The USA is Experiencing the worst year in the Oder for over three decades, with over 1,300 cases in 40 states from July 16. The cases were almost so high in 2019. Odra elimination status threatened. Six years ago, health officials were able to stop the spread. But among the growing public reactions to vaccines, many tactics used may not work now.
The elimination of the Oder means that there was no constant transmission in the country for longer than 12 months. This almost happened in the explosion in 2019, which largely influenced orthodox Jewish populations in Novel York and some nearby poviats. In autumn 2018, American travelers returning from Israel have positively checked the Oder. The disease quickly spread in close communities, especially among children, due to the low vaccination indicator. While the vaccination rate from the Odra through the whole country was 98 percent in the previous school year, vaccination insurance in schools in the explosion area There was only 77 percent. Because the Odra is highly contagious, a 95 -percentage vaccination indicator It is needed to protect the community against illness.
As a result, most of the Odra cases occurred in people 18 and below, Almost 86 percent of which they were known as unvaccinated. Some of these people developed severe complications, including pneumonia, and almost 8 percent were hospitalized.
The current growth is driven by an explosion, which began in the underestimated Mennonite community in Western Texas. Since then, cases have spread to other counties in Texas, Novel Mexico and Oklahoma. Two children in Texas without basic conditions and one adult in Novel Mexico died this year as a result of the Oder. Everyone was unvaccinated.
“There are definitely similarities. What we saw in New York was largely the result of years and years of spreading disinformation and disinformation around vaccine safety,” says Neil Vora, executive director of pandemic prevention in a source coalition, and earlier the medical epidemiologist at the Center for Control and prevention of prevention and prevention, which would aid react to the publication 2019.
Cases finally burned out in Novel York after a month’s effort, which included both established approaches to public health and changes in politics at local and state levels.
“You have to take the first matter seriously, because it’s like lighting. You never know when this fire will simply explode,” says Oxiris Barbot, the current president and general director of United Hospital Fund, which was the Health Commissioner in Novel York in 2018–2020.
As the Barbot disease spread, the City Health Department would have to go to the source of transmission, mainly orthodox Jewish schools in affected districts. Working with school administrators, they reviewed vaccination entries to identify unvaccinated or insufficiently vaccinated children. After the exhibition, children were forbidden to attend school and take care of children for 21 days, the incubation period for the Oder. Similar funds were taken in some poviats outside the city.
“It took a lot of time, a lot of leg work,” says Barbot. In one school, a contingent child led to more than 25 infections with other students and continued to spread out of school. He says that the Health Department was “heavily involved” in making sure that schools observed quarantine resources. “
