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Measles inching closer to South Dakota

Measles inching closer to South Dakota

Yahooa day ago

SIOUX FALLS, S.D. (KELO) — Measles is spreading, and since the initial outbreak in Texas, there are now more than 1,000 cases in the U.S this year.
According to the Department of Health's website, there hasn't been a confirmed case of measles in South Dakota this year, but the infection is making its way closer every week.
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The measles outbreak started in Texas in late January and has spread to more than 25 other states.
Dr. Peter Paul Lim of Avera and Dr. Ashley Sands of Sanford say the illness is extremely contagious.
'It's the most contagious infection that we know of, so in a room of ten people who are unvaccinated against measles and come into contact with that measles virus, nine of them will get sick with the measles infection,' Sands said.
'It's more contagious than Ebola virus. Everybody's scared about Ebola virus. This is more contagious than Ebola. This is more contagious than COVID-19,' Lee said.
As of now, there are confirmed cases of measles in Iowa, Minnesota, North Dakota and Nebraska. The case in Nebraska is in Sheridan County, which borders South Dakota and is just south of the Pine Ridge Reservation.
'It's not a matter of if, it's a matter of when we're going to have a case here,' Lim said.
Nebraska officials say the case involves an 'appropriately vaccinated child,' but local doctors say not to lose your faith in the MMR vaccine.
'It's not a guarantee that you're not going to have measles. A very, very, very rare chance. you can actually get it, but most of the time it's usually modulated, in a lot of instances as well. You will not be as contagious as if you've never had a vaccine,' Lim said.
'We know that people who are vaccinated and to do come in contact with the virus have much milder symptoms,' Sands said.
Because getting vaccinated is the best form of prevention.
'It is very important that everyone gets vaccinated. In fact, I would say that's the most effective way, actually, to prevent measles,' Lim said.
Both doctors say the first dose of the MMR vaccine is 93% effective. It's 97% effective once you get two doses, and once you get both of your shots, you don't need to another one for the rest of your life.
Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

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This week, a Get Starting Point A guide through the most important stories of the morning, delivered Monday through Friday. Enter Email Sign Up There's so much in this world to justify our stress. But: Is overparenting burning us out on top of it all? I chatted with Elkins (in between reminding my eighth-grader to stay after school for homework help and clicking 'refresh' on my second-grader's soccer schedule) to find out. Advertisement Let's start with your thoughts about the study, and then we'll go into the overparenting stuff. Advertisement It's confirming what we're all seeing firsthand, which is that moms are really struggling. The focus is really timely, especially in light of last year's surgeon general I liked that they highlighted in the article that [more] research on maternal mental health centers around the perinatal period. … But what about moms whose babies are older than 6 months? We're in this for a while. Maternal mental health is suffering. We can't blame it all on COVID. Sign up for Parenting Unfiltered. Globe staff #mc_embed_signup{background:#fff; clear:left; font:14px Helvetica,Arial,sans-serif; } /* Add your own Mailchimp form style overrides in your site stylesheet or in this style block. We recommend moving this block and the preceding CSS link to the HEAD of your HTML file. */ Subscribe * indicates required E-mail * Where do you feel it's coming from? Is the problem overparenting? We can't draw clear, direct conclusions between overparenting and declining mental health based on the study. That being said, I think the fact that the study highlighted a decline in maternal mental health across the sociodemographic spectrum suggests that there's more here than structural racism, access to resources, housing insecurity, and other [systemic] factors that are impacting well-being. 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A lot of us are older, which often means that we're more highly educated, and that means that we've spent all these years in achievement-driven environments where hard work and problem-solving get results, and we're used to having agency. If something is broken, we fix it, and our boss says, 'Good job.' When it comes to parenting, we're bringing the same mind-set: We're analyzing and optimizing and deep-diving on the internet to figure out research. We're trying to manage every variable. What's the difference between overparenting and snowplow or intensive parenting? Overparenting is a more deeply held core belief. It's not just about hovering behaviors or snowplowing behaviors. I find that it's usually rooted in two beliefs. The first is that negative emotions are unsafe or somehow harmful, and they should be avoided. We feel that the normal emotions that we might all expect kids to be exposed to — shame and fear and sadness and boredom — are somehow bad. 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I think the data is a little bit tricky on that, because most of the research is going to come from clinical populations, which tend to skew more white and upper-middle-class, because they're the ones who can access the care. But we do have data indicating that families across the sociodemographic spectrum value the things that intensive parenting values. It's not like they dismiss it; I think perhaps their opportunity to live it out in real time might be diluted. How does this manifest in real life? It's funny: While we were talking, I was mouthing to my eighth-grader to check in with his teacher about a grade as he walked out the door. I guess I'm guilty. What are some prominent examples from your practice? In the child anxiety world, [there is] what we call parental accommodation, the behavioral and clinical descriptor for how overparenting plays out. These are changes that parents make to our own behavior in an effort to decrease the distress of our kids. 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Maybe, the overparenting response would be to call the coach and to complain, or to tell the child that they were treated unfairly: 'You were treated poorly, and I'm going to do something about it.' The aim is to protect the kid from feeling shame, rejection, and failure. A love-and-limits approach might be to acknowledge the disappointment, to express a belief in your child's ability to cope with that disappointment, and to put it back on them: 'What do you want to do next? Do you want to try another league? Do you want to do something else?' If your kid is anxious over a really tough homework assignment, the overparenting path might be getting highly involved, giving a lot of scaffolding around the assignment, and maybe ultimately doing the majority of the work. A love-and-limits approach might be validating the distress: 'This is a monster of an assignment,' suggesting one or two coping strategies, but then dropping the rope. It's validation of the distress, but with the narrative that: 'You can cope with this hard feeling, and I bet you can come up with a solution. I'm here if you need a suggestion or a hug.' Advertisement Overparenting becomes such a problem because with a parent's well-meaning intention of swooping in to cushion the distress, the kid gets the message: 'I can't handle this by myself.' Devil's advocate: Parents actually call coaches to complain that their kid got cut from a team? I find that mortifying. This is a thing that happens? Oh yeah. … It's this hyper-awareness of what a child must be feeling in this moment, and that if they feel rejection, they're going to crumple. But the problem is that, if kids haven't had the opportunity to experience normative negative emotions and recover because parents are jumping in, then they flail spectacularly when things get really hard. You know, you've got a kid who trends anxious. They express distress. 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