Originally published April 21, 2011 at 4:48 AM | Page modified April 21, 2011 at 6:09 AM
Comments
(0)
E-mail article
Print
Share
Europe, especially France, hit by measles outbreak
Europe, especially France, has been hit by a major outbreak of measles, which the U.N. health agency is blaming on the failure to vaccinate all children.
Associated Press
![]()
Europe, especially France, has been hit by a major outbreak of measles, which the U.N. health agency is blaming on the failure to vaccinate all children.
The World Health Organization said Thursday that France had 4,937 reported cases of measles between January and March - compared with 5,090 cases during all of 2010. In all, more than 6,500 cases have been reported in 33 European nations.
"This is a lot of cases, to put it mildly. In past years we've had very few cases," said Rebecca Martin, head of WHO's office in Copenhagen for vaccine-preventable diseases and immunization.
"There's been a buildup of children who have not been immunized over the years," she said. "It's almost like a threshold. When you have enough people who have not been immunized, then outbreaks can occur."
WHO has found that young people between 10 and 19 have not been getting immunized as they should, she said.
To prevent measles outbreaks, officials need to vaccinate about 90 percent of the population. But vaccination rates across Europe have been patchy in recent years and have never fully recovered from a discredited 1998 British study linking the vaccine for measles, mumps and rubella to autism. Parents abandoned the vaccine in droves and vaccination rates for parts of the U.K. dropped to about 50 percent.
The disease has become so widespread in Europe in recent years that travelers have occasionally exported the disease to the U.S. and Africa.
Around Europe, Spain reported more than 600 cases in Andalusia in two outbreaks since October in Sevilla and Granada. Macedonia reported 400 cases this year with the capital, Skopje, most affected.
WHO said outbreaks and rising case numbers also were reported in Britain, Germany, the Netherlands, Norway, Romania, Russia and Switzerland.
"One of the problems is that people have fear of the vaccine more than the disease," Martin said. "People forget how severe measles can be."
WHO officials are examining immunization coverage data and plan a workshop with French, German, Belgian and Swiss officials later this month.
Measles symptoms include fever, cough, spots on the cheek and a rash. It is spread through close contact including coughing and sneezing and is especially serious in babies and people with weak immune systems. Health officials estimate complications affect one in every 15 children infected, including pneumonia, seizures and encephalitis.
---
AP Medical Writer Maria Cheng in London and Elaine Ganley in Paris contributed to this report.

general classifieds
Garage & estate salesFurniture & home furnishings
Electronics
just listed
14 week old female min pin for sale
14K White Gold 3/4 Carat t.w. Leo Diamond B...
AKC sable male collie
More listings
POST A FREE LISTING
- Four dead in avalanches at Stevens and Snoqualmie passes
- Backups while city waited 11 hours to send crew to broken West Seattle traffic light
- Deaths highlight boom in backcountry skiing
- Huskies' Terrence Ross, Tony Wroten in no-lose situation, but here's how they win | Jerry Brewer
- Chinatown ID restaurateurs say longer parking hours cut business
- It's a logjam at third for Mariners; is Kyle Seager the odd man out?
- Microsoft sharpens its advertising sword to jab rivals
- Mariners confirm Ichiro to No. 3 in order, Chone Figgins to lead off | Mariners Blog
- Head of Madigan removed from command amid PTSD probe
- A look at possible Mariners lineup | Mariners Blog
- Judge: State can't make druggists sell Plan B contraceptive
557 - Chinatown ID restaurateurs say longer parking hours cut business
328 - The overdue split among Democrats on education reform
232 - Speculators blamed for rising oil, gas prices
173 - Chone Figgins taking all the heat off of Ichiro as Mariners go in bold new direction
133 - AP source: Obama seeks 28 percent corp. tax rate
128 - Seattle's hopes of luring NBA's Kings here takes a hit
126 - Elks lodges are hot again in Seattle
85 - Seattle full-day kindergarten fees to increase 15%
79 - Brendan Ryan and Munenori Kawasaki having fun and working hard at Mariners camp
57
- Elks lodges are hot again in Seattle
- Spaghetti squash can be a side or main dish
- Deaths highlight boom in backcountry skiing
- Japan quake studies suggest harder jolt to NW possible
- Seattle surprises in James Beard nominations | All You Can Eat
- Head of Madigan removed from command amid PTSD probe
- Ichiro's style change is bigger news than his lineup change | Larry Stone
- Zumba's Latin rhythms on the move in the fitness world
- 'Oklahoma' seen in a new light | Nicole Brodeur
- Four dead in avalanches at Stevens and Snoqualmie passes
Even the country with the foremost medical care system in the world can't cure... (April 21, 2011, by SilkyAnteater)
Read more
