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90 New Cases of Measles Reported in U.S. as Outbreak Continues Record Pace

Signs about measles were on display at the Rockland County Health Department in Pomona, N.Y., last month.Credit...Seth Wenig/Associated Press

The number of new measles cases in the United States rose again this month, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention said on Monday, bringing the total number to 555 in 2019. This year’s outbreak is on course to be the worst since the country eliminated measles as an endemic disease in 2000.

Health authorities reported 90 additional cases as of April 11, with outbreaks in New York, Washington, California, New Jersey and Michigan, up from 78 the week before. Those cases were largely linked to travelers returning from countries seeing outbreaks of their own, including Israel, Ukraine and the Philippines.

The disease then spread through populations in which large numbers of people are unvaccinated, the C.D.C. said.

More than half of the cases this year were reported in New York City, where the latest number was 285. In Rockland County, to the north of the city, health authorities updated their count Monday to 186 cases.

[New York City’s response to the measles outbreak is tangled in Bill de Blasio’s ties to ultra-Orthodox Jews.]

The American outbreaks come as the incidence of measles is rising all over the world, according to preliminary numbers from the World Health Organization. Reported cases tripled globally in the first three months of 2019 compared with the year before, the W.H.O., a United Nations agency, said Monday.

The W.H.O. said that every region of the world was experiencing outbreaks, both in poor countries with low vaccination rates such as the Democratic Republic of Congo and wealthier countries like the United States and Israel, where the agency said the disease had spread among unvaccinated communities.

“This is a very unforgiving disease,” said Dr. Saad Omer, a researcher at the Emory Vaccine Center in Atlanta who studies immunization coverage and disease incidence. The illness killed close to 110,000 people worldwide in 2017, according to the W.H.O.

The global spike in measles reverses a celebrated public health achievement. A worldwide effort succeeded in bringing down measles cases by nearly 80 percent from 2000 to 2016.

[Here’s our full coverage about the measles outbreak.]

Experts attribute the new outbreaks to several causes. Enduring poverty limits access to the vaccine in countries with threadbare public health systems. This is compounded by rumors that the vaccines are harmful, leading parents to refuse to vaccinate their children.

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The measles virus was eliminated as an endemic disease in the United States in 2000.Credit...Universal Images Group

“It’s rarely a single cause,” Dr. Omer said.

The W.H.O. warned that “measles is one of the world’s most contagious diseases, with the potential to be extremely severe.”

“The disease is entirely preventable through two doses of a safe and effective vaccine,” the statement added.

Epidemiologists say that a vaccination level of 95 percent is needed to prevent outbreaks, but global coverage of the first dose remains at 85 percent, the W.H.O. said.

In the United States, authorities said in 2000 that domestic measles had been eliminated, and the cases that have occurred since then have been traced to visitors returning from countries where outbreaks have occurred.

The size and spread of the outbreaks this year do not come as a total surprise, Dr. Omer said, because vaccination refusal rates have been rising in the United States.

In a study that Dr. Omer and his colleagues published in 2016, researchers warned that the risk of outbreaks would increase as the overall pool of unvaccinated children swelled.

Dr. Omer compared the increase to filling a bucket with water. “A bucket is a small vessel,” he said. “If you keep adding water, it sometimes splashes.”

The population is hovering close to the vaccination threshold below which outbreaks are possible.

“What do you start seeing after that happens? You start seeing more frequent outbreaks and their size increases,” he said.

During the last major outbreak in the United States, in 2014, there were 667 cases during the whole year.

Dr. Omer said there was a possibility that endemic measles could return to the United States, “but it’s not inevitable.”

School mandates are quite effective in the United States, he said, and the C.D.C., working with local health authorities, is able to play a firefighting role.

But, he warned, “there is a limit to that capacity.”

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