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posted by martyb on Friday January 18 2019, @07:52PM   Printer-friendly
from the how-many-more-will-suffer dept.

Anti-vaccine nonsense spurred NY's largest outbreak in decades

Health officials in New York are cautiously optimistic that they have a large measles outbreak under control after tackling the noxious anti-vaccine myths and unfounded fears that fueled the disease's spread.

Since last fall, New York has tallied 177 confirmed cases of measles, the largest outbreak the state has seen in decades. It began with infected travelers, arriving from parts of Israel and Europe where the highly contagious disease was spreading. In New York, that spread has largely been confined to ultra-Orthodox Jewish communities. As measles rippled through those insular religious communities, health officials ran into members who were wary of outsiders as well as those who harbor harmful myths and fears about vaccines. This included the completely false-yet-pernicious belief that the measles vaccine causes autism.

To quash the outbreak, health officials met with rabbis and pediatricians in the community, who in turned urged community members to be vigilant and, above all, get vaccinated, according to The New York Times. "Good people, great parents were terrified," Rabbi Yakov Horowitz, founder of Darchei Noam yeshiva in Monsey in Rockland County, told the Times. Despite the fears, he insisted parents vaccinate their children. "They felt that I was asking to give their children something that would harm them."


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  • (Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Sunday January 20 2019, @07:19AM (2 children)

    by Anonymous Coward on Sunday January 20 2019, @07:19AM (#788959)

    Regarding encephalitis and encephalopathy as a result of MMR vaccination. This is most likely nothing to do with thimerosal

    You didnt say due to thimerosal, you said "There is not, and never has been, any connection between vaccines and autism or brain damage."
    You mispoke, I'd recommend being more careful in the future (keep in mind that on a site like this the audience is primarily other people who read your conversation). Your claims about the danger of measles are also inappropriate, since they refer to a time well before the vaccination campaigns were introduced. When vaccinations were introduced it was closer to 1/10k cases:

    The secondary infections, and deaths from measles have steadily declined-from 307 in 1949 to 98 in 1959.1 Nevertheless up to the end of September this year 749,251 cases of measles had been notified in England and Wales.

    There are other issues but really whatever, my point is your posts aren't convincing to the audience when they are sloppy like that. That's all, I'll just stop there.

  • (Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Sunday January 20 2019, @07:22AM

    by Anonymous Coward on Sunday January 20 2019, @07:22AM (#788961)
  • (Score: 2) by rleigh on Sunday January 20 2019, @08:42AM

    by rleigh (4887) on Sunday January 20 2019, @08:42AM (#788992) Homepage

    You're right, I did miss speak about that. It would have more appropriate to say that the chance of that happening is extremely remote, and compared with the risk of complications or death without vaccination, is a minor consideration at best. The reason I stated it in such black and white terms is that there are far too many people who are incapable of understanding or assessing risk, and end up obsessing over unimportant risks whilst ignoring the big ones. Like worrying about autism, when death and brain damage and deafness are far bigger problems to be concerned about.