US measles outbreak spreads to more states
The measles outbreak in California is growing.
The number of cases has increased to 68,
with 48 of those cases linked to an outbreak at Disneyland, state health
officials reported Friday.
Two days ago, the health department reported 59 cases, 42 with a Disney connection.
In addition, nine cases have been reported
in Arizona, Utah, Washington, Colorado, Oregon and Mexico. A new case
was reported in Nevada, but the Southern Nevada Health District said
it’s unknown whether that case is Disney-related.
The disease outbreak apparently surfaced
when visitors reported coming down with measles after visiting the park
December 15-20. At least five Disney employees have been diagnosed with
measles, Disney said.
Measles is a highly communicable
respiratory disease caused by a virus and spread through the air,
according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Measles
starts with a fever, runny nose, cough, red eyes and sore throat, the
CDC said.
Dr. Gil Chavez, deputy director of the
state’s Center for Infectious Diseases, recommended that children under
12 months and people who’ve never had a measles vaccination stay away
from the park while the disease event continues.
He made the same recommendation for other places where large numbers of people congregate, such as airports and shopping malls.
However, Chavez said Disneyland would be “perfectly safe” if you’ve been immunized.
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