logo
How to stay safe against measles while traveling: Expert advice

How to stay safe against measles while traveling: Expert advice

Measles is an airborne disease that is very transmissible and may spread easily and rapidly on a plane, bus, or train.The United States and some other countries have recently seen a rise in measles cases and outbreaks.The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention has urged people traveling internationally to ensure they are vaccinated against measles.Some travelers may need boosters if they received inactivated forms of the measles vaccine or only one dose.Measles cases have been on the rise in recent months, and infection poses serious health risks, yet discussion about how to protect more vulnerable groups has been lacking.As a highly contagious viral disease, measles poses a particular risk to children, older adults, people who are unvaccinated, and immunocompromised individuals. However, another group that is at high risk is travelers.Because of the closed space and recycled air breathing, travelers can be at heightened risk of contracting viruses, such as in the case of measles.The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) recently issued updated advice to people traveling internationally, urging everyone to get fully vaccinated and monitor their health to prevent further spread of the virus.Medical News Today spoke to two experts — Monica Gandhi, MD, MPH, an infectious disease specialist with the University of California, SF, and David Cutler, MD, a board-certified family medicine physician at Providence Saint John's Health Center in Santa Monica, CA, to learn more about how measles spreads and what measures travelers can take to stay safe and minimize their risk of measles infection.How infectious is measles?Much like COVID-19, measles spreads via respiratory droplets expelled when a person with a measles infection coughs or sneezes. It can also spread via touch, with a person touching their mouth, nose, or eyes after having touched surfaces contaminated with these droplets.The virus that causes measles can also remain active and contagious in the air or on surfaces for up to 2 hours.'Measles is one of the most infectious viruses known. After being exposed, 90% of susceptible people become infected. However, since infection offers lifelong protection, and immunization is 93–97% effective, there has always been the hope that this disease could be eradicated,' Cutler said.But how does one determine how much at risk they are for measles?'The risk of an individual acquiring measles depends on their susceptibility, the presence of active measles cases, and gaining proximity to someone with measles,' Cutler explained.What may help travelers to determine their individual risk is considering their vaccination status, health conditions, as well as knowing current global hotspots for measles outbreaks.Avoiding high risk areas can help minimize infection risk. CDC Travel Health Notices and WHO Disease Outbreak News could be good sources to monitor.Does traveling via plane or bus constitute a big risk?Considering how measles is transmitted, we asked our experts how much of a risk traveling via bus, train, or plane constitutes.Gandhi told MNT that, since the measles virus is airborne, it can remain in the air for a substantial amount of time 'after the person infected with measles has left.''Therefore, traveling during an outbreak can constitute a risk since these modes of transportation are most often sealed off without ventilation,' she pointed out.Out of all classic modes of transport, planes may be associated with the highest risk of infection due to the fact that travelers have to remain in close quarters to each other for prolonged periods of time.'Traveling by bus, train, plane, or automobile could expose you to measles if you are in close proximity to someone who is infected. Keeping distant from other people, avoiding those who might be infected, and staying away from communities with known measles outbreaks may reduce the risk of infection,' Cutler explained.What measures can travelers take to protect themselves?Both experts agreed on one measure that is scientifically proven to protect people against infection with measles: getting vaccinated.'The best way to protect yourself from measles is to be vaccinated,' Gandhi said.The MMR vaccine has been proven to offer lifelong protection against measles with two doses, and breakthrough cases are rare and milder.Travelers should aim to carry evidence of their vaccination status, especially if they are traveling to a high-risk area. In terms of timing, they should aim to get vaccinated at least two weeks before their travel.1. MMR vaccine: When to get vaccinated against measlesInfants ages 6–11 months should receive an early dose of the vaccine before they travel, and then follow the routine vaccination schedule. Children older than 12 months should receive their first dose now, and the second dose at least 28 days later. Teenagers or adults without immunity against measles should get two doses of the MMR vaccine, 28 days apart.2. Face masks and personal hygieneCutler said that as measles is spread by airborne transmission, one way people can protect themselves is by wearing an N95 mask, especially indoors or in places of outbreaks.Practicing good hygiene such as washing hands thoroughly, avoiding touching one's face, and using hand sanitizer can also minimize the risk of infection.Gandhi also touched on the importance of proper ventilation and personal safety measures such as masking, as additional layers of protection after getting vaccinated.'Since measles is airborne, ventilation is very protective so sitting next to open window on a bus or train is also [somewhat] protective. For those who are vulnerable, a tight-fitting and filtering mask, such as an N95 or K95 mask, can protect from measles,' she said.What to do if you've been exposed to measles during travelPeople with measles typically experience high fever, cough, runny nose, red eyes, and a distinctive rash that starts to develop about three to five days after the initial symptoms appear. The incubation period for measles is generally between seven and 14 days from exposure, though this can go up to 21 days. Experts recommend that people who have been in contact with someone with measles should get in touch healthcare providers as soon as possible and isolate themselves to prevent the disease from spreading further.Researching local health clinics and learning a few basic phrases to describe symptoms may help travelers feel more at ease if they start feeling unwell.'People with measles should isolate themselves, wear a strong fit and filtered mask and present to a medical facility so that supportive care can be provided if needed and contact tracing initiated to trace the origin of the infection (and to ensure that others who were exposed to measles do not get infected or are treated),' said Gandhi.As measles can lead to various health complications such as pneumonia, encephalitis (inflammation of the brain), ear infections and, in severe cases, long-term neurological issues or even death if left untreated, experts advise people to seek immediate medical attention.Cutler explained for MNT that:'Once infected with measles there is no effective cure. Treatment for someone with measles is simply supportive: maintaining adequate hydration, good nutrition and control of fever. There is about a 1 [in] 1,000 risk of dying if infected with measles. So, while hospitalization may not be necessary, it is a good idea to seek medical attention if you might have measles to confirm the diagnosis, eliminate the possibility of an infection which might mimic measles, and to assure that anyone you have exposed has the opportunity to gain appropriate protection,' Vitamin A, when administered by healthcare professionals, can help lessen the severity of disease. However, experts agree that it is not a substitute for vaccination.For people who are unvaccinated, the first 72 hours may also be crucial in terms of disease progression. To that extent, Cutler talked about two strategies that may help reduce risk.'For individuals who are not protected by vaccination or prior infection, infection after exposure can best be prevented by administering the vaccine within three days of exposure,' Cutler said.'Intramuscular or intravenous immune globulin is another option. This is generally reserved for infants under 6 months of age, pregnant women, and those who are 3–6 days after exposure. For these people, vaccination to prevent infection is not recommended,' he added.People should also monitor their health for three weeks after they return home from their travels, and watch out for symptoms such as a rash, fever, confusion, and breathing problems.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

University of Alaska dorms to host up to 750 Russian delegates in town for Trump-Putin summit
University of Alaska dorms to host up to 750 Russian delegates in town for Trump-Putin summit

The Independent

time12 minutes ago

  • The Independent

University of Alaska dorms to host up to 750 Russian delegates in town for Trump-Putin summit

The University of Alaska Anchorage is expecting hundreds of Russian delegates who are in the city for the summit between President Trump and President Vladimir Putin to stay in student dorms. 'There may be up to 750 people staying on campus between the U.S. and Russian delegations,' vice chancellor Ryan Buchholdt said in an email to the Alaskan newspaper, Anchorage Daily News. The school can house around 12,000 people. This week marks the start of the school calendar for those returning from the summer break. The summit is going to be held at Joint Base Elmendorf-Richardson, about a 10-minute drive from Anchorage, reports Alaska's News Source. The meeting will mark the first time Trump and Putin have met in person since 2018. 'In addition to the dorms, we do have the Alaska Airlines Center [a sports arena that has a 5,000-seat capacity] that has been set up with beds, meeting most of the need, mostly from the Russian delegation side,' Buchholdt also told Alaska's News Source. University police are working closely with state and federal law agencies to monitor security, Buchholdt added. 'Our main concern is making sure anyone who is staying on campus, whether they are from the United States or Russia or any other locality, is safe,' Buchholdt said, 'and is able to do the mission that they're here to do and go back home safely.' On Thursday, some of the delegates had already arrived as of Thursday afternoon, according to university spokesperson Katie Bender. Flight tracking data showed that at least one flight from Moscow had touched down in Anchorage that afternoon. 'The delegations are in separate locations. For security purposes, we are not able to share where the delegations are located,' Bender added. Alyeska resort, located about 40 miles south of Anchorage, informed local press that they were fully booked for the weekend, and the website of the local hotel, Captain Cook, was also fully booked. The hotel site showed one remaining room in a hostel, at a staggeringly raised price of $150 a night on Friday. Town mayor Suzanne LaFrance explained that finding accommodation at the height of the tourist season is hard enough as it is, let alone with a significant political event taking center stage. 'I know that people are looking at creative solutions. I don't have any specific details about that [housing delegations in UOA], but I know that the university is engaged in those conversations, and I'm optimistic that we'll come up with some options for folks,' she said to Alaska's News Source. At the Joint Base Elmendorf-Richardson, news and camera crews were seen rolling in on Thursday morning. Locals watched on as officials gathered in the vicinity. 'It's kind of a big deal, I mean, do we all want World War III?' one man told Alaska's News Source. The two leaders will hold peace talks regarding the future of Russia and Ukraine, amid a deadly war that has killed hundreds of thousands of soldiers on both sides. Earlier on Thursday, Putin praised Trump's 'energetic and sincere efforts to stop' the war in Ukraine. More than a million Russian troops have been killed or injured since the full-scale invasion of Ukraine began on 24 February 2022, reports the British Ministry of Defense. Meanwhile, Ukrainian personnel fatalities and casualties have amounted to around 400,000, says the US-based Centre for Strategic and International Studies. Ahead of the summit, Trump vowed that as he hopes to secure a ceasefire deal.

Booze up: is gen-Z's ‘sensible' relationship with alcohol moving towards hedonism?
Booze up: is gen-Z's ‘sensible' relationship with alcohol moving towards hedonism?

The Guardian

time13 minutes ago

  • The Guardian

Booze up: is gen-Z's ‘sensible' relationship with alcohol moving towards hedonism?

Gen-Z have long been hailed as 'generation sensible' – dozens of articles have charted how they drink less alcohol, exercise more, eat healthier and have ditched night clubs for book clubs. But could that be about to change? Recent data has shown the proportion of gen Z – those born roughly between 1997 and 2012 – who are of legal drinking age and have consumed alcohol in the past six months has risen by 7% between 2024 and 2025. Alcopops are apparently all the rage among gen-Z customers, with booming sales of Smirnoff Ice, Bacardi Breezers and BuzzBallz, while last year's 'brat summer' was said to herald the end of the clean living era. The reality, experts say, is more complicated than that. 'We're seeing a generational recalibration, not a simple return to hedonism,' said Ivo Vlaev, a professor of behavioural science at Warwick University. 'This isn't a simple return to the past – it's a complex blend of coping, compensation, identity expression and socioeconomic constraint. The behaviours may look familiar, but the psychology behind them has evolved.' He said the fact that gen-Z came of age during a pandemic, climate crisis and increased concerns over the cost of living was a recipe for 'psychological whiplash'. Key factors at play included a rebound from the restrictions of the Covid era with young people now 'reasserting agency through social behaviours'. Vlaev said research showed that 'when autonomy is suppressed, people later overcompensate with behaviours that signal freedom or control'. There was also an element of 'self-soothing' as a result of rising levels of anxiety, depression and loneliness, as well as the glamorisation of certain drinks and behaviours on TikTok. Financial concerns may have also pushed the younger generation towards 'present-biased decision-making'. 'When the future feels unstable, people are less likely to invest in long-term health and more likely to seek short-term mood boosts, like alcohol or late nights out,' he said. Vlaev also said an element of 'wellness culture' fatigue had probably set in. 'Some gen-Zers are pushing back against the pressure to optimise every aspect of life,' he said. Richard Halstead, chief operation officer of consumer research at drinks market analysis company IWSR, said: 'From a consumer research and data point of view, it does seem there is some pushback on this idea that we're all perfect, having perfect pictures taken of us on Instagram and we're all super in control of our lives. 'Every cultural move has a countercultural move associated with it.' He said gen Z's attitudes towards drinking and socialising was more nuanced than is often portrayed in the media – gen Z were not 'puritans' who abstain from alcohol, but nor did they like booze as much as previous generations. 'The idea that gen Z do not drink at all or that they have turned their backs on alcohol is not supported by data,' he said. 'The idea that they have a different relationship with alcohol compared to previous generations is supported by data.' He said that, for instance, gen-Z were more likely to drink a wider variety of alcohols, and drink out in bars and restaurants. 'Their pattern of behaviour is actually going out for a reason, as opposed to just meeting for a pint in the pub because the pub's there and you've got nothing better to do,' he said. Dr Laura Tinner, a research fellow at the Centre for Public Health at the University of Bristol, said people shouldn't underestimate the power of the alcohol companies themselves, keen to capture a younger audience they feared they were losing. 'It's not necessarily that there has been a swing in the pendulum or a return to previous drinking behaviours, it's more that alcohol companies are continually trying to target young people with their products,' she said. 'They are using the current revival and zeitgeist around 00s and 90s culture to design their products to target young people.' There was also a suggestion that gen-Z were simply older – they are now roughly between the ages of 13 and 28 – so those at the older end of the group were more likely to have access to well paid jobs and disposable income. 'I think we're seeing some tailwinds develop,' said Halstead. 'They're getting older so some are probably in better paying, stable jobs and they've got more opportunity perhaps to do things that people with a bit more money like to do, which is go out and buy a drink and not worry too much about how much it costs you.' What many researchers were interested in was whether the characteristics that make gen Z different from their predecessors will stay with them as they age, with evidence suggesting generations become more and more similar as they get older. 'We've always had a question about whether or not the decline [in drinking alcohol] will persist into adulthood,' said Dr Laura Fenton, a research associate at the University of Sheffield who specialises in youth drinking cultures. 'What makes gen-Z slightly distinct as a generation is their attitude towards risk. They've engaged in fewer [risky pursuits] proportionally compared to people their age 20 years ago – and that extends to sex, it extends to driving, it extends to smoking and drug use,' she said. 'I think the question really is, is their approach to risk going to stay intact?'

Beauty product used by millions is making people's eyes CHANGE COLOUR, alarming reports reveal
Beauty product used by millions is making people's eyes CHANGE COLOUR, alarming reports reveal

Daily Mail​

time13 minutes ago

  • Daily Mail​

Beauty product used by millions is making people's eyes CHANGE COLOUR, alarming reports reveal

Health experts have warned women using lash serums that promise longer, darker lashes that the trending beauty product could also cost them their eye-colour. For those avoiding the expense of eyelash extensions, eyelash serums that promote hassle-free growth may seem like a safer, less expensive option. But experts warn many of these products contain powerful pharmaceutical drugs that could cause burning, irritation and even permanently change a person's eye colour from blue to brown. It comes as lash serums have taken the beauty world by storm, promising darker, longer and fuller lashes at home. Over two decades ago a type of prostaglandin analogues (PGAs)—called bimatoprost—was approved by officials to treat glaucoma and ocular hypertension—eye conditions that cause pressure to build up inside the eye, eventually leading to vision loss. As well as treating the conditions with less side effects than earlier treatments, doctors noticed that patients eyelashes were also growing longer, thicker and darker. Whilst it is not yet fully understood how the drug stimulates lash growth, researchers have speculated that it extends the active growth phase, where lashes grow to their full length fuelled by blood supply from the root of the hair follicle. In 2008 the drug—sold under the brand name Latisse—was approved by the US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) to treat eyelash hypotrichosis, an eye disease which affects the density of a patient's lashes. Extensive research showed that the active ingredient was effective at making lashes longer after just 16 weeks of daily use, making it an attractive commodity for beauty product manufacturers. In the UK, whilst bimatoprost remains a prescription-only medication, manufacturers have harnessed the power of other PGAs to boost lash growth. However these powerful ingredients also come with serious cosmetic side effects including fat loss around the eyes, creating a hollow sunken look, unwanted hair growth where the serum spreads, drooping of the upper eyelid which may require surgery and permanent iris darkening—turning blue eyes brown. A shocking investigation carried out by government officials revealed that almost one in four lash serums sold in the UK contain harmful PGAs which can cause skin darkening and irritation within just a few weeks of use. In the US, the FDA has previously issued urgent warnings stating that any cosmetic product containing these potentially harmful ingredients under growth claims should be treated as a drug and not a beauty product. Experts are now sounding the alarm stating that consumers may be unaware they are using these powerful ingredients that have been manufactured to mimic prescription-only treatments. Even if a products claims to be PGA-free, experts advise checking the ingredient list and staying away from anything ending in -'prost' to minimise the risk of redness and irritation. Instead they suggest opting for peptide-based alternatives, which work by boosting keratin to support lash growth—though these products too are not risk-free and there is very little evidence to suggest they actually work. Dr Mahmood, a New York based plastic surgeon, is just one of the many women who has fallen victim to the promise of darker, fuller lashes in a bottle. In a video posted to Instagram, she said: 'This is the one skincare product I would never recommend to any patient.' After using a lash serum for two months, Dr Mahmood said her lashes looked the best they ever had. But after a few days she noticed that one of her eyes was bulging out of her face and was significantly bigger than the other. After two MRI scans and further tests, doctors discovered that the lash serum had caused the muscles in her upper eyelid to thin, causing the area to droop. To compensate for this loss of vision, Dr Mahmood's other eye had started to bulge, resulting in two surgeries to restore her vision and lift her eyelid. 'It's pretty clear prostaglandins are bad, especially when it comes to eyelash serums,' she told her 25,800 followers.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store