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Texas parents of child who died of measles urge others not to vaccinate

Texas parents of child who died of measles urge others not to vaccinate

Yahoo21-03-2025
The Texas parents of an unvaccinated 6-year-old girl who died from measles Feb. 26 told the anti-vaccine organization Children's Health Defense this week that the experience did not convince them that vaccination against measles was necessary.
'She says they would still say 'Don't do the shots,' ' an unidentified translator for the parents said. 'They think it's not as bad as the media is making it out to be.'
The couple, members of a Mennonite community in Gaines County, spoke on camera in both English and Low German to CHD Executive Director Polly Tommey and CHD Chief Scientific Officer Brian Hooker.
'It was her time on Earth,' the translator said the parents told her. 'They believe she's better off where she is now.'
'We would absolutely not take the MMR,' the mother said in English, referring to the measles-mumps-rubella vaccination children typically receive before attending school. She said her stance on vaccination has not changed after her daughter's death.
'The measles wasn't that bad. They got over it pretty quickly,' the mother said of her other four surviving children who were treated with castor oil and inhaled steroids and recovered.
The couple told CHD that their daughter had measles for days when she became tired and the girl's labored breathing prompted the couple to take her to Covenant Children's Hospital in Lubbock. There, the girl was intubated and died a few days later. The other children came down with measles after their sister died.
The parents' interview was posted on the website of Children's Health Defense, an organization founded in 2007 by Robert F. Kennedy Jr., who is now secretary for the U.S. Health and Human Services Department. Kennedy stepped down from the organization to run for president in 2023.
The deceased girl's father insisted that measles helps build up a person's immune system. 'Also the measles are good for the body for the people,' the father said, explaining 'You get an infection out.'
The Mennonite community located in remote Gaines County, about 400 miles west of Dallas, has been the center of a West Texas measles outbreak. As of Tuesday, measles has spread to 279 patients in Gaines and nearby counties.
Covenant Children's Hospital in Lubbock, which cared for the couple's daughter, released a prepared statement on Thursday. They said the interview circulating online contains 'misleading and inaccurate claims regarding care provided at Covenant Children's' and that the hospital could not directly speak about the girl's case because of patient confidentiality laws.
'What we can say is that our physicians and care teams follow evidence-based protocols and make clinical decisions based on a patient's evolving condition, diagnostic findings and the best available medical knowledge,' the statement said.
Covenant Children's reiterated that measles is a highly contagious, potentially life-threatening disease that often creates serious, well-known complications like pneumonia and encephalitis.
The hospital urged anyone with questions about measles to contact their health provider.
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California man in dire need of a kidney transplant finds 1-in-100,000 match: His wife
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California man in dire need of a kidney transplant finds 1-in-100,000 match: His wife

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Record share of US kindergartners missed required vaccinations last year, ahead of surge in measles cases
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MMR coverage dropped to 92.5%, marking the fifth year in a row that coverage has been below the federal target of 95%, according to the CDC data. The vast majority of this year's measles cases have been in unvaccinated children. 'Vaccination remains the most effective way to protect children from serious diseases like measles and whooping cough, which can lead to hospitalization and long-term health complications,' the CDC said in a statement. 'CDC is committed to working closely with state and local partners by providing tools, resources, and data that help communities promote vaccine access and awareness.' But the statement also echoed language that is often used by US Department of Health and Human Services Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr., saying that 'the decision to vaccinate is a personal one. Parents should consult their healthcare providers on options for their families.' Forty-five states allow religious beliefs to be used as a basis for a vaccine exemption for children beginning school, and 15 states allow exemptions for other personal or philosophical reasons, according to the American Academy of Pediatrics. 'As pediatricians, we know that immunizing children helps them stay healthy, and when everyone can be immunized, it's harder for diseases to spread in our communities,' Dr. Susan Kressly, president of the AAP, said in a statement. 'At this moment when preventable diseases are on the rise, we need clear, effective communication from government leaders recommending immunizations as the best way to ensure children's immune systems are prepared to fight dangerous diseases.' This week, the organization reaffirmed its longstanding position that non-medical exemptions to school immunization requirements should be eliminated. 'The science behind vaccines demonstrates that the benefits greatly outweigh any potential risks,' said Dr. Sean O'Leary, a pediatric infectious disease specialist and chair of the AAP Committee on Infectious Diseases. 'There really aren't good reasons to opt out.' However, in the 2024-25 school year, vaccine exemptions increased in 36 states, according to the new CDC data. In 17 states, more than 5% of kindergartners had exemptions – meaning reminders from administrators to complete paperwork or doctor's visits won't be enough to raise coverage to the 95% goal for two doses of MMR vaccine set by HHS, a threshold necessary to help prevent outbreaks of the highly contagious disease. 'There are more and more states where even the potentially achievable coverage that we can get by catching everyone up who's overdue is getting lower and lower,' said Dr. Josh Williams, a pediatrician with Denver Health and associate professor at the University of Colorado Anschutz Medical Campus. 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Numbers on MMR coverage in West Virginia were not available in the latest data from the CDC, but the four other states are among the small group of 10 states that reached the federal goal of 95% coverage among kindergartners. In 2023, a federal court paved the way for religious exemptions to be added to Mississippi school vaccination policy. Exemption rates immediately jumped in the state, and MMR coverage has dropped about 1 percentage point, CDC data shows. Overall, nationwide MMR coverage among kindergartners dropped from 92.7% in the 2023-24 school year to 92.5% in the 2024-25 school year, according to the CDC. Experts say that a change like this may seem small but can significantly raise risks. 'It's a small percentage point change that adds up if it happens year over year, and that is what we've been seeing,' Williams said, and the change isn't distributed evenly. 'Individuals who tend to refuse vaccines tend to cluster together. … It's probably that the areas where there have been low uptake now have even worse uptake, and the areas where there have been more reasonable uptake continue to stay reasonable.' The vast majority of measles cases reported in this record-breaking year have been concentrated in Texas. MMR coverage in the state has been trending down for at least the past decade, CDC data shows, with just 93.2% coverage among kindergartners. Exemptions have surged past 4% – well above the national rate – and a law passed by the state legislature this year would make it even easier to get an exemption. Starting in September, the affidavit form to file for an exemption will be available to print from the state health department's website, without the need to file a written request. There was a lot of testimony opposing this change, said Dr. Philip Huang, director of the Dallas County health department. 'We were making the point during the whole thing that there needs to be a consistent message of unequivocal support for vaccinations from the top,' he said. 'We're very concerned about what's happening with HHS and the messaging sort of undermining that.' Experts say that vaccines can sometimes be 'victims of their own success,' with people not realizing how much protection they offer until they see the suffering that can happen when they're not utilized. This year's measles outbreak – which has led to three deaths and dozens of hospitalizations, mostly among children – may raise the urgency around the need to vaccinate and help to start to turn the trend around, experts say. 'The declines that we're seeing for measles and for other vaccines are always concerning, but perhaps in the context of one of our larger measles outbreaks in recent memory, I think a lot of people have it in mind with returning to school this fall,' Williams said. 'In my clinical practice here in Denver, we are getting requests from families who are worried about measles transmission in school and in day care. We've had some families coming in who want to get that protection on board prior to the school year beginning to make sure that their child is going to be as protected as possible prior to going back to school this fall.' Williams says he likes to remind parents that most people support vaccination and that he works hard to gain the trust of parents who are hesitant. 'It's always good to remember that the vast majority of parents vaccinate their kids on time and according to the recommended schedule,' he said. 'When that's not true in a school or in a community, I think that's an opportunity for advocates to speak up and talk to other parents and be partners in the process of improving vaccine confidence.'

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