Louisville Medicine Volume 66, Issue 10 | Page 27

DOCTORS' Lounge SPEAK YOUR MIND If you would like to respond to an article in this issue, please submit an article or letter to the editor. Contributions may be sent to [email protected] or may be submitted online at www.glms.org. The GLMS Editorial Board reserves the right to choose what will be published. Please note that the views expressed in Doctors’ Lounge or any other article in this publication are not those of the Greater Louisville Medical Society or Louisville Medicine. MEASLES: Soon, a Rash of Lawsuits? Mary G. Barry, MD Louisville Medicine Editor [email protected] B y February 10th in Clark County, Wash., 54 people had contract- ed measles from one index case, and four cases had appeared in nearby Portland, Ore. By the end of January in New York, the case rate was climbing to 200, primarily clustered in Or- thodox communities’ yeshivas and in one Evangelical academy. At least 10 states have active cases of measles. In 2018 we had more measles cases than any year since 2000, when we declared the disease practically eliminated in this country. This was due to mass vaccination programs enforced by the public school system. Non or weak enforcers of the system include schools operated by particular faith groups. No major religion, I note, has taken any stand, ever, against vaccination. Small groups, a sect of Protes- tants in the Netherlands for instance, prefer their own interpretations of religious rule, and have recently suffered fatal outbreaks of measles. Health officials believe that the index cases in the Orthodox communities were unvaccinated children who acquired mea- sles while traveling to Israel in September. Unvaccinated travelers from the US who visit Italy, Ukraine, Israel and Moldova right now can bring home measles. All affected states currently have a religious exemption: parents can choose not to vaccinate their children for reasons of religious practice. Please recall that effective herd immuni- ty requires a community vaccination rate over 90 percent, ideally at least 95. In the involved New York and Washington com- munities, measles vaccination rates in the affected schools were found to be only 47 to 60 percent. In Kentucky, the religious exemption also exists. The exemption form lists all of the state-required vaccinations followed by the statement, “Due to my religious beliefs, I object to my child receiving the required immunizations selected above. I am aware that if I change my mind I can rescind this objection and obtain immunizations for my child.” As of last week, because of the severity of the outbreak in Washington state, legis- lators were putting together a bill to remove the religious exemption. As of February 10, the vaccination rate for Clark County had jumped by nearly 600 percent. In Williams- burg and in other parts of Brooklyn, public health clinics and private doctors’ offices were opening on weekends to get people vaccinated and were swamped. However, as those who care for children know all too well, the driving force in this country for refusing to vaccinate children is willful belief in misinformation. Too many parents believe that vaccines are potentially harmful to the child; so potentially harmful that parents successfully avert their eyes from centuries of childhood death from vaccine-preventable illnesses. The false flag of autism is planted deeply in their paren- tal minds, so firmly that they are able to fantasize that their children will never get sick. Their children will never go blind, deaf or mute from measles. They won’t die of pneumonia from measles. They will not be exposed to measles and get SSPE (Sub- acute Sclerosing Panencephalitis), which is uniformly fatal but only after long years of suffering. These parents believe that their children will not choke to death from Diph- theria, break a rib coughing from Pertussis, get meningitis from Mumps, or paralysis and lifelong disability from Polio. So they think. But what happens if their child gets sick or makes another child sick? What happens if their sick child makes an- other child so disabled that the cost of caring for that child soars into the millions? With these new outbreaks, that question is once again legally on the table. Professor of Law Dorit Rubenstein Reiss (J.D. from Berkeley), who serves on the faculty at UC (continued on page 26) MARCH 2019 25