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nitpicker

(7,153 posts)
Tue Apr 30, 2019, 03:52 AM Apr 2019

(xpost) Doctors Say People Born In 1960s, 70s May Need Booster Shot As Over 700 Measles Cases Confir

https://baltimore.cbslocal.com/2019/04/29/measles-booster-shot-maryland/

Doctors Say People Born In 1960s, 70s May Need Booster Shot As Over 700 Measles Cases Confirmed In US

By Kelsey Kushner

April 29, 2019 at 9:54 pm

BALTIMORE (WJZ) — More than 700 cases of measles have been confirmed in the U.S.- and four of them are in Maryland. It’s the highest level in the U.S. since the disease was declared eliminated in 2000.

Now the question is whether or not people should be getting a booster shot or not.

Doctors said if someone has documentation showing they got two shots when they were younger- they should be safe from getting the contagious disease. It’s people who were vaccinated in the early-to-mid 60s that might want to think about getting one.
(snip)

Doctors said adults vaccinated against the virus as children may only be partially immune. “The people most at risk or the ones we worry about are the people born in the 60s-70s who might’ve gotten one shot and also between 1963 to 1968 we were giving a different measles shot that we know was not effective,” said Dr. Miriam Alexander, with LifeBridge Health.

Dr. Alexander said people born before 1989 may need a second booster shot because of the change in vaccine recommendations.
(snip)
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(xpost) Doctors Say People Born In 1960s, 70s May Need Booster Shot As Over 700 Measles Cases Confir (Original Post) nitpicker Apr 2019 OP
ssssssssshit uponit7771 Apr 2019 #1
I should probably get one. Jokerman Apr 2019 #2
What they need to do is check for the anti-bodies in a blood draw to see if they need the still_one Apr 2019 #3
What if you had the measles in the 60s? Can you get them again? KewlKat Apr 2019 #4
I had one form of the measles in the early '60s nuxvomica Apr 2019 #5
Geez ananda Apr 2019 #6
I was originally vaccinated in around 1964.. luvs2sing Apr 2019 #7

Jokerman

(3,518 posts)
2. I should probably get one.
Tue Apr 30, 2019, 06:44 AM
Apr 2019

I'm sure I had at least one shot as a kid but it was during the time period mentioned and I have no documentation.

As a school employee I was recently warned that if any cases were to occur in our school then all staff members will have to either provide proof of immunization or take a leave of absence.

still_one

(92,403 posts)
3. What they need to do is check for the anti-bodies in a blood draw to see if they need the
Tue Apr 30, 2019, 07:06 AM
Apr 2019

vaccine. That is the recommended approach, since we are dealing with a live vaccine

nuxvomica

(12,443 posts)
5. I had one form of the measles in the early '60s
Tue Apr 30, 2019, 08:14 AM
Apr 2019

I remember people saying there were two kinds: "German" and "hard" measles. I caught one, the "hard" one, which I well remember as I had the chickon pox at the same time so I had two kinds of rashes, and was vaccinated for the "German" one. This was my understanding as a five- or six-year-old. So I'm not sure whether I need a vaccination.

luvs2sing

(2,220 posts)
7. I was originally vaccinated in around 1964..
Tue Apr 30, 2019, 09:28 PM
Apr 2019

When I went to work at a hospital in 1997, they did titers and found I had lost immunity and needed to be revaccinated some 33 years later. It’s now 22 years later, and I’m wondering if I should get another one.

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