Four children in US contract polio (AP) Updated: 2005-10-14 08:31
Four children in an Amish community in Minnesota, the United
States, have contracted the polio virus — the first known infections in the
country in five years, state health officials said Thursday.
Dr. Harry Hull, the state epidemiologist, said the cases do not pose a threat
to the general public because most people have been vaccinated against polio and
are unlikely to have contact with Amish people. But he said he expects to find
more infections within the Amish community because some of its members refuse
immunizations on religious grounds.
None of the children have shown any symptoms of the paralyzing disease. About
one in 200 people who contract the polio virus suffer paralysis because of it;
others typically rid themselves the virus after weeks or months.
None of the four children had been vaccinated. Three are siblings; the fourth
is a baby from another family.
The infection came to light when the baby was hospitalized for various health
problems and underwent tests. Authorities then began testing other members of
the community for the virus.
Officials would not identify the Amish community but said it consisted of 100
to 200 people.
Hull said the infections were traced to an oral vaccine that was administered
in another country, probably within the past three years.
The use of oral polio vaccine containing the live virus was stopped in the
United States in 2000. The live-virus vaccine caused an average of eight cases
of polio a year in the United States. The U.S. and Canada now use an injected
vaccine made from the killed virus.
State and federal officials are investigating how an infection from a vaccine
given in another country reached Minnesota. Stool or saliva from an infected
person can transmit the virus.
Health officials said they are working with the Amish community to determine
who may have been exposed to the virus, and to encourage immunizations.
"We have been going house to house, talking with them about the risk,
offering the vaccine and attempting to collect specimens to see if the virus has
been spreading," Hull said. "Some families have said, `No, thank you, we do not
want to interact with you at all.' Other families have said, `Sure, we'll get
vaccinated. We'll provide specimens.'"
Without the community's cooperation, Hull said, there is a chance of an
outbreak similar to one that occurred in 1979 in Amish communities in Iowa,
Wisconsin, Missouri and Pennsylvania. Ten people were left paralyzed by the
disease, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.
The last naturally occurring case of polio in the United States was in 1979,
and health officials consider the disease eliminated in the Western Hemisphere.
It persists in other parts of the world, with the vast majority of cases
concentrated in India, Nigeria and Pakistan, according to the World Health
Organization.
According to the CDC, more than 95 percent of U.S. children are vaccinated
against polio by the time they enter school.
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