
Iowa joins growing list of state with confirmed measles cases
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Iowa health officials confirm Iowa’s first case of measles
Iowa health officials have confirmed a case of measles. The case was confirmed in an unvaccinated adult in the central part of the state. This is the first confirmed case in the Iowa this year. More than 1,000 confirmed cases have been reported throughout the country this year, and three people have died, according to HHS.
Iowa health officials have confirmed a case of measles.
According to the Department of Health and Human Services, the case was confirmed in an unvaccinated adult in the central part of the state.
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This is the first confirmed case in the Iowa this year. The last time measles was confirmed in the state was in 2019.
More than 1,000 confirmed cases have been reported throughout the country this year, and three people have died, according to HHS.
RELATED COVERAGE: CHI Health says doctors monitoring, protecting against the infection in Nebraska
Iowa health officials do not believe there will be widespread public exposure from the case, and they are contacting those who may have been exposed.
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Measles Cases On The Rise Across The U.S.: What To Know In MI
U.S. measles cases are nearly triple what they were last year, including 1-9 cases in Michigan. With five months left to go in the year, 26 states and the District of Columbia have reported 188 cases of measles. Last year, the nation saw 58 measles cases in four outbreaks. This year, there have been 13 outbreaks, the largest of them traced to a migrant shelter in Chicago in March in which 60 illnesses have been linked. Seven states — Massachusetts, Michigan, Minnesota, New Hampshire, New York, Oregon and Vermont — joined the growing list of states with measles outbreaks in the past month, according to the CDC. The CDC said the current uptick in cases is due to an increase in vaccine hesitancy since the COVID-19 pandemic.
U.S. measles cases are nearly triple what they were last year, including 1-9 cases in Michigan, according to data released Friday by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. (Shutterstock)
MICHIGAN — U.S. measles cases are nearly triple what they were last year, including 1-9 cases in Michigan, according to data released Friday by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.
A child in Macomb County was diagnosed with measles earlier this month. There have been at least five other confirmed cases in the metro Detroit area so far this year.
With five months left to go in the year, 26 states and the District of Columbia have reported 188 cases of measles, about half of which (49 percent, or 93) were severe enough to require hospitalization, mostly among people under the age of 5.
Last year, the nation saw 58 measles cases in four outbreaks. This year, there have been 13 outbreaks, the largest of them traced to a migrant shelter in Chicago in March in which 60 illnesses have been linked. Seven states — Massachusetts, Michigan, Minnesota, New Hampshire, New York, Oregon and Vermont — joined the growing list of states with measles outbreaks in the past month, according to the CDC. In Massachusetts, the case was the first in three years.
The CDC said the current uptick in cases is due to an increase in vaccine hesitancy since the COVID-19 pandemic, as well as a global uptick in measles cases. About 85 percent of U.S. measles cases this year were among people who haven’t been vaccinated or had an unknown vaccination status, and 10 percent were among people who had taken only one dose of MMR (measles, mumps and rubella) vaccine.
In some U.S. communities, the number of people protected against measles by the vaccine has fallen below the 95 percent coverage level needed to prevent measles outbreaks. In Michigan, 92.9 percent of kindergarteners in the 2022-23 school year were up-to-date on their MMR vaccinations, according to CDC data. Nationwide, 93 percent of kindergartners that year had received two doses of MMR vaccine, compared to 93 percent in the 2019-20 school year, the data shows.
Vaccination requirements vary by state. All states require that incoming kindergartners get polio vaccines, and all but Iowa require measles vaccinations. All but a handful of states require Hepatitis A vaccinations, but fewer than 20 require Hep. B. Michigan does not require a Hepatitis A vaccine, but does require a Hep. B vaccine. Personal and religious exemptions are allowed in Michigan, but any parent/guardian who wants to claim a nonmedical waiver will need to receive education regarding the benefits of vaccination and the risks of disease from a county health department before obtaining the certified nonmedical waiver form through the Local Health Department.
Measles was declared eradicated from the United States in 2000, a status threatened by a large measles outbreak in 2019, which resulted in 1,200 cases, mostly associated with outbreaks in Orthodox Jewish communities in New York. The 2024 measles outbreak is the highest since then.
Before the vaccine became available in 1963, between 3 million and 4 million people were infected every year, with about 400 to 500 of them dying. Measles is highly contagious. A sick person can spread it to 90 percent of the people in close contact if they are not immune, and the virus can remain in the air for up to two hours after an infected person leaves.
Source: https://www.ketv.com/article/iowa-health-officials-confirm-iowas-first-case-of-measles/64867979