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-Short Attention Span Theater- | ||
Polio strikes Arizona woman | ||
2006-02-05 | ||
![]() "This case highlights the previously unrecognized risk for paralytic polio among unvaccinated persons exposed to [oral polio vaccine] during travel abroad," the team of international, federal and state epidemiologists said. The authors noted that polio is rare in the United States because of the success of a universal childhood immunization and the Global Polio Eradication Initiative. The woman who contracted polio in Costa Rica had never been vaccinated against polio because of a religious exemption. The Costa Rican family with whom she lived included a mother, father and daughter with no young children. However, the couple's son and daughter-in-law, who had two children -- 2 months old and 3 years old -- lived next door and visited the host family frequently. The host couple's infant grandson received his first dose of oral polio vaccine on Jan. 19, 2005, just four days after the Arizona woman arrived. Contact with that baby was her only known exposure to the oral vaccine during her travels, the authors said. When she was transported to a Phoenix hospital, the woman had severe weakness in her lower extremities and was suffering respiratory failure. Magnetic resonance imaging showed abnormalities of the cervical and thoracic spine. The woman eventually recovered respiratory function and was sent home for out-patient therapy. But two months later, she still had residual weakness in both legs. As of late 2004, polio remained endemic in six countries -- Egypt, Afghanistan, India, Niger, Nigeria and Pakistan -- and transmission had been re-established in six other African countries. The Americas were certified as being polio-free in 1994. But unvaccinated U.S. travelers or those incompletely vaccinated could still be at risk in countries where the live-virus oral polio vaccine remains in use, the authors said.
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Posted by:lotp |
#5 When did they stop requiring polio vaccination? And why? To allow natural selection to work its magic. |
Posted by: Nimble Spemble 2006-02-05 21:15 |
#4 "The woman... had never been vaccinated against polio because of a religious exemption." |
Posted by: Darrell 2006-02-05 21:13 |
#3 Is this Arizona woman a native-born American? Because I thought our kids had to get all kinds of vaccinations to attend school. When did they stop requiring polio vaccination? And why? The disease is certainly not wiped out. |
Posted by: Barbara Skolaut 2006-02-05 21:09 |
#2 Health VS Religion I know of one young woman afflicted- it is no joy to have post polio syndrome. God accepts you in sickness and in health----look out for yourself -GET VACINATED. God will still accept you! Andrea |
Posted by: Andrea Jackson 2006-02-05 20:38 |
#1 This case highlights the previously unrecognized risk for paralytic polio among unvaccinated persons The risk is well know. I've referred to it several times here. Although such cases are normally mild. |
Posted by: phil_b 2006-02-05 16:41 |