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Making Microbes Great Again

  

Category:  Health, Science & Technology

Via:  bob-nelson  •  3 days ago  •  23 comments

By:   Paul Krugman

Making Microbes Great Again



The Texas measles outbreak is just the beginning


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The anti-vax movement is perhaps the most pertinent proof of MAGA's insanity.

The facts are clear: vaccines save lives. But vaccines are science, and for MAGA science is just a bunch of conspiracies.

So children must die. MAGA über alles!




S E E D E D   C O N T E N T


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Source: CDC

I'm almost certain that I had measles as a child. My memories are a bit vague, and unfortunately my parents, who would surely have remembered the incident, have passed on. But I was born in 1953, and grew up in an era when, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, "nearly all children got measles by the time they were 15 years old."

However, measles cases declined precipitously after 1963, when a vaccine was licensed. (My wife, born in 1959, never caught it.) By 1980 all states had laws requiring that children entering school be vaccinated, although most allowed exemptions for religious beliefs. Measles vaccines don't just protect the person vaccinated; by ensuring that very few children catch the disease, they also break potential chains of infection. So in 2000 the CDC declared measles in the United States eliminated.

But now there's a significant outbreak in Texas. Only 48 cases have been identified so far (13 of whom have been hospitalized), but officials believe that there are hundreds more that haven't been reported.

As far as I can tell, nobody following disease trends is surprised by this development, nor does anyone think it's a one-time event; this is probably just the first of many outbreaks of measles and other infectious diseases we thought had been eliminated.

The reason is simple. Measles was eliminated, for a while, because vaccination was near-universal. The "target" vaccination rate, sufficient to prevent community transmission, is 95 percent. But much of the nation has now fallen well below that target:

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Source: KFF

So the widespread return of measles was just a matter of time.

How did this happen? The answer, of course, is politics, specifically Republican politics.

As an illuminating article in Lancet notes, anti-vaccine activism was originally a fringe movement with a "natural-living, left-leaning base." Translation: it was more or less a hippie thing. In fact, you can still see some traces of those roots in Robert F. Kennedy Jr.'s incoherent views on health policy — views that unfortunately matter a lot now that he's in charge of the Department of Health and Human Services.

But the anti-vax movement became powerful and deadly when it took over much of the political right.

The groundwork for that takeover was laid in the Reagan years. Reagan wasn't specifically anti-vaccine. But he was anti-science — because, as I wrote recently, once you start rejecting scientific research that tells you things you don't want to hear, you're basically rejecting the whole scientific enterprise. And he also rejected the idea that the government can ever be a force for good.

So when it comes to childhood vaccinations, what you have is the government telling you that your children must get their shots, because that's what medical science says must be done. From right-wingers' point of view, that's a perfect storm of everything they hate.

And if evidence shows that vaccines and vaccine mandates work — if we went from a nation where almost every child caught measles to one in which the disease had effectively been eliminated — well, people who believe in looking at evidence are probably radical left-wing Marxists who hate America.

Which helps explain the perverse political reaction to what was, by any reasonable standard, one of medical science's greatest triumphs: the incredibly rapid development of vaccines against Covid-19.

What's especially perverse about the politics here is that Operation Warp Speed, the public-private partnership that helped accelerate the development and deployment of Covid-19 vaccines, was an initiative of, yes, the Trump administration. In a halfway rational world Trump would be claiming credit for the vaccines and crowing about their effectiveness.

For yes, they were effective — I'd say undeniably effective, except that what we've learned these past few years is that many people will deny what's right in front of their nose if it's inconvenient for their ideology.

How do we know that the vaccines were effective? There are multiple kinds of evidence, but the easiest one to explain is the fact that the United States inadvertently performed what researchers call a "natural experiment." Vaccination rates varied hugely across U.S. counties, and as the indefatigable Charles Gaba has showed, there was a strong negative relationship between vaccination rates and death rates:

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And why were there such large differences in vaccination rates? Covid vaccines became bound up with identity politics, with a strong negative correlation between the share of a county's votes that went for Trump and the willingness of its residents to get their shots:

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I can't resist posting one memorable Twitter exchange:

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Americans should have taken two big lessons from the Covid experience. First, scientists do know what they're talking about. Second, taking medical advice from people who reject science is bad for your health. In fact, it can kill you.

What happened instead was a hard turn by Republicans against vaccination. Only 26 percent of Republicans now say that childhood vaccinations are important; 31 percent say that they're more dangerous than the diseases they were designed to prevent.

Trump has just signed an executive order cutting off federal funds to schools that impose Covid-19 vaccine mandates — probably an illegal action, but does that even matter anymore? We have RFK Jr., a vaccine skeptic and conspiracy theorist, in charge of the nation's health system. And hostility to Covid vaccines has, um, infected attitudes toward vaccination in general — hence those declining rates of MMR (measles, mumps and rubella) vaccination and the Texas outbreak.

It's not clear how far this will go. So far the Trump administration appears to be singling out Covid-19 vaccines as a target, not vaccines in general. At the state level, however, things are going much further: Louisiana has announced that the state health department "will no longer promote mass vaccinations," while lawmakers in multiple states have been pushing to expand the range of vaccine exemptions.

Furthermore, the MAGA base doesn't seem to be making a distinction between Covid and other vaccines, and, again, RFK — whose anti-vax proselytizing helped fuel a measles outbreak in Samoa that infected 5700 people and killed 83, mostly children — is in charge of HHS.

So it seems to be a real possibility that the second Trump administration will go down in history for, among other things, making microbes great again.


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Bob Nelson
Professor Guide
1  seeder  Bob Nelson    3 days ago

Insanity.

Well... except for Clorox injections. That was a great idea.

 
 
 
Trout Giggles
Professor Principal
2  Trout Giggles    3 days ago

I was born in 62 but didn't receive the MMR until 1968 right before I started school. I did get the measles and the mumps when I was little

 
 
 
Greg Jones
Professor Participates
3  Greg Jones    3 days ago

The antivax contingent of the US population is statistically insignificant and tends to be woke liberals.

The efficacy of the Covid vaccine is still under debate. I have had all the shots starting 80 years ago including the military.

 
 
 
Jack_TX
Professor Quiet
3.1  Jack_TX  replied to  Greg Jones @3    3 days ago
The antivax contingent of the US population is statistically insignificant

It varies based on where you are.

and tends to be woke liberals.

Meh.  Religious nutjobs are a big part of this, which is why we're seeing this Texas outbreak.

The efficacy of the Covid vaccine is still under debate.

Is it?  I'm not sure the math backs that up.  

 
 
 
Ozzwald
Professor Quiet
3.1.1  Ozzwald  replied to  Jack_TX @3.1    3 days ago
Is it?  I'm not sure the math backs that up. 

It doesn't.  The debate is not in the medical field, the debate is purely politics.

 
 
 
Krishna
Professor Expert
3.2  Krishna  replied to  Greg Jones @3    3 days ago
The efficacy of the Covid vaccine is still under debate

If you spend enough time on social media sites, the efficacy of all vaccines is under debate!

 
 
 
Krishna
Professor Expert
3.2.1  Krishna  replied to  Krishna @3.2    3 days ago
If you spend enough time on social media sites, the efficacy of all vaccines is under debate!

And don't get me started re: what I've seen from The Flat Earthers!

 
 
 
Jack_TX
Professor Quiet
3.2.2  Jack_TX  replied to  Krishna @3.2.1    3 days ago
And don't get me started re: what I've seen from The Flat Earthers!

Have you ever actually met one?  I haven't, and I live in Texas.

I'm starting to think they're an urban legend.

 
 
 
Buzz of the Orient
Professor Expert
3.2.3  Buzz of the Orient  replied to  Krishna @3.2.1    3 days ago

Come on, Krishna, anyone who was a student in a school where this was hung in their classroom will KNOW the Earth is flat.

world-map-pictures-kihicpc5fpae3s6u.jpg

Doesn't it look flat to you?

 
 
 
shona1
Professor Quiet
3.2.4  shona1  replied to  Buzz of the Orient @3.2.3    3 days ago

Morning...our maps were different.

256

 
 
 
Buzz of the Orient
Professor Expert
3.2.5  Buzz of the Orient  replied to  shona1 @3.2.4    2 days ago

That's only because when you're south of the equator the North Pole gets heavier than the South Pole.

 
 
 
Nerm_L
Professor Expert
4  Nerm_L    3 days ago

I obtained natural immunity for measles, mumps, and chicken pox.  I may have received the vaccines anyway through our school vaccination program.  The medical orthodoxy 6 decades ago was extremely autocratic and not very transparent.  We did what we were told, when we were told.  Or else.

The vaccines we receive today are not the same as those used for clinical trials.  What we get are mass produced vaccines that have been distributed and stored.  We have no idea how the vaccines were produced, handled, or stored.  We only know the vaccines have been produced and sold for profit.  We don't know if any specific vaccine is being recommended for our health or for a medical practitioner's bottom line.  We could be injected with isotonic saline and never know the difference.

How far can we trust profit seeking, price gouging pharmaceutical manufacturers and medical practitioners?  

 
 
 
Tacos!
Professor Guide
4.1  Tacos!  replied to  Nerm_L @4    3 days ago
Or else.

Or else what?

The vaccines we receive today are not the same as those used for clinical trials.

What are you talking about?

What we get are mass produced vaccines that have been distributed and stored. 

Something wrong with that? Do you expect your doctor to just create the vaccine on the spot before injecting you? Virtually everything we consume has been mass produced, distributed, and stored. How is that a problem?

We could be injected with isotonic saline and never know the difference.

There’s something called the Center for Drug Evaluation and Research. The CDER is an arm of the FDA. They actually test medications after they’ve gone to market to make sure they’re authentic, safe, and effective, as advertised. Or at least, they used to do this. The way Trump and Musk are indiscriminately gutting the federal government, who knows how much longer this safeguard will function.

 
 
 
Ozzwald
Professor Quiet
4.1.1  Ozzwald  replied to  Tacos! @4.1    3 days ago
There’s something called the Center for Drug Evaluation and Research. The CDER is an arm of the FDA.

Didn't DOGE just fire all of them?

 
 
 
Krishna
Professor Expert
4.2  Krishna  replied to  Nerm_L @4    3 days ago
I obtained natural immunity for measles, mumps, and chicken pox.

And Shingles?

 
 
 
Nerm_L
Professor Expert
4.2.1  Nerm_L  replied to  Krishna @4.2    2 days ago
And Shingles?

Yup, shingles, too.  I was planning to be vaccinated but shingles doesn't care.

 
 
 
Robert in Ohio
Professor Guide
5  Robert in Ohio    3 days ago

Great article - thanks for sharing.

 
 
 
Jack_TX
Professor Quiet
6  Jack_TX    3 days ago
How did this happen? The answer, of course, is politics, specifically Republican politics.

Oh look.  Paul Krugman blaming something on Republicans.  Who saw that coming? 

Reagan wasn't specifically anti-vaccine. But he was anti-science 

Riiiiight.  The guy that funded systems to shoot down incoming missiles was "anti-science".   

Americans should have taken two big lessons from the Covid experience. First, scientists do know what they're talking about.

Let's ignore the fact that the CDC told us not to wear masks and Anthony Fauci told us Covid was spread by rubbing other people's spit in our eyes.  Scientists are in the business of learning.  They're not always right in the moment.

By 1980 all states had laws requiring that children entering school be vaccinated, although most allowed exemptions for religious beliefs.

For people like Mennonites?  Can't imagine.

Only 26 percent of Republicans now say that childhood vaccinations are important

Because you politicized the Covid vaccine, ignored the science, and tried to create a vaccine police state.

 
 
 
JBB
Professor Principal
6.1  JBB  replied to  Jack_TX @6    3 days ago

Now who is being over the top ridiculously hyperbolic? Developing vaccines was an accomplishment on par with the Moon landings. Before they were developed about half died before adulthood. Go walk through an old cemetery. In the 50s and 60s people were thrilled that their kids were lined up and vaccinated along with everyone else. I do not remember anyone calling Dwight Eisenhower a vaccine tyrant...

 
 
 
Jack_TX
Professor Quiet
6.1.1  Jack_TX  replied to  JBB @6.1    3 days ago
Now who is being over the top ridiculously hyperbolic?

To what, specifically, do you object?  

In the 50s and 60s people were thrilled that their kids were lined up an vaccinated along with everyone else.

Most people were thrilled.  People like Mennonites were not lining up for vaccines back then, either.  We've always had fringe religious groups and they always have fringe religious practices.  

I do not remember anyone calling Dwight Eisenhower a vaccine tyrant...

Ike didn't make them mandatory.  The only widespread mandatory vaccine at that time was smallpox, and only for children.  The vaccine cocktail (TB, diphtheria, polio, etc) we all took as kids started to become mandatory for school kids in the early 60's, and doesn't spread nationwide until about 1980.   That said, your point stands that almost all of our parents were adamant about us getting our shots.  

Ike didn't try to make adults show vaccine paperwork to drink in a bar or eat at a restaurant.  Ike also didn't ignore the very obvious math and science concerning the vaccines of his day, which were as close to the current covid vaccines as the Wright Flyer to the Saturn V rocket (to borrow a moon landing comparison). 

Ike was a soldier, and was not about to pander to fear for political gain.  

 
 
 
freepress
Freshman Silent
7  freepress    3 days ago

So many scarred children from measles. It's very hard to stop little ones from scratching the tiny red blisters and they frequently leave scars. Hard to believe that people are so hard hearted as to ignore the suffering of children.

 
 
 
Jack_TX
Professor Quiet
7.1  Jack_TX  replied to  freepress @7    3 days ago
Hard to believe that people are so hard hearted as to ignore the suffering of children.

Why would you think that's the case?  

 
 
 
Buzz of the Orient
Professor Expert
8  Buzz of the Orient    3 days ago

Unfortunately I got the measles around 80 years ago while my permanent teeth were forming so I have had problems with my teeth all my life.  Now there's a reason my teeth are no longer a problem. LOL

 
 

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