South Carolina officials reported five additional cases of measles, and said that the quarantine of unvaccinated children is working to limit spread of the infectious disease.
The five new cases all appeared in people who were exposed at schools and have been quarantining at home, the South Carolina Department of Public Health said.
“The early quarantining as a result of their identified exposure is actually a successful public health outcome that shows how rapid containment efforts around known cases and quarantining those known to be exposed is highly effective in preventing community spread,” Dr. Linda Bell, South Carolina’s state epidemiologist, told reporters on a call on Oct. 15.
Of the 16 cases now confirmed, 12 are directly linked to the outbreak in Spartanburg County, according to Bell. None of the 16 patients had received the measles, mumps, rubella (MMR) vaccine, officials said.
The five new patients are known to have been in close contact with infected individuals in schools and started quarantining before they became infectious, officials said. It was not clear if all five patients were students.
Officials said previously that some 153 students had been told to quarantine for 21 days, the transmission period of measles, due to being unvaccinated and being exposed to measles at the two schools linked to measles cases in Spartanburg County.
That number was down to 139, officials said Wednesday.
The quarantine is a result of guidance from the state Department of Public Health and is voluntary, a spokesperson for the department told The Epoch Times via email.
The MMR vaccine is required for school attendance in South Carolina, although parents can obtain religious or medical exemptions for their children. Officials are encouraging people to receive the MMR vaccine if they have not. The CDC estimates one dose of the vaccine provides 93 percent protection against measles, and two doses confer 97 percent protection.
The vaccine can cause side effects, but Bell said the benefits outweigh the risks.
Some of the outbreaks, including the largest one, which was in Texas, have ended, while others, including one in Minnesota, have cropped up.







