Hospital chief executive officer Timothy Walsh, left, joins emergency room student nurse Danielle Shea and emergency room medical manager Rich Huffam Monday at measles information table in front of the hospital.
Mark Lovewell

Hospital Alerts Vineyard Community After Confirmed Case of Measles

The Martha’s Vineyard Hospital will hold two free vaccination clinics today and tomorrow following a diagnosis of measles in an unvaccinated child visiting the Island from another state last week. Health officials report public exposures occurred in West Tisbury, Chilmark and Oak Bluffs.

The Martha’s Vineyard Hospital and public health officials on the Vineyard have issued a widespread measles alert following a diagnosis of the highly contagious disease in an unvaccinated child visiting the Island from another state. The child was evaluated at the hospital emergency room on Wednesday, June 17. State health officials confirmed that this is the second case of measles in the commonwealth this year.

Free vaccination clinics are scheduled for tonight and tomorrow from 5 to 9 p.m. in the old doctor's wing at the hospital. The hospital asks people attending the clinic to enter through the Eastville entrane behind the hospital.

“While the child was immediately identified and subsequently isolated from the community, we know that individuals on the Island were exposed to the virus during a phase of the illness in which the patient is infectious but has no symptoms,” the hospital said in the alert posted on its website.

According to the hospital alert, known locations where exposures to others are likely to have occurred include:

The West Tisbury public library on June 8, from 11 a.m. to 3 p.m.; the Aquinnah Library on Tuesday, June 9 from 3 p.m. to 5:30 p.m. and again on Thursday, June 11 from 3:30 p.m. to 6:30 p.m.; the Martha’s Vineyard Airport Laundromat in West Tisbury on Friday, June 12 from 1 p.m. to 5 p.m.; Sharky’s Cantina in Oak Bluffs on Tuesday June 16, from 7:30 p.m. to 10:30 p.m., and Ryan Family Amusements in Oak Bluffs on June 16, from 5:30 p.m. to 9:30 p.m.

The Massachusetts Department of Public Health (DPH) sent out an alert Wednesday that the individual with measles was at the Chilmark School playground and the Chilmark library on Monday, June 8 from 2:30 p.m. to 5 p.m. This is an update to an earlier alert, which said the exposure took place in those places on June 17. That exposure did not occur, the DPH said.

Vineyard library directors announced late Tuesday that the annual summer reading kickoff for children at the Agricultural Hall Saturday morning has been cancelled out of precaution.

Island public schools have sent alerts to parents.

Dr. Jeffrey Zack, chief of emergency medicine at the hospital, said the patient was considered infectious from Monday, June 8 through Wednesday, June 17.

“There is certainly a lot of concern, folks wanting information,” Dr. Zack told the Gazette in a telephone interview Monday. “We would like to make sure the public understands if they have questions they should contact their primary care doctor. The one thing we don’t want is people coming into the hospital or into the doctor’s office if they think they have measles. Letting someone into the building can make it an infectious area, at least for a couple of hours. It’s most important not to spread this within the hospital,” he said.

The hospital has set up a measles hotline at 508-957-0117 and scheduled the free vaccination clinics.

People under the age of 58 who have not been vaccinated, have not had measles in the past, or do not have blood work indicating immunity to the disease should attend the clinic, the Martha’s Vineyard Boards of Health said in a press release. People born before 1957 are likely to have immunity to the disease, according to information from the DPH.

Hospital staff are working with the DPH to deliver responsible communications to the public and are following a protocol for public response to a measles diagnosis.

“We have staff members stationed outside the emergency room waiting area, to inform and hopefully guide anybody who might be showing symptoms to the appropriate place,” said Rachel Vanderhoop, a spokesman for the hospital. 
She said doctors will screen people who are concerned about exposure over the phone, then decide whether to refer patients to the emergency room.

“The emergency room will be alerted, and you will be brought in through a decontamination entrance, and the staff will be properly dressed in precaution suits,” Ms. Vanderhoop said. “It’s a safer way to bring somebody who might have been exposed into the hospital.”

Anyone who suspects a case of measles should not go to the doctor’s office or the hospital, but instead should call their primary care physician and follow the doctor’s instructions.

High fever, a rash that begins on the head, or a runny nose and cough are all possible symptoms that should result in a call to a doctor. The hospital also recommends calling a doctor if you or your child are not vaccinated, or unsure of immunization status.

Measles can cause serious problems such as ear infections, pneumonia and swelling of the brain in some people, especially pregnant women, infants, and people with weakened immune systems, public health officials. In rare cases, measles can lead to death. Adults are also at increased risk. The virus that causes measles lives in the nose and throat and is sprayed into the air when an infected person coughs or talks, health officials said. The virus can stay in the air for up to two hours.

The Island has some of the lowest vaccination rates in the state, the Massachusetts Department of Public Health confirmed earlier this year.

Dr. Zack said the confirmed case demonstrates the vulnerability of an isolated community that sees a huge influx of summer visitors. “We live in a very small world,” Dr. Zack said. “We’re at risk, no matter where we live. We’re about to hit high season and we’re getting people from all over the place.

“This is sort of an opportunity to reeducate everyone to the risks and benefits of vaccination,” he said. “The problem is when you don’t see a disease like measles for 50 years, people forget about the repercussions and why we started vaccinating in the first place. It killed thousands and thousands of people before vaccinations. We don’t want to see those days, obviously, again.”

Comments

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Mon, 06/22/2015 - 14:44

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Concerned MV

I certainly hope that this does not spread, but if it does, I hope that the boards of health and business owners address this situation with integrity. Our most vulnerable citizens are at risk through no fault of their own. At least one business on that list employs multiple undocumented workers. I am a big supporter of the J1 work program, and in fact of immigration reform to help those already here fully integrate. The J1 and other visa holders must be vaccinated to work here. But businesses employing undocumented workers likely have many unvaccinated employees. These employees also live in extremely cramped quarters this time of year, often dozens to a single family home. The major lodging house in OB has been temporarily closed in past seasons due to insect infestation caused in part by near 50% overcrowding as documented by the fire dept. and health dept. there. If this spreads, employers will have to come to terms with their illegal hiring practices. They've faced zero penalty for so long it almost seems normal to them. When the health dept comes knocking, will they put the public safety first or their businesses? I always thought the IRS would eventually take these guys down. Perhaps it will be the health department. Let's all hope this doesn't get bad, because we have all the components here for an epidemic.

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Mon, 06/22/2015 - 17:16

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Ben MV

It is insane that people are giving up on basic public health measures like vaccines due to laziness and misinformation. People spend a lot of time and money to enjoy themselves on the Vineyard. Do we really need to pass laws that say people must be vaccinated to arrive here?

What is wrong with people? Speak to your doctor or pediatrician or get unbiased advice from a source like historyofvaccines.org, not a former Playboy Bunny or the clinically insane.

Marcia MB

I have a dear friend with a child who had a severe allergic reaction to that immunization. You can't lump all who forego the injections into a lazy and misinformed category.

Bruce West Tisbury

I think it's fair to say that those aren't the only two categories available for describing those who have reservations about the safety of vaccinations. In fact, the government has had a program in place for almost 30 years to compensate for injuries from vaccinations, the National Vaccine Compensation Program. At the very least, this would indicate that concerns about vaccinations are not unfounded, and that many responsible parents as caring and as educated as I imagine you to be are not "clinically insane" for weighing those risks against the possibility of contracting measles. And bear in mind that, as far as I know, no one died from the recent outbreak (less than 200 cases) in California. There can be laziness and misinformation on both sides of this issue. There's enough polarization in this country right now. Around this important question our children, at least, deserve having those who care for them acting like adults.

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Mon, 06/22/2015 - 17:32

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John Gault Oak Bluffs

Surprise, surprise,surprise, we HAD eradicated Measles in this country. Now we are getting Measles, whooping cough, a new strains of Tuberculosis and many undetected viruses that the SDC can't name. This is what occurs when you don't protect our borders and keep the USA safe,now our children will bear the brunt of this policy.

Elizabeth Guittar Edgartown

I think polio came back also. Sister spent months in an iron lung and remained paralyzed from her neck down for life. She was 16, only those 15 and under were eligible for the vaccine, so consequently she had no junior prom, cheerleading, sports, for the rest of her life. She was robbed but lived a beautiful life with a husband, 4 sons, a job and thousands of friends. But parents never got over the pain. Take one more look at the facts, it's worth the effort.

John Gault Oak Bluffs

Just the facts Carla, What causes measles?
Measles is caused by a virus. It is spread when an infected person coughs, sneezes, or shares food or drinks. The measles virus can travel through the air. This means that you can get measles if you are near someone who has the virus even if that person doesn't cough or sneeze directly on you.
The measles vaccine protects against the illness. This vaccine is part of the MMR (measles, mumps, and rubella) and MMRV (measles, mumps, rubella, and varicella [chickenpox]) vaccines. Most children get the vaccine as part of their regular shots. This is why measles is rare in the United States and Canada. Please re read the LAST sentence again. You need a source for this virus to spread, it did not come from with in the USA but from outside the USA. ZERO? The facts don't back up you statement.

Carla Edgartown

Wouldn't be a problem if everyone here were immunized. No matter who brought what into the country. People have been coming here from abroad for decades and it hasn't been a problem until parents here decided to stop getting their kids vaccinated.

Nadezhda nantucket

omg this has nothing to do with the borders and emigration reforms and etc...how when you protect the border will stop spreading a Desease ?What now,all Desseases coming from abroad!!!

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Mon, 06/22/2015 - 20:13

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VeryAnnoyed Vineyard Haven

thank you to all of the moms against vaccines, so we can be a three world country! The reason why vaccines are important is to keep those childhood diseases from EVER coming back! I remember them!

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Mon, 06/22/2015 - 21:28

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Phil C OB

Could the health people answer the following questions:

1. Have there been other cases on the island in the last week?
2. What kind of contact is required to pass on the disease or is the virus in the air?
3. What precautions are in order for infants or others at risk? What about open air such as going to the beach or walking down the street?
4. If there are no more cases, when is it safe to assume the risk has passed?

Gary Martin Assonet, MA

Since nobody has replied, I'll take a stab at a few of your questions.
1. A case of measles is big news. Multiple cases would be huge. If there were others, surely it would be in the headlines.
2. Sneezing or coughing contaminates the air for up to two hours. Exposure infects about 90% of people without immunity. http://answers.webmd.com/answers/1174723/how-is-measles-spread
3. See http://www.wikihow.com/Prevent-Measles
4. It takes 4 days for the rash to appear. Allowing another day or two for diagnosis and reporting, if there's no more cases reported by Saturday, it's probably safe.

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Tue, 06/23/2015 - 10:14

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Truthteller CA

I can remember when people died from measles, unborn babies were damaged, miscarriages, disfigurement, people living in fear. Those of us who believe in herd immunity have to suffer for those who do not. Those of us who have compromised immune systems, chemotherapy patients, the elderly, are being put in danger by uninformed people. Perhaps when we get the lawyers involved in lawsuits, against people, individually, businesses that hire workers who have not been vaccinated or inoculated, we may see some results.

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Wed, 06/24/2015 - 08:30

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jessica manchester

No one has died from measles in the US for 10 years.
Calm down people, If you get measles, you will have a lifetime immunity.
Vaccinations do NOT give lifetime immunity.
Vaccinations shed the illness. This is true science:
http://www.cnbc.com/id/102473744

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Wed, 06/24/2015 - 11:58

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Chris Knowles Martha's Vineyard, Massachusetts

It is important for Island parents to remember that as their children were making their way through the Island's public school system they received routine immunizations from the public health nursing agency with which their town's board of health contracted. This included the MMR vaccination. Resistance to having children immunized was precipitated by studies stating that the use of the organomercury compound thimerosal, used in extending the shelf life of MMR vaccines, may contribute to, or exacerbate, disorders on the autism spectrum when administered to the very young. While the findings of these studies have, for the most part, been widely disproven, some parents still refrain from having their children vaccinated due to largely unfounded fears. As the article points out, Martha's Vineyard has a disproportionately large number of such parents, thereby leading to the disproportionately high risk for infection and transmission on the Island.

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