Emotions run high on the topic of vaccination. People resent being forced to make choices for their children that they are not comfortable with, and others resent having their children put at risk when their classmates aren’t vaccinated. There are active protest groups on both sides, and in the meantime, cases of preventable disease are on the rise.
The tally of measles cases in the United States this year has reached 626, as of April 19. This exceeds the total number of yearly cases for 2018 and 2017. If contagion continues at this rate, the nation is on track for the most measles cases per year in the last decade. Authorities have even declared a health emergency in parts of Brooklyn, New York.
This caseload is still low by historical standards. In the 1950s, in the U.S., a typical year would see 3 million to 4 million measles cases. The overall decline in measles since the 1950s happened for the same reason that measles rates are currently rising: the ebb and flow of vaccination.
The measles vaccine was introduced in 1963. By 1968, the number of yearly measles cases had dropped from 4 million to under 50,000. By the early 1980s, the figures were close to zero.
In more recent years, however, skepticism of routine childhood vaccination has increased with the so-called anti-vax movement. A combination of celebrity anti-vaxxers, and a movement toward more personal choice in medicine generally, has laid the groundwork for a small but influential population who oppose vaccines. People against vaccination argue it has risks, that vaccines can cause autism or other unspecified injuries. Proponents of vaccination say this is nonsense, anti-science, and damaging to the health of children.
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