FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 24, 2023
Unvaccinated attendee of big revival has state’s third case of measles in 3 months; Ky. ranks very low in measles vaccinations
An unvaccinated Jessamine County resident who attended the large, spontaneous revival at Asbury University has Kentucky’s third reported case of measles in three months, the state Department for Public Health said Friday.
“Anyone who attended the revival on Feb. 18 may have been exposed to measles,” Dr. Steven Stack, the state health commissioner, said in a news release. “Attendees who are unvaccinated are encouraged to quarantine for 21 days and to seek immunization with the measles vaccine, which is safe and effective.” Citing privacy, the state said nothing more about the infected person.
Stack added, “If you may have been exposed at Asbury University’s campus and develop any symptoms, whether previously vaccinated or unvaccinated, please isolate yourself from others and call your medical provider, urgent care, or emergency department to seek testing. Please do not arrive at a health-care facility without advance notice, so that others will not be exposed.”
Measles is one of the most contagious diseases, and spreads through the air. Early symptoms resemble those of many upper-respiratory illnesses – fever, cough, red eyes and runny nose – “and proceed to the characteristic rash three to five days after symptoms begin,” the release said.
The state says it investigates all reported cases. It said the first case in the last three months was in Christian County, and it was linked to an outbreak in Ohio. The second was reported in January in Powell County, and there were no known exposures or connections to the outbreak in Ohio,” the release said. “These two previous cases were thoroughly investigated and neither presented a public-health threat.”
The vaccine for measles vaccine is given in combination with those for mumps and rubella (“German measles to children at 12 to 15 months of age. A second dose is usually given at 4 to 6 years old, and is required for admission to school. Two doses of the MMR vaccine are about 97% effective at preventing measles if exposed to the virus, the state says.
The CDC reports that the rate could be as low as 86.5 percent, which could rank it sixth lowest among the states. The national average is about 93%. Kentucky’s percentage is expressed as “greater than or equal to” because the state counts some or all vaccine doses that are given outside federally recommended age and time intervals, and it does not include vaccinations at certain types of facilities, which could include kindergartens in child-care facilities, online schools, correctional facilities, or military installations.
The CDC report has a graph estimating the gap between MMR vaccination rates and the potential rates in each state, based on the percentage of unvaccinated students without a documented vaccine exemption; Kentucky’s gap appears to be larger than any state but Alaska (right-click to download image):