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Get Vaccinated or Stay Out of Disneyland: Officials

"We can expect to see many cases of this vaccine-preventable disease unless people take precautionary measures," Chavez said.

State and local disease detectives will be tracking down everyone who's been in contact with each and every case that is reported. "This could easily amount to hundreds of contacts for each case," said Kathleen Harriman, chief of the Vaccine Preventable Disease Epidemiology Section at California's Department of Public Health.

"We want to identify and isolate these cases very early on," Chavez added.

Five park employees are among the cases, and Disney is watching about 100 other employees who worked closely with them.

Measles has been just about eliminated in the United States by vaccination. Before the vaccine was available, measles made about 500,000 people sick in an average year, and it killed around 500 of them. Pneumonia is what kills most people who die but encephalitis, an inflammation of the brain, also can develop and kill patients.

"I want to stress at this time that measles is not a trivial illness," Chavez said. "Those of us who have cared for measles patients can attest to its potential severity."

Most U.S. outbreaks are linked to travel. Visitors to the U.S. do not have to show they've been vaccinated against measles, and unvaccinated Americans can travel abroad and bring the virus back with them. They can then infect others who haven't been vaccinated - including babies and people who refuse or cannot get the vaccine.

And as many as 5 percent of people who get vaccinated don't develop the full immune response needed. And immunity may have waned in others many years after vaccination.

Some people cannot be vaccinated because of allergies or because of legitimate religious objections. And babies too young to be vaccinated are very vulnerable. So doctors aim to create what's called herd immunity - if everyone who can be vaccinated gets vaccinated, the virus is far less likely to spread and infect those who are not.

"Measles is not a trivial illness."

What's helping fuel the regular U.S. outbreaks now are clusters of people who for other reasons have decided not be vaccinate themselves or their children. The virus can take hold and spread from these clusters.

"Vaccination is safe and effective," Chavez said. Doctors stress that there are almost no health concerns about the combined measles, mumps and rubella (MMR) vaccine. Study after study has proven the MMR vaccine does not cause autism, and there is no advantage to "spacing out" the vaccine over time. Kids should get two doses at 12 months and 15 months and adults who are not immune or not vaccinated should also get two doses spaces three months apart.

The vaccine can be given to people who have already been exposed to measles and it may prevent infections from taking hold, but it takes about two weeks to provide full immunity.

"It is really a bad combination when you have people that trivialize what can be a very dangerous illness and then, on bad information, decide that vaccines are unsafe," Chavez said.

The Associated Press contributed to this article

First published January 22 2015, 11:41 AM

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