Disneyland Measles Outbreak Confirmed to Be Linked to Low Vaccination Rates
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Researchers estimate that the measles, mumps and rubella vaccination rate among the people who were exposed to measles in that outbreak may be as low as 50 percent
Low vaccination rates are likely responsible for the large measles outbreak that began at Disneyland in California last December, a new analysis suggests.
The researchers estimated that the MMR (measles, mumps and rubella) vaccination rate among the people who were exposed to measles in that outbreak may be as low as 50 percent, and is likely no higher than 86 percent. Since the beginning of this year, have been linked to the Disneyland outbreak, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC).
"While researchers have certainly speculated that low vaccine rates might be to blame for the 2015 , our study confirms this suspicion in a scientifically rigorous way," said study author Maimuna Majumder, a research fellow at Boston Children's Hospital.
Prior to these findings, researchers didn't have a good idea of how low vaccination rates might be among the people who came in linked to Disneyland, Majumder told Live Science.
In the analysis, which is published online today (March 16) in the journal JAMA Pediatrics, the researchers created a mathematical model using data from both the official measles case counts collected by the California Department of Public Health during the outbreak, and media-reported case counts. []
The national rate for the MMR vaccination in the U.S. is quite high, at about 92 percent. However, can act as breeding grounds for future measles outbreaks, Majumder said.
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