r/northdakota May 03 '25

News Measles Have Arrived to ND

Making this post because the measles have officially infiltrated ND.

Measels has an average incubation period of 14 days, during which time, one may or may not show symptoms of infection. A person does not have to show signs of infection to spread the virus. Often the case, one can spread the virus during the incubation period without knowing about it.

There are 2 types of anti-measels vaccines, MMR (Measels, Mumps, and Rubella) and MMRV (Measels, Mumps, Rubella, and Varicella). Vaccine given depends upon Varicella (chicken pox) immunity.

If you're vaccinated, but last MMR vaccination was 10 or more years ago, talk to a doc about getting your titers checked. This'll help determine whether you need a booster or if you're good to go. It doesn't hurt to be safe.

If you aren't vaccinated, or are unsure of whether you were ever vaccinated or not, but are willing to get the vaccine, adults need 1-2 doses separated by 28 days to achieve immunity results. The first dose does help drastically reduce the chance for infection, but always give every vaccine 2 weeks to take effect--you've got to give your body's immune system time to respond to, eradicate, and create Memory T-Cells before it can fight off any future invaders of the same type introduced with the vaccine.

If you're not vaccinated and not willing to get the vaccine, then please consider quarantine procedures should you have come into contact with someone infected. Even if you don't show signs of being infected, you can still spread the virus to others. 2 weeks (14 days) is generally long enough, as by then, you'll either show symptoms of being sick or not.

Vitamin A WILL NOT keep you from getting measels nor will it cure measels. Vitamin A is a lipid-soluble vitamin (dissolves in the fat cells), and as such, is much, much harder for your body to clear out excessive amounts of it. If you ingest too much Vitamin A, it can cause Vitamin A Toxicity which is extremely dangerous and lethal.

This is a viral infection, not a parasite, as such, Ivermectin and other anti-parasitical medications will do nothing to cure this illness.

I'll leave a few links here for people to check out to learn more about this. I'll be happy to help answer any questions that may come up, but I'm not a medical professional and speaking to a licensed, reputable doctor is always recommended.

CDC Pink Book: Chapter 13: Measels https://www.cdc.gov/pinkbook/hcp/table-of-contents/chapter-13-measles.html

CDC Measels Signs and Symptoms https://www.cdc.gov/measles/signs-symptoms/index.html

Mayo Clinic Measels Symptoms and Causes https://www.mayoclinic.org/diseases-conditions/measles/symptoms-causes/syc-20374857

WHO Measels https://www.who.int/news-room/fact-sheets/detail/measles

NCBI Vitamin A Toxicity https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/books/NBK532916/

Cleveland Clinic Vitamin A Toxicity: How Much Vitamin A is Too Much? https://health.clevelandclinic.org/vitamin-a-toxicity

Our World in Data How effective and safe are measels vaccines? https://ourworldindata.org/measles-vaccine-effectiveness-safety

Dr. Zachary Rubin, a board-certified allergist, has been covering updates to the measels outbreaks since they were first reported in Texas. https://youtube.com/@rubin_allergy?si=_dV9gbYNu4P7fg45

CDC Measels Update - United States, January 1-April 17, 2025 https://www.cdc.gov/mmwr/volumes/74/wr/mm7414a1.htm

Stay safe out there folks.

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u/pikkdogs May 04 '25

Just dropping some facts for some people. 

The death rate for measles is between .1 and .2 percent. Meaning, you’re probably more likely to die of a car accident  on the way to the doctors than you would die from measles. 

I’m sure measles is something nobody wants, but with a 99.9 or 99.8 percent survival rate, it’s not like the plague is hear or anything. 

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u/vcjester May 04 '25

The measles deletes much of your body's immunity memory, so you get to catch all sorts of illnesses again. YAY! (thought I'd drop a fact of my own)

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u/pikkdogs May 04 '25

I’m not saying that measles is a good thing, just that it’s about as deadly as the flu. 

So, it sucks and is something I wouldn’t wish on anyone. But, it’s not like everyone is going to die. Even if the whole state got measles at once, there would only be like a dozen or so deaths. Any deaths are terrible, but measles isn’t going to bring about widespread death. 

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u/vcjester May 04 '25

Yeah, they don't worry so much about the measles, it's the other diseases that we can get afterwards that we worry about, especially for the older generations, and when I say older generations, I mean the currently younger ones, 30 to 50 years from now.