New York health officials are investigating an outbreak of measles the city after 16 people tested positive in two of the city’s five boroughs, reports CBS.
Officials do not yet know where or how the outbreak began, but are urging everyone who is not vaccinated to do so as soon as possible. Measles infects 90 percent of unvaccinated people if they exposed to it.
Four children too young to be vaccinated, three vaccinated children just over one year old, two unvaccinated children and seven adults ranging from age 22 to 63 have been infected in Manhattan and the Bronx.
Measles was virtually eliminated in the United States in 2000 but it still exists in other parts of the world. There were 122,000 measles deaths in 2012, mostly children under the age of five, according the World Health Organization.
That does not mean that measles doesn’t find its way to people living in the United States. There were 175 cases in 2013, almost all of which were linked to people traveling abroad. Fifty-four people have been infected in 2014, around of dozen of which had recently traveled to the Philippines.
Some speculate the spike also has to do with the anti-vaccination sentiment gaining steam in the U.S. Some anti-vaccine proponents say there are links between the vaccine and other health-related issues like asthma and autism, and instead opt for more “natural” solutions, like exposing their children to viruses to allow their immune systems to tackle it on its own.
Health officials warn against this, saying that unvaccinated children pose a risk to not only themselves, but to others as well.
The measles vaccine was first developed in 1963 and compounded into the MMR (measles-mumps-rubella) vaccine in 1971. It is considered 95 percent effective and considered safe by the World Health Organization.
Measles Outbreak in New York City Has Health Officials Looking For Answers
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