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A
measles outbreak centered around Disneyland in California has spread to six
more US states and Mexico, and an international visitor to the theme park
likely sparked the health alert, officials said Friday.
AFP reports Fifty-one
confirmed cases of measles have been reported to the Centers for Disease
Control and Prevention (US CDC) since late December, the US government agency said in a
statement, most in California but others as far afield as Nebraska and
Washington states.
The
CDC said those who had fallen ill were aged from 10 months to 57 years and only
a tiny fraction were vaccinated against measles, in the face of an
anti-vaccination trend that has emerged in recent years, particularly in North
America.
Opponents
fear the MMR (measles, mumps, rubella) vaccine causes autism, even though an
array of studies have ruled out any link.
Measles
has been officially eradicated from the United States since 2000 while
remaining widespread in other regions including Europe, Africa and Asia.
"In
addition to the US cases, one case was reported from Mexico in an unvaccinated
child who visited Disneyland Resort Theme Parks on December 17 and December 20,
2014," the CDC said.
While
health officials have yet to isolate the source of the outbreak, "it is
likely that a traveler (or more than one traveler) who was infected with
measles overseas visited one or both of the Disney parks in December during
their infectious period," the CDC added.
Most
-- 42 -- of the 51 cases are in California, but three more have been found in
Utah, two in Washington, and one each in Oregon, Colorado, Nebraska and Arizona.
Measles
is highly contagious and can be spread through the air without physical
contact. Infection usually begins with a fever followed by a cough, runny nose,
conjunctivitis and a rash.
Complications
can include blindness, hearing loss, pneumonia and death. One to two children
of every 1,000 infected with measles will die from it, the CDC said.
Eradication
means the disease is no longer native to the United States, but there were 644
measles cases in the US last year, an enormous jump from 173 cases in 2013.
An
analysis by the Los Angeles Times last year found that 9.5 percent of
kindergarten children in an Orange County school district were exempted from
vaccinations because of personal beliefs.
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