Measles Outbreak Traced to Disneyland is Declared Over
From NBC News and many
others
California health authorities on
Friday declared an end to a large measles outbreak that started at Disneyland
and triggered a national debate about vaccinations.
Disease detectives for months raced
to contain the highly contagious disease, which surfaced at Disney theme parks
in December and spread to a half-dozen U.S. states, Mexico and Canada. The
outbreak sickened 147 people in the U.S., including 131 in California. There
were no deaths.
Officials at the California
Department of Public Health said no new infections have been reported for the
past 42 days — or two incubation periods — meaning the outbreak is over in the
U.S. But it is still active in the Canadian province of Quebec, where 159
people were sickened. Most belong to a tight-knit religious community with a
low vaccination rate.
Many who fell ill in the Disneyland
episode were not immunized against measles. Some cited personal reasons for
refusing shots, and others were too young to get the measles-mumps-rubella
vaccine.
While the Disneyland measles
outbreak has ended, there are other measles cases circulating around the
country. Public health officials don't know who sparked the Disneyland outbreak
but believe it was someone who caught the virus overseas and visited Disneyland
while contagious.
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