Eight people have been diagnosed since last month. None was immune to measles — meaning they either never got vaccinated or contracted measles before.
At least eight people have been diagnosed with measles in an outbreak that started last month in the Philadelphia area. The most recent two cases were confirmed on Monday.
The outbreak began after a child who'd recently spent time in another country was admitted to the Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia (CHOP) with an infection, which was subsequently identified as measles. The Philadelphia Department of Public Health considers the case to be "imported" but did not say from where.
The disease then spread to three other people at CHOP, two of whom were already hospitalized there for other reasons.
Two of those infected at the hospital were a parent and child. The child had not been vaccinated and the parent was offered medication usually given to unvaccinated people that can prevent infection after exposure to measles, but refused it, the Philadelphia Inquirer first reported.
Despite quarantine instructions, the child was sent to day care on Dec. 20 and 21, the health department said.
People with particularly weak immune systems or people on immunosuppressant drugs are advised not to get the MMR vaccine. There's also some other edge case reasons.
Which is why every single person in the U.S. who had an organ transplant is likely exasperated and infuriated by all the anti-vaxxers. Those people could literally kill them just by being in their proximity. And the anti-vaxxers tell people like that to just not go outside. Really.
My personal pet peeve is when people say things like "Well, they're only hurting themselves," or, "at least anti-vaxxers will kill themselves off." That's not how it works, and they are hurting everyone else more than they are hurting themselves.
Vaccination is not a personal choice, it's a public health concern. It's like someone saying it's their personal choice to drive inebriated.