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Robert F. Kennedy Jr. to ask CDC to explore alternative measles treatments

Robert F. Kennedy Jr. to ask CDC to explore alternative measles treatments
ALL RIGHT, THAT’S ALL RIGHT. ONE DAY AT A TIME. FIVE ON YOUR HEALTH TONIGHT, MISINFORMATION ABOUT THE MEASLES VACCINE. THERE’S A NEW STUDY THAT SUGGESTS IN THE UNITED STATES IT IS SPREADING ALMOST AS FAST AS THE VIRUS ITSELF. JOINING US NOW IS DOCTOR DANIEL KURITZKES, CHIEF OF INFECTIOUS DISEASES AT BRIGHAM AND WOMEN’S HOSPITAL. ALWAYS WONDERFUL TO SEE YOU. GREAT TO SEE YOU, DOCTOR. WELCOME BACK. GOOD TO SEE YOU. SO LET’S START WITH THE LATEST DATA. CDC NOW CONFIRMS NEARLY 900 CASES 884 SO FAR IN 30 STATES. AND THREE PEOPLE HAVE DIED. ABOUT 11% HAVE BEEN HOSPITALIZED. ARE YOU SURPRISED? THERE HAVE BEEN NO CASES YET HERE IN MASSACHUSETTS? WELL, MARIA, IT’S GREAT TO BE BACK WITH YOU. YOU KNOW, WE’RE VERY FORTUNATE HERE IN MASSACHUSETTS THAT OUR VACCINATION RATES ARE SO HIGH. BUT THAT’S NO GUARANTEE THAT WE’LL CONTINUE TO GET AWAY WITHOUT HAVING ANY CASES, BECAUSE WE KNOW THAT THE VACCINE, ALTHOUGH VERY EFFECTIVE, IS ONLY ABOUT 97 OR 98%. SO THERE’S STILL A SMALL CHANCE THAT PEOPLE COULD GET MEASLES. AND THE MORE EXPOSURES THERE ARE, THE GREATER THE CHANCE THAT SOMEBODY IS GOING TO END UP COMING DOWN WITH IT. SO WE HAVE TO STILL BE ON OUR GUARD. SO LAST YEAR, AROUND 92% OF KINDERGARTNERS RECEIVED THE SHOT. IT’S MRE, MMR, MMR. YES. OKAY. SO THERE’S A NEW STUDY THAT PREDICTS IF THAT RATE STAYS THE SAME, WE COULD SEE ALMOST 900,000 NEW CASES OF MEASLES IN THE NEXT 25 YEARS. IF IT DROPS BY 10%, WE’LL SEE 11 MILLION CASES. IF IT DROPS IN HALF. GET READY FOR 51 MILLION. THESE ARE. IT’S A HUGE NUMBER. WHAT DOES THAT MEAN FOR YOU AND YOUR COLLEAGUES, DOCTOR? WELL, IT’S REALLY CONCERNING. FIRST OF ALL, WE KNOW THAT THERE’S A RISK OF DEATH FROM MEASLES AROUND 1 TO 2% IN IN LOW INCOME COUNTRIES MAY SEE DEATH. AND IF WE HAVE A LARGE UNVACCINATED POPULATION, THAT WOULD BE THE BIGGEST RISK. THE SECOND CONCERN IS WE HAVE A MUCH LARGER GROUP OF IMMUNOCOMPROMISED PEOPLE NOWADAYS THAN WE DID SAY, YOU KNOW, FIVE DECADES AGO WHEN MEASLES WAS STILL VERY PREVALENT. AND THERE ARE MANY MORE SERIOUS COMPLICATIONS THAT CAN OCCUR IN IMMUNOCOMPROMISED INDIVIDUALS WHO COME DOWN WITH MEASLES. THAT WOULD BE A BIG WORRY. AND MISINFORMATION IS ALWAYS BAD. DO YOU AGREE THAT MISINFORMATION ABOUT THE VACCINE IS A BIG FACTOR? I THINK PEOPLE REALLY NEED TO UNDERSTAND THAT THESE VACCINES VACCINES ARE INCREDIBLY SAFE. WE HAVE A NEW SEVEN MONTH OLD GRANDDAUGHTER AND SHE JUST GOT VACCINATED BECAUSE SHE’S TRAVELING, AND WE WANTED TO MAKE SURE THAT SHE’S GOING TO BE PROTECTED. PEOPLE SHOULD BE CONFIDENT IN THE SAFETY OF THESE VACCINES. AND, DOCTOR, BEFORE WE STEP ASIDE, YOU KNOW WHAT HE’S GOING TO SAY, I ALREADY KNOW. WAIT A MINUTE. LET’S JUST SAY, HYPOTHETICALLY, THAT YOU’RE A PLUS 50 MALE WHO WORKS ON TELEVISION AND ANCHORS AND AND HAD GOTTEN THIS. OKAY, WELL, I’LL GET TO THAT IN A MINUTE. OKAY. AND HAD GOTTEN THIS SHOT A LITTLE WHILE AGO THAT THAT PERSON DOESN’T HAVE TO WORRY ABOUT IT AGAIN. DOES THAT PERSON I MEAN, IT’S HYPOTHETICAL, RIGHT? WELL, SO SO PEOPLE BORN BEFORE 63 ARE PRESUMED TO HAVE HAD MEASLES AND ARE PROTECTED. PEOPLE BORN AFTER 1969 SHOULD HAVE RECEIVED TWO MEASLES VACCINES. WE’RE ALL SET. I MEAN, THE HYPOTHETICAL YOU SOLVED CONGRATULATIONS ON YOUR GRANDCHILD, AND YOU WANT TO TALK TO HIM ABOUT THE THINGS BEHIND HIM. DID YOU ADD TAYLOR SWIFT TO THAT COLLECTION BEHIND YOU, OR ARE YOU YES OR NO? NOT YET. BUT I DIDN’T WANT TO DISAPPOINT YOU AND MADE SURE THAT I HAD THE RIGHT PEOPLE. WE LOVE IT. IT’S ALWAYS GREAT. YOU FEEL LIKE AN OLD FRIEND. WE ALWAYS APPRECIATE YOUR WISDOM. AND WE WE ALWAYS ENJOY TALKING TO YOU. DOCTOR.
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Robert F. Kennedy Jr. to ask CDC to explore alternative measles treatments
Robert F. Kennedy Jr., secretary of the Department of Health and Human Services, is asking the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention for an agency-wide “scientific process” on treating measles and other conditions with medications as well as alternative therapies such as vitamins, HHS said in a statement.Video above: Study suggests misinformation about measles vaccine spreading fastThe HHS statement notes that “the CDC continues to recommend measles vaccination as the most effective way to prevent the disease,” and Kennedy himself has publicly encouraged measles vaccination – while saying it’s a “personal” choice.However, “we recognize that some individuals and communities across the U.S. may choose not to vaccinate,” the HHS statement says. “Our commitment is to support all families – regardless of their vaccination status – in reducing the risk of hospitalization, serious complications, and death from measles.”“Secretary Kennedy will be enlisting the entire agency to activate a scientific process to treat a host of diseases, including measles, with single or multiple existing drugs in combination with vitamins and other modalities,” the statement says. “This effort will involve collaboration with universities nationwide to develop protocols, conduct testing, and pursue approval for new uses of safe and effective therapeutics that meet the highest scientific standards.”As a measles outbreak centered in West Texas continues to grow, reaching nearly 800 cases as of this week, disease experts fear that Kennedy’s continuing emphasis on unconventional therapies such as cod liver oil, the antibiotic clarithromycin and the steroid budesonide might take away from efforts to boost vaccination.“We’ve got doctors now in these communities that are teaching other doctors how to treat this disease with aerosolized steroids, with budesonide, with clarithromycin and others,” Kennedy said Monday at a town hall event hosted by Dr. Phil McGraw.The measles-mumps-rubella (MMR) vaccine is 97% effective at preventing measles after the recommended two doses, but there is no specific treatment for measles once someone is infected.In severe cases, doctors may offer treatments such as supplemental oxygen and fluids to help patients get through the worst of their illness. The CDC also recommends two doses of physician-administered vitamin A in cases of severe measles, such as people who are hospitalized. Infectious disease experts note that the vitamin is most useful in impoverished countries where children are significantly malnourished.In a measles treatment overview posted Thursday, the CDC says that “vitamin A may be used under the supervision of a healthcare provider” and that “other therapies, such as antibiotics should be prescribed based on clinical judgment by an individual healthcare provider.”The overview also notes that although there’s no evidence to support routine use of antibiotics in someone with measles, they may be necessary if the person develops a secondary bacterial infection. Likewise, it says that patients with a history of certain airway conditions may be given inhaled steroids.A poll released last week showed that a growing share of adults in the U.S. have heard false claims about measles and the vaccine, including that vitamin A can prevent infections.“It’s really important not to conflate what … supportive or adjunctive care for measles versus curative treatment for measles,” Dr. Christina Johns, a pediatric emergency physician at PM Pediatrics in Annapolis, Maryland, told CNN in March.In a fact-check on its website, the American Academy of Pediatrics emphasizes that “Recent claims that budesonide and clarithromycin cure measles are reckless and put children at serious risk. There is no cure for measles. Immunization is the only way to prevent the spread of measles.”

Robert F. Kennedy Jr., secretary of the Department of Health and Human Services, is asking the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention for an agency-wide “scientific process” on treating measles and other conditions with medications as well as alternative therapies such as vitamins, HHS said in a statement.

Video above: Study suggests misinformation about measles vaccine spreading fast

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The HHS statement notes that “the CDC continues to recommend measles vaccination as the most effective way to prevent the disease,” and Kennedy himself has publicly encouraged measles vaccination – while saying it’s a “personal” choice.

However, “we recognize that some individuals and communities across the U.S. may choose not to vaccinate,” the HHS statement says. “Our commitment is to support all families – regardless of their vaccination status – in reducing the risk of hospitalization, serious complications, and death from measles.”

“Secretary Kennedy will be enlisting the entire agency to activate a scientific process to treat a host of diseases, including measles, with single or multiple existing drugs in combination with vitamins and other modalities,” the statement says. “This effort will involve collaboration with universities nationwide to develop protocols, conduct testing, and pursue approval for new uses of safe and effective therapeutics that meet the highest scientific standards.”

As a measles outbreak centered in West Texas continues to grow, reaching nearly 800 cases as of this week, disease experts fear that Kennedy’s continuing emphasis on unconventional therapies such as cod liver oil, the antibiotic clarithromycin and the steroid budesonide might take away from efforts to boost vaccination.

“We’ve got doctors now in these communities that are teaching other doctors how to treat this disease with aerosolized steroids, with budesonide, with clarithromycin and others,” Kennedy said Monday at a town hall event hosted by Dr. Phil McGraw.

The measles-mumps-rubella (MMR) vaccine is 97% effective at preventing measles after the recommended two doses, but there is no specific treatment for measles once someone is infected.

In severe cases, doctors may offer treatments such as supplemental oxygen and fluids to help patients get through the worst of their illness. The CDC two doses of physician-administered vitamin A in cases of severe measles, such as people who are hospitalized. Infectious disease experts note that the vitamin is most useful in impoverished countries where children are significantly malnourished.

In a posted Thursday, the CDC says that “vitamin A may be used under the supervision of a healthcare provider” and that “other therapies, such as antibiotics should be prescribed based on clinical judgment by an individual healthcare provider.”

The overview also notes that although there’s no evidence to support routine use of antibiotics in someone with measles, they may be necessary if the person develops a secondary bacterial infection. Likewise, it says that patients with a history of certain airway conditions may be given inhaled steroids.

released last week showed that a growing share of adults in the U.S. have heard false claims about measles and the vaccine, including that vitamin A can prevent infections.

“It’s really important not to conflate what … [is] supportive or adjunctive care for measles versus curative treatment for measles,” Dr. Christina Johns, a pediatric emergency physician at PM Pediatrics in Annapolis, Maryland, told CNN in March.

In on its website, the American Academy of Pediatrics emphasizes that “Recent claims that budesonide and clarithromycin cure measles are reckless and put children at serious risk. There is no cure for measles. Immunization is the only way to prevent the spread of measles.”