Former Meals and Drug Administration (FDA) Commissioner Scott Gottlieb stated he’s “very concerned” in regards to the measles outbreak in Texas spreading.
Gottlieb joined CBS Information’s “Face the Nation” on Sunday, the place he was requested by host Margaret Brennan in regards to the outbreak within the South Plains area of Texas, which has left many youngsters contaminated.
He famous that he believes it “will spread.”
“There’s been 100 cases that have been identified so far,” Gottlieb stated. “There’s in all probability many greater than that.
“So, I think that this is going to get into the hundreds of cases and could take many months to try to fully snuff out,” he added.
The Texas Division of State Well being Providers confirmed not less than 90 circumstances of measles and stated 16 sufferers have been hospitalized. Simply 5 of the sufferers have been vaccinated.
The division stated there have been doubtless extra measles circumstances that aren’t but confirmed.
“When you have that kind of a concentration of measles within a community, it’s going to inevitably spread outside that community,” Gottlieb stated.
He famous that there are pockets of low vaccine charges for the extremely contagious illness in varied communities throughout the nation. The measles vaccine can also be below scrutiny from Division of Well being and Human Providers Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr.
There are considerations that Kennedy’s skepticism about vaccines will gas the politicization of the vaccine.
Gottlieb countered the argument in opposition to vaccines, noting the measles shot is “highly effective.”
“This is a very dangerous virus, and as I said, about 27 percent of the kids who have been infected in that West Texas outbreak and a New Mexico outbreak have been hospitalized,” he stated. “So this could be a quite serious illness with long-term consequences.”
Gottleib additionally famous that there may very well be financial impacts from the unfold of measles, as different nations may place the U.S. below a journey advisory.
“The risk to the United States right now is that a virus that has been largely extinguished from circulation in the U.S. could return and just continue to spread, even at a low level,” Gottlieb stated.