logo
MCH hasn't seen large influx of measles

MCH hasn't seen large influx of measles

Yahoo12-04-2025

Apr. 11—Although measles cases are mounting statewide, Medical Center has only seen a handful of positive cases as of April 10, said Brenda Dalrymple, director of patient safety and infection prevention.
But there haven't been any admissions yet, Dalrymple said.
There are eight confirmed cases in Ector County. Of the three positive cases that MCH has seen, two were not vaccinated and one was.
The hospital serves a 17-county area, but the three were Ector County residents.
"The best prevention is the vaccine," Dalrymple said.
Other preventative measures include good hand hygiene, staying hydrated, eating a healthy diet and doing things to help keep your immune system up, she said.
Some people have talked about Vitamin A helping with measles, but Dalrymple said there isn't "actual scientific research to back that."
Vitamin A is used mainly for skin and helps cells repair faster.
Measles is very contagious and very airborne.
"It will stay suspended in the air for up to two hours after a positive measles person has been through that area. That's what makes it so contagious, that it stays around for so long. The exposure time is very short. You don't have to be exposed to it for a long period of time to get infected," Dalrymple said.
As of April 8, Ector County had eight confirmed cases of measles.
Three or more cases is considered an outbreak.
"We've reached some of the requirements for outbreak status. However, the state has not put us in outbreak status, so we're not considered an outbreak as of yet, but we are able to give emergency-use vaccines, the MMR, and we are now vaccinating (children at) 6 months," Health Department Director Brandy Garcia said April 8.
Dalrymple said the most vulnerable population are children below the age of 5 months.
"That's more of our high-risk population because they're too young to get the vaccine. And then, of course, there's the anti vaxxers that just choose not" to get the vaccine, Dalrymple said.
The county's vaccination rate is 93 or 94 percent. Dalrymple said.
"Of course, we've had so many people move in to the area over the last year or two, so I don't know what their vaccine status is," she added.
A measles outbreak has been discussed for the past couple of years just because of the population increase. Nationwide, the virus had been considered eradicated since 2000.
"It's becoming more accepted and more common for people not to get their vaccine," Dalrymple said.
People have their own strong beliefs and "a lot of it may be due to lack of education and doing their own research, but there's so much access to misinformation now. That's a big part of it," Dalrymple said.
"If you search something, you're going to find an article somewhere that is against it, even though there's a million other articles that support the vaccine, you're going to find that one that's telling you not to get it ... and I think it's just a lot of misinformation," she added. "And, of course, freedom of choice."
The first measles vaccines were available in 1963 and it has become more effective over time. Dalrymple noted that it has been proven to be safe and undergone "all sorts of testing."
There is a protocol for post-exposure. If you know you've been exposed and you are in a high-risk category there is a shot they can give you within the first 72 hours that offers some protection.
In March, The Immunization Partnership Chief Strategy Officer Rekha Lakshmanan said the epicenter of the outbreak in Gaines County has high immunization exemption rates and has had for years.
"If you look at the nine counties with confirmed cases. Sixty-seven (67) percent of those counties have school vaccine exemption rates above the state average," Lakshmanan said then.
She said this matters because the research shows that vaccine exemptions cluster geographically, in neighborhoods, in schools and "they tend to cluster in faith communities."
Tuberculosis crops up sometimes, she said.
"We see a couple cases a year. We haven't seen a significant increase," Dalrymple said.
She added that it has probably stayed the same for about the last 10 years.
On the average they test and follow about 150 to 200 cases a year, but true positives are probably less than 15 to 20 a year, Dalrymple said.
"I don't have those exact numbers, but ... the testing for tuberculosis ... takes a very long time because it's a slow growing bacteria. When we collect the specimen, we still have to wait six to eight weeks before we get a final result. We work a lot of them up, but not a lot of positives," she said.
TB is also airborne, but not as contagious as measles.
"You usually have to have a little bit more prolonged exposure to it," Dalrymple said.
It's usually passed along among family members that live in the same household, people that you're in close contact with for an extended amount of time.
If you have any TB bacteria in your body, it can be dormant or latent in your body for weeks, months, or even years, and you may not ever develop an active tuberculosis infection, Dalrymple said.
"We have to have actual sputum cultures that grow out for six to eight weeks. There are also some blood tests that we call the TB Gold, which we can send off, and we get those results ... usually (within) five to seven days. And again, that will tell you if you have any of the bacteria growing or (been) exposed to it, but it doesn't confirm an active case," she said.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Murdoch's Paper Unloads on RFK Jr. Over Axing Vaccine Board
Murdoch's Paper Unloads on RFK Jr. Over Axing Vaccine Board

Yahoo

time43 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

Murdoch's Paper Unloads on RFK Jr. Over Axing Vaccine Board

A Rupert Murdoch-owned paper ripped into Robert F. Kennedy Jr. on Tuesday for gutting the nation's top vaccine advisory panel. The Wall Street Journal published a scathing op-ed a day after Kennedy, a longtime vaccine skeptic, announced the firing spree at the Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices (ACIP) in the paper itself. The ACIP reports to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) on vaccine efficacy. The Secretary of Health and Human Services said he was 'retiring' all 17 members of the advisory committee on vaccines in a 'bold step' to help restore 'public trust.' The move raised alarm bells at a time when health experts fear vaccine skepticism is fueling the nation's largest measles outbreak in around 25 years. 'Most of ACIP's members have received substantial funding from pharmaceutical companies, including those marketing vaccines,' Kennedy wrote, hinting at a plot to push vaccines on Americans. Murdoch's editorial board hit back: 'Mr. Kennedy's beef seems to be that the committee's members know something about vaccines and may have been involved in their research and development.' 'How does he define 'substantial'?' the board asked. The board noted that trial doctors get small payments, typically less than their salaries, from vaccine makers to assist with clinical trials. But 'these trials are double-blinded, meaning doctors don't know which volunteers receive the vaccine or placebo so there's no financial incentive to tilt the data in favor of manufacturers,' the board said. Any conflicts of interest among the committee were also 'honestly handled,' the board said. Kennedy said in a separate announcement that 'a clean sweep is necessary to reestablish public confidence in vaccine science.' 'ACIP new members will prioritize public health and evidence-based medicine. The Committee will no longer function as a rubber stamp for industry profit-taking agendas,' he added. Since joining the Trump administration in January, Kennedy, who is leading the Trump administration's 'Make America Healthy Again' initiative has doubled down on conspiracy theories around shots, including that the measles jab contain 'aborted fetus debris.' 'The MMR vaccine contains millions of particles that are derived from fetal tissue, millions of fragments of human DNA from aborted fetuses,' Kennedy told NBC News' Tom Llamas last month. Kennedy was referring to the combined Measles, Mumps and Rubella vaccine. Vaccines do not contain aborted fetuses, fetal cells, fetal DNA, or fetal debris, according to the Children's Hospital of Philadelphia. The rubella component of the vaccine is developed from a fetal cell line known as WI-38 that originally came from the lung tissue of an elective abortion performed more than five decades ago. No new fetal issue has been used since, and cells used today are thousands of times removed from the original source. Health experts are alarmed by Kennedy's suggestions that the measles jab is unsafe, a claim which contradicts decades of research from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. The World Health Organization declared measles eliminated from the United States in 2000 due to the success of vaccination efforts. International travel and growing vaccine hesitancy are thought to be behind its resurgence. The American Medical Association has said Kennedy's decision to gut ACIP undermines 'trust and upends a transparent process that has saved countless lives.' Kennedy wrote in his op-ed for the Journal that ACIP's new members 'won't directly work for the vaccine industry.' 'They will exercise independent judgment, refuse to serve as a rubber stamp, and foster a culture of critical inquiry—unafraid to ask hard questions.' ACIP is set to hold its next meeting on June 25 at the CDC's headquarters.

‘Come help us': Milwaukee parents fire back at Trump administration for denying federal aid amid lead crisis in schools
‘Come help us': Milwaukee parents fire back at Trump administration for denying federal aid amid lead crisis in schools

CNN

time5 hours ago

  • CNN

‘Come help us': Milwaukee parents fire back at Trump administration for denying federal aid amid lead crisis in schools

Pollution Environmental disease Student lifeFacebookTweetLink Follow The library at Starms Discovery Learning Center has cheerful peach and blue walls, and squat wooden shelves filled with books wrapped in thick plastic jackets to protect them from the touches and smudges of many small hands. On Monday, the library became a place to exchange other stories, too – darker stories. These were stories of stressed mothers and anxious kids, of graduating fifth-graders missing out on end-of-year celebrations. The stories were about families with a dangerous toxin – lead – in their homes and now in their public schools. Those families shared stories about brain damage and learning disabilities, and about a federal government that has denied them help. 'I am here to elevate your stories,' said Sen. Tammy Baldwin, a Democrat from Madison who is the junior senator from Wisconsin. Baldwin, flanked by officials from the city's health department and school district, had come to Starms to meet with families and community activists and to hear more about their lives since the discovery that a child had been poisoned by peeling lead paint in one of the city's aging and poorly maintained school buildings. The city's health department ordered the school district to remediate the hazard, but the scope of the problem turned out to be much larger than a single building. So far, the district has closed six schools for cleaning and repainting, displacing roughly 1,800 students. Over the summer, the district's efforts will kick into high gear. It has a goal of visually inspecting all school buildings by September 1. The district, which is the largest in Wisconsin, has 144 buildings. All but 11 were built before 1978, when it was still legal to use lead in paint. The average age of an MPS school is 82 years. A few blocks away, Starms Early Childhood Center, the sister campus to the elementary school, is one of four that remains closed. It was built in 1893 and its preschool and kindergarten students and their teachers were moved into the elementary school. Though the city has cleared the building to reopen, many families said they'd prefer to remain where they were through the end of the school year to minimize further disruptions. Friday is district's last day before summer break. Several students in the district have been found to have elevated levels of lead in their blood. One case has been definitively linked to deteriorating paint in the basement of a school building, Golda Meir elementary. Two other cases involved students at Trowbridge and Kagel schools. Investigations determined that the source of the lead was most likely a combination of exposures from home and school. Other cases have been investigated and the schools were cleared as the source, said Caroline Reinwald, a spokesperson for the Milwaukee Health Department. Since the crisis started, Reinwald said, about 550 children have been screened for lead at clinics run by the health department and Novir, a company hired by the city to assist with screening. That doesn't include kids who might have been tested through their primary care doctors. 'We need to test many more kids for lead,' Milwaukee Health Commissioner Dr. Michael Totoraitis said on Monday. The City of Milwaukee Health Department had been working with experts in the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention's Childhood Lead Poisoning Prevention Branch when the entire team was laid off in the federal government's Reduction in Force cuts in April. The city had requested that the CDC dispatch disease detectives to help mount a wide-scale blood testing campaign of kids in city schools. That request was also denied, citing the agency's loss of its lead experts. Families who attended the meeting with Baldwin said they were outraged by the Trump administration's apparent lack of support or interest. 'We need our children to be protected right now,' said Tikiya Frazier, who has nieces and nephews at two of the closed schools. 'We need them to understand that and come and help us. This is a state of emergency for us.' On Monday, Baldwin issued an open invitation to US Health and Human Services Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. to visit Milwaukee to see and hear the issues for himself. She has twice before pressed Kennedy about the denial of federal aid. Both times he gave mollifying answers. 'Do you mean to eliminate this branch at the CDC?' Baldwin asked him in a hearing in May. 'No, we do not,' Kennedy responded. But he has yet to reinstate the fired experts or reopen the lead program under his planned Administration for a Healthy America. He's also given no timeline for when federal lead poisoning prevention activities might continue. When Baldwin asked Kennedy about Milwaukee's situation in a budget hearing a week later, he responded that 'We have a team in Milwaukee.' The team was a lab technician who had briefly come to help calibrate a machine in the city's public health lab. Although the city had requested and needed that help for years, officials said it was not the work they had recently asked the CDC to tackle: helping get more kids' blood tested for lead exposure. 'Either he was lying, or he didn't know what was happening in his own agency. Either one is unacceptable,' Baldwin said after Monday's meeting. Kennedy has also failed to respond to a letter that Baldwin and US Rep. Gwen Moore sent in April, urging him to reinstate the CDC's lead team. On Tuesday, Baldwin and her colleague, Democratic Sen. Jack Reed of Rhode Island, sent Kennedy another letter with detailed questions about the fate of the Lead Poisoning Prevention Program. They gave him until June 16 to respond. 'We've got to hold the Trump administration accountable,' Baldwin said. 'They could make the situation better today by rehiring these experts.' CNN reached out to HHS and the White House with questions about their plans for the Lead Poisoning Prevention Program and to get the administration's response to Milwaukee parents. HHS did not respond by CNN's deadline. 'I'm angry because Wisconsin is always there for other states,' said Koa Branch, who has four children in Milwaukee's public schools. When the tap water in Flint, Michigan, tested positive for high levels of lead a decade ago, Branch said, she remembers community members packing up food and supplies and going for support. But now, 'where's our help? Where's help for us?' Branch had two sons at Westside Academy when it closed in early May. She was notified via a newsletter sent home with her children and later a phone call. 'My anxiety hit the roof,' she said. The school district relocated classes to Andrew Douglas Middle School, about 3 miles away, or gave students the option to take classes online. Branch says her easygoing 5-year-old, Jonas, took things in stride, but her sensitive fourth-grader Jerell, 10, couldn't handle the change. 'I had to make a choice. I had to separate the two,' Branch said. Jonas moved with his class and teacher to the new campus, while Jarrell took classes online after Branch got home from work at night. 'I can't speak for everybody else, but it stressed my household,' she said. Branch said her kids have a vigilant pediatrician who has tested them for lead at each yearly wellness visit. So far, their test results have been normal. Still, she planned to take her youngest to a free clinic at a local church to get tested again. Santana Wells said she had a son and a niece attending fifth grade at Brown Street Academy, which closed May 12, about a month before school ended. Being at a different school caused her son to miss out on a lot of activities Brown Street had planned for its departing fifth-graders, she said. 'Brown Street used to do a carnival every year. They do a picnic. They have a long list of what they were doing for their graduates,' Wells said. Now, she said, it was a pared-down field trip, which felt unfair. Wells said she 'runs a tight schedule' at home to make it to work by 3 p.m. each day. With the change in schools, her son was arriving home later, which made her late to work, on top of everything else. Several parents said their kids had questions about the lead and felt anxious about going back to school in the fall, even though the city has tested their schools and deemed them safe to reoccupy. The stories told on Monday weren't just for the ears of the federal government. Totoraitis said the questions from children were a light-bulb moment for him, too. The health department's workers took great care to explain the lead situation to parents, but they hadn't done as much to try to answer kids' questions about what was happening. He said the department would work on that. He also hopes to temporarily hire at least one of the laid-off CDC lead experts for a few weeks to come review the city's efforts and make sure they are on track. Baldwin hopes the federal government will rehire them, too. 'These were the renowned experts on childhood lead mitigation and remediation, and the federal government needs to have that staff capacity to help, just as they did in Flint, Michigan,' she said. 'That's needed here, right now, in Milwaukee.' The US Environmental Protection Agency lifted its emergency order on drinking water in Flint last month — nine years after it was put into place.

‘Come help us': Milwaukee parents fire back at Trump administration for denying federal aid amid lead crisis in schools
‘Come help us': Milwaukee parents fire back at Trump administration for denying federal aid amid lead crisis in schools

CNN

time5 hours ago

  • CNN

‘Come help us': Milwaukee parents fire back at Trump administration for denying federal aid amid lead crisis in schools

Pollution Environmental disease Student lifeFacebookTweetLink Follow The library at Starms Discovery Learning Center has cheerful peach and blue walls, and squat wooden shelves filled with books wrapped in thick plastic jackets to protect them from the touches and smudges of many small hands. On Monday, the library became a place to exchange other stories, too – darker stories. These were stories of stressed mothers and anxious kids, of graduating fifth-graders missing out on end-of-year celebrations. The stories were about families with a dangerous toxin – lead – in their homes and now in their public schools. Those families shared stories about brain damage and learning disabilities, and about a federal government that has denied them help. 'I am here to elevate your stories,' said Sen. Tammy Baldwin, a Democrat from Madison who is the junior senator from Wisconsin. Baldwin, flanked by officials from the city's health department and school district, had come to Starms to meet with families and community activists and to hear more about their lives since the discovery that a child had been poisoned by peeling lead paint in one of the city's aging and poorly maintained school buildings. The city's health department ordered the school district to remediate the hazard, but the scope of the problem turned out to be much larger than a single building. So far, the district has closed six schools for cleaning and repainting, displacing roughly 1,800 students. Over the summer, the district's efforts will kick into high gear. It has a goal of visually inspecting all school buildings by September 1. The district, which is the largest in Wisconsin, has 144 buildings. All but 11 were built before 1978, when it was still legal to use lead in paint. The average age of an MPS school is 82 years. A few blocks away, Starms Early Childhood Center, the sister campus to the elementary school, is one of four that remains closed. It was built in 1893 and its preschool and kindergarten students and their teachers were moved into the elementary school. Though the city has cleared the building to reopen, many families said they'd prefer to remain where they were through the end of the school year to minimize further disruptions. Friday is district's last day before summer break. Several students in the district have been found to have elevated levels of lead in their blood. One case has been definitively linked to deteriorating paint in the basement of a school building, Golda Meir elementary. Two other cases involved students at Trowbridge and Kagel schools. Investigations determined that the source of the lead was most likely a combination of exposures from home and school. Other cases have been investigated and the schools were cleared as the source, said Caroline Reinwald, a spokesperson for the Milwaukee Health Department. Since the crisis started, Reinwald said, about 550 children have been screened for lead at clinics run by the health department and Novir, a company hired by the city to assist with screening. That doesn't include kids who might have been tested through their primary care doctors. 'We need to test many more kids for lead,' Milwaukee Health Commissioner Dr. Michael Totoraitis said on Monday. The City of Milwaukee Health Department had been working with experts in the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention's Childhood Lead Poisoning Prevention Branch when the entire team was laid off in the federal government's Reduction in Force cuts in April. The city had requested that the CDC dispatch disease detectives to help mount a wide-scale blood testing campaign of kids in city schools. That request was also denied, citing the agency's loss of its lead experts. Families who attended the meeting with Baldwin said they were outraged by the Trump administration's apparent lack of support or interest. 'We need our children to be protected right now,' said Tikiya Frazier, who has nieces and nephews at two of the closed schools. 'We need them to understand that and come and help us. This is a state of emergency for us.' On Monday, Baldwin issued an open invitation to US Health and Human Services Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. to visit Milwaukee to see and hear the issues for himself. She has twice before pressed Kennedy about the denial of federal aid. Both times he gave mollifying answers. 'Do you mean to eliminate this branch at the CDC?' Baldwin asked him in a hearing in May. 'No, we do not,' Kennedy responded. But he has yet to reinstate the fired experts or reopen the lead program under his planned Administration for a Healthy America. He's also given no timeline for when federal lead poisoning prevention activities might continue. When Baldwin asked Kennedy about Milwaukee's situation in a budget hearing a week later, he responded that 'We have a team in Milwaukee.' The team was a lab technician who had briefly come to help calibrate a machine in the city's public health lab. Although the city had requested and needed that help for years, officials said it was not the work they had recently asked the CDC to tackle: helping get more kids' blood tested for lead exposure. 'Either he was lying, or he didn't know what was happening in his own agency. Either one is unacceptable,' Baldwin said after Monday's meeting. Kennedy has also failed to respond to a letter that Baldwin and US Rep. Gwen Moore sent in April, urging him to reinstate the CDC's lead team. On Tuesday, Baldwin and her colleague, Democratic Sen. Jack Reed of Rhode Island, sent Kennedy another letter with detailed questions about the fate of the Lead Poisoning Prevention Program. They gave him until June 16 to respond. 'We've got to hold the Trump administration accountable,' Baldwin said. 'They could make the situation better today by rehiring these experts.' CNN reached out to HHS and the White House with questions about their plans for the Lead Poisoning Prevention Program and to get the administration's response to Milwaukee parents. HHS did not respond by CNN's deadline. 'I'm angry because Wisconsin is always there for other states,' said Koa Branch, who has four children in Milwaukee's public schools. When the tap water in Flint, Michigan, tested positive for high levels of lead a decade ago, Branch said, she remembers community members packing up food and supplies and going for support. But now, 'where's our help? Where's help for us?' Branch had two sons at Westside Academy when it closed in early May. She was notified via a newsletter sent home with her children and later a phone call. 'My anxiety hit the roof,' she said. The school district relocated classes to Andrew Douglas Middle School, about 3 miles away, or gave students the option to take classes online. Branch says her easygoing 5-year-old, Jonas, took things in stride, but her sensitive fourth-grader Jerell, 10, couldn't handle the change. 'I had to make a choice. I had to separate the two,' Branch said. Jonas moved with his class and teacher to the new campus, while Jarrell took classes online after Branch got home from work at night. 'I can't speak for everybody else, but it stressed my household,' she said. Branch said her kids have a vigilant pediatrician who has tested them for lead at each yearly wellness visit. So far, their test results have been normal. Still, she planned to take her youngest to a free clinic at a local church to get tested again. Santana Wells said she had a son and a niece attending fifth grade at Brown Street Academy, which closed May 12, about a month before school ended. Being at a different school caused her son to miss out on a lot of activities Brown Street had planned for its departing fifth-graders, she said. 'Brown Street used to do a carnival every year. They do a picnic. They have a long list of what they were doing for their graduates,' Wells said. Now, she said, it was a pared-down field trip, which felt unfair. Wells said she 'runs a tight schedule' at home to make it to work by 3 p.m. each day. With the change in schools, her son was arriving home later, which made her late to work, on top of everything else. Several parents said their kids had questions about the lead and felt anxious about going back to school in the fall, even though the city has tested their schools and deemed them safe to reoccupy. The stories told on Monday weren't just for the ears of the federal government. Totoraitis said the questions from children were a light-bulb moment for him, too. The health department's workers took great care to explain the lead situation to parents, but they hadn't done as much to try to answer kids' questions about what was happening. He said the department would work on that. He also hopes to temporarily hire at least one of the laid-off CDC lead experts for a few weeks to come review the city's efforts and make sure they are on track. Baldwin hopes the federal government will rehire them, too. 'These were the renowned experts on childhood lead mitigation and remediation, and the federal government needs to have that staff capacity to help, just as they did in Flint, Michigan,' she said. 'That's needed here, right now, in Milwaukee.' The US Environmental Protection Agency lifted its emergency order on drinking water in Flint last month — nine years after it was put into place.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store