US Health and Human Services Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. still inspected the outbreak of Burdwan Ham on Sunday, a funeral for the second young child on the same day, who was not vaccinated and died of an ham -related illness.
Kennedy said in a social media post that he was working “under the outbreak” and went to Gains County to comfort the families buried with two young children. He was spotted outside the Menonite Church on Sunday afternoon where the funeral service was held, but he did not attend a nearby press conference in the United States to control and prevent the disease in the United States.
The seminol is the center of this outbreak, which began in the end of January and it is about to swell – there are only 500 cases in Texas, and the events of these outbreaks are believed to spread New Mexico, Oklahoma, Kansas and Mexico.
The Texas State Department of State Health Services said in a Sunday press release that the second young man was described on Thursday as “child physician Ham’s pulmonary failure” and died on Thursday because of the underlying health condition. Lubbock’s UMC Health System spokesman Aaron Davis said the child was “receiving treatment for ham complications while hospitalized.”
It is the death of the third familiar ham tied to this outbreak. One was another primary school-old child in Texas and the other was an adult in New Mexico; Both were not vaccinated.
This is the first visit to the region as the Health Secretary of Kennedy, where he said he had met with the families of both 6- and 8 years old. He said that he developed “bonds” with the Menonite community in West Texas where the virus is spreading mostly.
Earlier this year, an opposition advocate of a vaccine, Kennedy, resisted that the outbreak of Ham under his watch was worse for the vaccine before the nation’s top health secretary. On Sunday, he said in a long statement posted on X that it was “the most effective way to prevent the spread of ham”.
Ham, mamps and rubella vaccines have been used safely for more than 60 years and are 97% effective against ham after two doses.
Dr. Manisha Patel, manager of the CDC incident, said at a press conference on Sunday that MMR vaccine is the best way to protect Ham Ham. He also told parents in Gains County that it was important not to do “delay care” for a child who is ill in ham.
Patel said, “Call your doctor and make sure you are talking to a healthcare professional who can guide you to the next steps,” Patel said.
Kennedy’s Social Media Post says that CDC employees have “renewed”. CDC spokeswoman Jason McDonald made it clear on Sunday night that the first CDC team came out early in March to leave the Gains County on April 7, when a team led by Patel “was rebuilt and reached today to evaluate the requirements by Kennedy.”
Asked about the outbreak on journalists on Air Force One on Sunday, Trump said, “They are reporting,” adding that if this outbreak “is progressed, we need to take a very sight action.”
Their ham report issued on Friday does not include both the CDC or State Health Department death, but the CDC acknowledged it when asked on Sunday.
The number of Texas cases has increased from March 25 to April 1, and 5 16 people were admitted to the hospital. Nationwide, in the United States, the number of ham cases has doubled in the United States more than twice the number of ham cases.
From Republican US Sen Bill Cassidy Louisiana, a liver doctor whose vote assisted in the confirmation of Sich Kennedy, was asked for a strong message from Health Officer in a X -A post on Sunday.
“Everyone should be vaccinated! There is no treatment for ham. Hum has no profit,” he wrote. “Top health officials should say so unquestionable that B/4 another child dies.”
Cassidy requested Kennedy to appear in front of his health committee on Thursday, though Kennedy was not publicly confirmed whether he would participate.
A CDC spokesman mentioned the effects of the ham vaccine on Sunday but stopped calling people to get it. Exit the chronic public health message around the vaccine, the spokesperson called the decision “personal” and encouraged people to talk to their doctor. People should “notify the potential risks and benefits related to vaccines,” added the spokesperson.
Incorrect information about how to prevent and treat ham is preventing a strong public health reaction, including demand for vitamin A supplements that doctors, despite the warning of physicians, can be dangerous and the overall drug supporters who should be given under the orders and it may be too dangerous.
Physicians at Lubak’s contracting children’s hospital, where the first ham died, says they have treated less than 10 kids for liver issues from vitamin A toxins, which they were not fully vaccinated and found while running a routine lab test on children in Ham Ham. Chief Medical Officer Dr. Lara Johnson said patients had reported using Vitamin A to treat and prevent the virus.
Dr Peter Marx, a former vaccine chief of the Food and Drug Administration, says the responsibility of death depends on Kennedy and its staff. Marx was expelled from the FDA after a disagreement with Kennedy due to the safety of the vaccine.
In an interview on Sunday, the Associated Press told the Marx Associated Press, “This is a reflection of a perfect unnecessary death.” “These kids should be vaccinated – that’s how you prevent people from dying in the ham.”
Marx also said that he recently warned US senators that if the administration did not respond to the outbreak more aggressively, more deaths would occur.
Experts and local health officials are hoping that the outbreak will continue for several months if not a year. In Western Texas, a large majority of events are in uninterrupted people and children under the age of 17.
Several states face the outbreak of vaccine-resistable diseases-and nationwide childhood vaccination rates are decreasing-some fear that ham can spend its status in the United States because of the elimination of the disease.
Hum is a breathing virus that can survive in the air for up to two hours. According to the CDC, the 9 out of 10 people will find a virus in 9 people. The first shot is recommended for children between the ages of 12 to 15 months and the second is for the age of 4 to 6 years.
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Sitz reports from Washington. Photo journalist Annie Rice and Washington’s AP Reporter Mathew Perone contributed to the report in the Seminol of Texas.
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Associated Press Health and Science Department has received the support of the Science and Educational Media Group and Robert Wood Johnson Foundation of the Hughes Medical Institute. AP is the sole responsible for all content.
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