Nurse Tea
08/25/2025
ALABAMA DEPARTMENT OF PUBLIC HEALTH
The RSA Tower, 201 Monroe Street, P.O. Box 303017, Montgomery, AL 36130-3017
(334) 206-5300 • FAX (334) 206-5520 Web Site: alabamapublichealth.gov
NEWS RELEASE
ADPH announces first case of measles in Alabama since 2002; MMR vaccination is encouraged
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
CONTACT: Karen Landers, M.D., (334) 206-5300
The Alabama Department of Public Health (ADPH) was notified today that a child under 5 years of age living in North Alabama has been confirmed to have measles. The unvaccinated child contracted measles while traveling out of the United States.
The child did not attend daycare or school, and entities involved in the management and treatment of the patient have been notified. The siblings of the child have been vaccinated and have not had any symptoms of measles.
Chief Medical Officer Dr. Karen Landers reminds parents to make sure their children are up to date with their measles vaccinations. If exposed, unvaccinated people have a 90 percent chance of becoming infected, and infected people can spread the disease several days before becoming symptomatic.
Measles is a serious viral respiratory illness that lives in the nose and throat mucus of infected people. It spreads when people breathe in or have contact with virus-infected fluid and can pass through droplets sprayed into the air when someone with measles sneezes or coughs. Symptoms usually appear 7-14 days later.
Dr. Landers said, “Measles follows a pattern in which the child first develops fever, cough, runny nose, and watery/red eyes, then a rash develops. Persons can start spreading the virus up to four days before symptoms appear, and those with weak immune systems can spread the measles virus longer.”
No specific antiviral drug is available to treat measles. To help manage the symptoms, parents can ensure the child gets plenty of fluid and rest and give a non-aspirin fever medicine such as acetaminophen or ibuprofen. In some cases, measles can lead to other problems, such as ear infections, pneumonia, or encephalitis.
For most children, measles protection is part of the measles-mumps-rubella vaccine (MMR), or measles-mumps-rubella-varicella vaccine, given when children are 12 to 15 months old and again when they are 4 to 6 years old. The first MMR vaccine can be given to babies as young as 6 months of age if they will be traveling internationally or during an outbreak. Estimates of the effectiveness of the MMR vaccine are 99 percent in measles prevention after the second vaccination.
Vaccines are available at pediatricians’ offices or county health departments. Getting the MMR vaccine is much safer than getting the measles disease.
Parents should call a doctor immediately if they believe their child has measles or if their child has been around someone who has measles, especially if their child is an infant, is taking medication that suppresses the immune system, has tuberculosis, cancer or a disease that affects the immune system or has not received two doses of the measles vaccine.
To learn more about the measles vaccines, go to www.alabamapublichealth.gov/immunization/measles.html
Measles Disease | Alabama Department of Public Health (ADPH) With measles cases rising in the U.S. and worldwide, concern is growing among parents and health professionals. In a podcast, Measles in 2024: An Urgent Call to Action, Dr. David Kimberlin from UAB joins the Alabama Regional Center for Infection Prevention and Control to discuss what’s behind the ...
02/24/2025
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Here's a few facts about HIV stats in Alabama for the 3rd Quarter of 2024.
1. Ages 30- 39 has the largest percentage of hiv + cases at 30% followed by 25-29 at 19%, 20-24 at 17.5% and 40-49 yr olds at 17%.
2. Of those diagnosed with HIV 63% are black and 29% are white.
3. 76% are male and 24% are females.
4. Newly diagnosed cases in larger counties
Montgomery- 55
Lee(Auburn)- 14
Jefferson - 71
Mobile - 28
Huntsville- 36
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PO Box 201215
Montgomery, AL
36120