A Houston nurse is no longer employed after she posted on social
media about a young patient with measles, Texas Children’s Hospital said
Thursday. The nurse also made anti-vaccine comments, something that
alarms public health officials wary of anything that might feed the
small but vocal vaccine skeptic movement.
“A
patient treated at Texas Children’s Hospital West Campus tested
positive for measles. This is a highly contagious, vaccine-preventable
infection. We know vaccination is the best protection against measles,”
the hospital said in a statement.
“We were
also made aware that one of our nurses posted protected health
information regarding a patient on social media,” the hospital added.
"We take these matters very seriously, as the privacy and well-being of
our patients is always a top priority. After an internal investigation,
this individual is no longer with the organization.”
The hospital did not identify the nurse. A Facebook user who alerted
Texas Children’s to the post said she was shocked by what the nurse had
said, and copied a screenshot of it to the Texas Children’s Facebook
page.
“The kid was super sick. Sick enough
to be admitted to the ICU and he looked miserable,” the nurse posted to
an anti-vaccine Facebook page. But she said she still opposed vaccines.
This shocked Dr. David Persse, director of the Houston Health
Department. “She is one of the few people who has seen firsthand how
devastating these diseases can be, and she has still taken this position
against vaccines," Persse said in an interview.
He pointed out that many studies have established the safety of
vaccines, and that medical professionals should be educated about the
facts.
“You have a greater risk of being
struck by lightning than you do of having a serious adverse event to a
vaccine," Persse said.
Measles has been
eliminated in the United States through vaccination, but every year,
cases are imported from other countries. People who are not vaccinated
or who are incompletely vaccinated can become infected and carry the
virus with them. It will spread if there are pockets of other
unvaccinated people.
Europe is experiencing
its largest number of measles cases in a decade, and the Centers for
Disease Control and Prevention has notified travelers about the risks of
traveling to affected areas.
Persse said
his department is helping track everyone that the child might have been
in contact with while infectious. Measles is one of the most infectious
viruses known, and people can spread it before they begin showing
symptoms.
Measles killed nearly 90,000
people globally in 2016, according to the World Health Organization.
Nine out of 10 people who have not been vaccinated will develop an
infection if they are exposed to someone with the virus, and can even
become infected if they walk into a room where an infected person has
been.
So when a case of measles is identified, health officials work to track down anyone who could have been exposed.
“We got lucky this time,” Persse said. He said the child was not in
contact with many people other than his family before he was isolated in
the hospital.
The Facebook user who
revealed the nurse’s posts said she used an alias on social media and
did not wish to be identified for fear of retaliation by members of the
anti-vaccine movement, who often attack medical professionals when they
speak out about the safety of vaccines.
Her post was taken down on Thursday afternoon.
NBC News
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