Kaleo’s Enzio, for instance, now costs around $4,000 per every two-pack, but was originally only $575 when it was approved in 2014. And though the company has often subsidized the cost for individual patients or private insurers, public payers like the federal government often still have to pay—via taxpayer money—for this higher wholesale price, and many publicly funded programs get less of the drug as a result. According to a recent Senate report, Kaleo’s upcharging over the years has cost the government more than $140 million. Faced with the bad publicity, Kaleo announced last December that it would release a generic version of Enzio sometime in 2019, with a much lower retail cost of $178.

Narcan is much cheaper than Enzio, ranging around $130 for a two-pack. But Teva’s generic version should be less expensive still. For some infuriating context, the actual production cost of a single dose of naloxone is no more than a few cents, and generic, though harder to use, injectable versions of naloxone can cost only around $20 (though those prices have risen over time as well). Companies such as Purdue Pharma—infamous for helping spark the opioid crisis via its misleadingly marketed painkillers—have also sought to muscle into the opioid overdose antidote market.

At this point, Teva has not issued any statement on the expected list price or availability of its product. The company has not immediately responded to a Gizmodo request for more information.

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In addition to approving cheaper, generic versions of naloxone, the FDA also says it’s working with companies to fast-track an over-the-counter version of the drug—something public health and opioid policy experts have long advocated for.

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https://gizmodo.com/a-generic-version-of-opioid-overdose-antidote-naloxone-1834176969

2019-04-19 21:12:00Z
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FDA OKs 1st generic nasal spray of overdose reversal drug - KOMO News

[unable to retrieve full-text content]

  1. FDA OKs 1st generic nasal spray of overdose reversal drug  KOMO News
  2. Press Announcements  FDA.gov
  3. A Generic Version of Opioid Overdose Antidote Naloxone Just Landed FDA Approval  Gizmodo
  4. Teva Pharma Gets Approval to Market Generic Nasal Spray for Opioid Overdoses  The Wall Street Journal
  5. The FDA Just Approved the First Generic Nasal Spray to Reverse Opioid Overdoses  TIME
  6. View full coverage on Google News

http://komonews.com/news/nation-world/fda-oks-1st-generic-nasal-spray-of-overdose-reversal-drug

2019-04-19 20:28:00Z
52780272240060

Fourth measles case confirmed in Baltimore County - WBAL TV Baltimore

[unable to retrieve full-text content]

  1. Fourth measles case confirmed in Baltimore County  WBAL TV Baltimore
  2. Are you protected from measles? It may depend on when you were born  CNN
  3. Officials confirm case of measles in East Tennessee  WREG NewsChannel 3
  4. 4th measles case confirmed in Maryland; possible public exposure  WTOP
  5. Flight attendant in coma after contracting measles  KPTV.com
  6. View full coverage on Google News

https://www.wbaltv.com/article/fourth-measles-case-confirmed/27209451

2019-04-19 18:47:00Z
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Is It Illegal to Refuse to Vaccinate Your Kid In New York? This Court Says Yes - Gizmodo

Photo: AP

Amidst a major measles outbreak in New York and other areas across the country, five unnamed mothers sued New York City to bar the municipality from requiring people to have measles-mumps-rubella vaccination. But a Brooklyn judge has upheld the mandate.

New York City is facing the largest measles outbreak since 1991. According to NYC Health, there have been 359 measles cases since October. The health crisis led New York City Mayor Bill de Blasio to declare a state of emergency earlier this month. Following the declaration, the health commissioner mandated that residents of the Williamsburg neighborhood get measles vaccination since many of the cases have happened in that area, primarily in the Orthodox Jewish community. Under the mandate, anyone who does not get the vaccine risks a $1,000 fine.

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“This is the epicenter of a measles outbreak that is very, very troubling and must be dealt with immediately,” de Blasio said at a press conference in Williamsburg, at the time.

A small group of parents responded to the mandate by suing the city on Monday, claiming that “there is insufficient evidence of a measles epidemic or dangerous outbreak” to justify the order, and arguing that the city was forcing them to give their children a vaccine, which they claimed (wrongly) is harmful.

Then on Thursday Judge Lawrence Knipel in Brooklyn ruled against the anti-vaxxers, rejecting their argument that the order was coercive and arbitrary.

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“A fireman need not obtain the informed consent of the owner before extinguishing a house fire,” Knipel wrote in the ruling, according to Gothamist. “Vaccination is known to extinguish the fire of contagion.”

Following the ruling, the city issued three summonses to parents who had not vaccinated their children. The city health department said its “disease detectives” had determined these children were exposed to measles.

“Because of measles’ long incubation period, we know this outbreak will get worse before it gets better,” NYC health commissioner Oxiris Barbot said, in a statement. “However, we can turn the tide by people getting vaccinated, especially before Passover when families and communities will gather. We urge everyone to protect their children and their fellow New Yorkers by getting vaccinated immediately.”

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According to ABC7, if the parents don’t respond to the summons or appear at the hearing, they will face a $2,000 fine.

[Ars Technica]

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https://gizmodo.com/is-it-illegal-to-refuse-to-vaccinate-your-kid-in-new-yo-1834168922

2019-04-19 18:00:00Z
52780271526419

Are you protected from measles? It may depend on when you were born - CNN

In a video posted to YouTube last week, a rabbi in Detroit who said he was "fully vaccinated" nevertheless came down with measles -- "a brutal three weeks," he said. In another recent case, an Israeli flight attendant has been unable to breathe on her own after experiencing a dire complication of measles: inflammation and swelling of the brain, called encephalitis. Health authorities believe she also received a vaccine.
"It's just so darn contagious. And the way that people travel nowadays, it just doesn't really take much for it to spread," said Dr. John Cullen, the current president of the American Academy of Family Physicians and a family physician in Valdez, Alaska.
"I have never seen a case of measles," he added. "But it's just a matter of time."
Measles is spreading across the US
Adding to the uncertainty, some adults simply don't know their vaccination status or have long lost their documentation, Cullen said. The history of the measles vaccine has also prompted questions about how people of different ages have been vaccinated: Not only has the recommended number of doses changed over the years, but so has the vaccine itself.
Several years ago, he recalled, a case of measles popped up in Fairbanks, Alaska -- the state's first case in years. Worried about having been exposed and uncertain about whether they were properly vaccinated, patients of his who had traveled there asked for a dose of the vaccine, just in case. (When given within three days of exposure to the virus, the vaccine may offer some protection or make the illness milder, according to health officials.)
Although Alaska hasn't seen any cases this year, health officials issued an alert following a declaration of emergency in nearby Washington state, which has confirmed dozens of cases in 2019.
"If we see a substantial increase in the number of infections of measles, then there's going to be a whole lot more people who are going to be wondering what their vaccine status is," he said.

What are the current measles vaccine recommendations?

Doctors recommend two doses of the MMR vaccine -- so called because it covers measles, mumps and rubella. Doctors give the first dose between 12 and 15 months, the second between 4 to 6 years.
The current recommendation was issued in 1989 by the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Prior to that, a single-dose recommendation had been in place from 1963.
Before we had a vaccine, the agency says 3 to 4 million Americans were infected yearly -- including 48,000 hospitalizations and 400 to 500 deaths.
In some recent years, there have been fewer than 100 cases nationwide. But the virus has made a comeback in other years, including 2019 -- largely due to anti-vaxers, experts say.
"The reason why we have vaccine hesitancy in this country is because people don't remember how bad it was," Cullen said.

One vs. two vaccine doses: What's the difference?

If you were vaccinated with two doses, in line with the latest guidelines from 1989, the CDC says you have a 97% chance at being protected against measles. And if that last few percent happen to come into contact with the virus, they're less likely to spread it to others, and their illness is often milder.
One dose is still about 93% effective at preventing the disease.
Measles accelerates to second-highest level in US in 25 years and over 100,000 global cases
"Most virologists only dream of a solution as successful" as today's measles vaccine, CDC's principal deputy director, Dr. Anne Schuchat, wrote in 2015. "Success can breed complacency, skepticism or even attack," she added.
The second dose, however, is not a booster per se. In research studies, nearly everyone developed signs of immunity to measles with a single dose -- and the vast majority of the time, this immunity is lifelong, experts say.
"That was in the clinical trials where everything was managed very, very tightly," said Dr. William Schaffner, an infectious disease specialist at Vanderbilt University School of Medicine and an adviser to the CDC on vaccines.
But out in the real world, despite major gains against the virus, health experts were still finding measles outbreaks among kids and adolescents who had supposedly been vaccinated with one dose.
A second dose seemed to do the trick, but the question remained: Why had the vaccine failed the first time around?
"When that was examined further, it was discovered that, in the hurly burly of busy [medical] practice, the vaccine was not always handled optimally," said Schaffner.
A measles outbreak is dividing families in this Orthodox Jewish community. Passover could make it worse
For example, if a doctor or nurse were vaccinating multiple children in a row, they may have kept the vaccine out of the refrigerator too long, causing it to deteriorate. Even placing it in the door of a fridge, which is slightly warmer than the inside, may in some cases be enough to degrade the temperature-sensitive vaccine, he added.
That's less of a threat now that health care providers are more educated about how to handle the vaccine. In addition, we have shifted to single-dose bottles from multi-dose ones that might have been left out between shots, Schaffner said.
Still, giving two doses has allowed health systems to "fill in" a small percentage of kids for whom the vaccine didn't take the first time around.
"That is a wonderfully American solution: We'll double the cost of the vaccine program in order to protect this small group of children from getting measles and its complications," Schaffner said. "That strategy worked brilliantly and has been adopted in the developing world.
"And the only way it's been undermined is when children are withheld from vaccination."

Which vaccine did I get?

If you were born before the 1960s, you may have never been vaccinated against measles because it was assumed you'd already been exposed to the virus. In fact, the CDC says that most people born before 1957 don't need the vaccine because "before vaccines were available, nearly everyone was infected with measles, mumps, and rubella viruses during childhood."
Then, in 1963, two types of measles vaccines were introduced: One the was "killed," and another, "live attenuated." The difference is that the first inactivates the measles virus, whereas the other has a weakened form of it.
The killed vaccine, which was given to an estimated 600,000 to 900,000 people, was itself killed off in 1967 "because it did not protect against measles virus infection," the CDC says. The agency also recommended that people who got that vaccine, or aren't sure of which one they got during those years, should get vaccinated anew.
This baby got measles because of anti-vaxers
The following year, in 1968, a new version of the live vaccine hit the market. It was just as effective as its live-attenuated predecessor and even safer than the first, as it had been further weakened. It is still being used today, in combination with the mumps and rubella vaccines and has been available since 1971.
Experts say many middle-aged adults who were vaccinated in the early days won't know which one they got. Whether one received the "live" or "killed" vaccine was not always documented, Schaffner said -- and these days, those decades-old records might be nowhere to be found.
"Back then, the entire profession was not as nuanced about giving vaccines," said Schaffner.
What's more, neither the CDC nor any national organization has kept vaccination records. Individual states have immunization registries, but those didn't come along until later. For many Americans, "the records that exist are the ones you or your parents were given when the vaccines were administered and the ones in the medical record of the doctor or clinic where the vaccines were given," according to the CDC, which recommends people search among baby books, school records and previous employers that may have collected this information, such as the military.
But many adults will be out of luck.
Older records "simply don't exist anymore because the doctors closed their practice, they retired, they moved away," Schaffner said. "It would be nigh on impossible to actually resurrect those records."

What do the experts recommend?

If you've received two doses of MMR or have had lab results showing immunity or previous measles infection, the CDC says you're all set.
If you've had one documented dose of the live vaccine and aren't at high risk of exposure, the agency says that's also adequate.
Those at higher risk -- whom the agency advises to get two doses for good measure -- might work in health care, travel internationally or are more likely to be affected by an outbreak.
What you need to know about measles as the virus spreads across the country
Some people can't get vaccinated at all or need to wait -- for example, people with weakened immune systems and babies who are too young to respond to the vaccine.
Born before 1957 and don't work in health care? The CDC considers that "presumptive evidence" that you're immune from having been exposed to the virus in a pre-vaccine era.
But what if you don't have written documentation of the right vaccine? For anyone who's unsure, the CDC says you can simply roll up your sleeve for another dose or two.
"The MMR vaccine is safe, and there is no harm in getting another dose," the agency says.
Cullen, however, acknowledged that the number of people uncertain about their vaccination status could be very high.
"If we were to have an epidemic in our area, would we have enough MMR to go around for the people who are concerned?" he wondered. "Probably not, under those circumstances. Unfortunately, this is kind of the new reality that we're dealing with."
There is a blood test doctors can use to check immunity, as well, but it may take some time to get results back, he added.
For the general population, Schaffner said that blood test is "expensive, impractical, and it only rarely produces an actionable result."
"The juice ain't worth the squeeze," he said. "The way to prevent those older people from getting measles is to make sure all the kids are vaccinated."

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https://www.cnn.com/2019/04/19/health/measles-vaccine-protection-age/index.html

2019-04-19 16:38:00Z
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