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Spend time at Logan's Terminal E last Saturday? Might want to start checking for measles symptoms if you don't know your vaccination status, state says

The state Department of Public Health reports an "international traveler" who passed through Logan Airport on his or her way from Dartmouth College to Amsterdam on June 22 "was present in public locations that could have resulted in exposure to other people."

The person's travels that day:

11:40 a.m. Dartmouth Coach bus line departure from Hanover, NH

Dartmouth College to Boston, MA arriving at Logan Airport (Boston, MA) at approximately 2:40 p.m.

2:40 p.m. to 8:40 p.m. Terminal E at Logan Airport, Boston, MA

Flight KLM6016 from Boston to Amsterdam departing from Gate E5

Measles, of course, is spread pretty easily, or as DPH says:

Measles is more easily spread than almost any other disease. The virus that causes measles lives in the nose and throat and is sprayed into the air when an infected person sneezes, coughs or talks. It can stay in the air for up to two hours. Other people nearby can then inhale the virus.

The department adds:

Those who were exposed and begin to develop symptoms of measles should call their healthcare provider before visiting an office, clinic, or emergency department. Visiting a healthcare facility may put others at risk and should be avoided. If you do need to visit a health care facility, please make sure to wear a mask to reduce possible transmission.

And so:

DPH urges all those who do not know their measles immunization status to get vaccinated with at least one dose of the Measles, Mumps, and Rubella (MMR) vaccine. Measles vaccine given within 72 hours of exposure may prevent measles disease, and vaccination beyond this window will provide protection from subsequent exposures. DPH, local health departments, and healthcare providers are working to contact individuals at high risk for exposure to this traveler. However, exposures on public transportation make identification of high-risk contacts challenging. Those exposed who do not have evidence of immunity to measles may be subject to quarantine for up to 21 days following the exposure.

Early symptoms of measles occur 10 days to two weeks after exposure and may resemble a cold (with fever, cough, runny nose, and red eyes) and a rash occurs on the skin two to four days after the initial symptoms develop. The rash usually appears first on the head and then moves downward. The rash typically lasts a few days and then disappears in the same order. People with measles may be contagious up to four days before the rash appears and for four days after the day the rash appears.

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Comments

Last Saturday was June 22.

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But yeah, stupid mistake fixed, thanks!

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36

Third world class.

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43

I mean, it's run by Republicans after all.

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The one where guns and viruses are uncontrolled, but only recently legalized weed? Where people act like a colorful bakery mural/sign is going to destroy the world and dimwit state legislators compete to ban rainbow flags?

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If you received vaccinations in Massachusetts, you can go to https://myvaxrecords.mass.gov/pages/Registration to find your most recent vaccinations, not limited to COVID boosters.

You can also request your MA vaccination records through your physician.

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37

although it includes every other shot that I can recall over the past few years -- Covid, flu, pneumonia, shingles, Tdap.

The physician group where I got the shot has since disbanded, so I don't have any good way to get it added to my state record.

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The state maintains a centralized system and vaccinators are supposed to report all doses. This has been in place for 20-30 years to support school mandates, but reporting in the early years was less complete for adults and for things like flu shots.

If your past doc reported the dose to the state, your current doc should be able to document your full record through the same system as they have a different interface and higher level of access. City and town public health also has access to the full set of records, given the school mandates.

I suspect the public access system only shows you about 5 years worth of shots. I'm seeing back to 2020 for mine, but my sons needed theirs for foreign travel and the full printouts went back decades.

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for instance, two Shingrix shots from 2019, a Tdap in 2019 and another in 2011.

It also lists a shot called "Hib, Unspecified" in 2011, which I don't remember getting, and don't even know what it is.

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A pneunomia that can become meningitis. Bad stuff.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Haemophilus_influenzae

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For the shots I’ve gotten in recent years at drugstores, clinics, etc there was usually a check box of whether you wanted the record reported to the state database. Some required opting in, some used a checkmark to opt out, and most interfaces would be easy to accidentally click opposite of what you wanted, especially if registering on a phone.

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which unfortunately closed a few months later.

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When I graduated junior college in the mid-70's I was told my transcripts, etc. were sent to another local college if I needed to access them later.

Can't/shouldn't medical records be available somewhere else if a medical office/institution closes? Just wondering...

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