Texas Children's Hospital fires nurse who posted about boy with measles 2 1 of 2The nurse, who was dismissed from Texas Children...
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- 1 of 2The nurse, who was dismissed from Texas Children's Hospital in the Texas Medical Center, listed her job on Facebook as a pediatric ICU/ER nurse at the hospital.
- 2 of 2This file photo from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention shows cells infected with the measles.
A nurse at Texas Childrenâs Hospital has been fired after posting information on social media about a rare measles case in the city, hospital officials said Tuesday.
The hospital took the action four days after learning of the nurseâs posts on a Facebook page called Proud Parents of Unvaccinated Children. Her posts concerned a boy, between 1 and 3 years old, currently receiving treatment at the hospitalâs west campus in the Energy Corridor. He acquired measles ov erseas, the Houston health department has confirmed.
Texas Childrenâs would not provide information about where the boyâs family traveled, his precise age, or his condition.
âWe were made aware that one of our nurses posted protected health information regarding a patient on social media,â Texas Childrenâs said in a statement. âWe 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.â
A Texas Childrenâs spokesperson said the nurse was removed from patient care Friday, after hospital officials saw the posts and launched an investigation. The nurse, a self-described anti-vaxxer, posted to share âhow much worse (measles) was than what I expectedâ based o n the case.
The measles case is the first in Houston since 2013. The 2013 case involved a boy in the same age range who had not acquired the condition overseas.
Measles is a highly contagious, vaccine-preventable infectious disease caused by a virus. It is particularly dangerous, capable of causing serious neurological disorders and death, in infants and the developing fetus in pregnant women.
âIt can cause a devastating set of conditions in the very young,â said Dr. David Persse, health authority for the city of Houston. âThatâs why itâs so important to protect those at extremes of age, for everyone to be vaccinated.â
The vaccine is given in two doses, the first at 12 to 15 months of age and the second at 4 through 6 years of age. The boy being treated at Texas Childrenâs hadnât yet received his first dose before the family left the country, said Persse. Family members had been vaccinated.
The nurse, who on Facebook listed her job at Texas Childrenâs as a pediatric ICU/ER nurse, described the âroughâ experience seeing a child with measles for the first time.
âI think itâs easy for us non-vaxxers to make assumptions, but most of us have never and will never see one of these diseases,â she said in screenshots of the posts obtained by the Chronicle. âBy no means have I changed my vax stance, and I never will. But this poor kid was bad off and as a parent, I could see vaccinating out of fear.â
She said sheâll continue âalong my little non-vax journey with no regrets, but Iâll have definitely have compassion to those who vehemently vaccinate.â
Texas Childrenâs said the dismissal was bec ause the nurse posted protected health information, not because of her anti-vaccination views.
Over the past 10 years, Houston has averaged fewer than one reported case of measles per year, according to the health department. In Harris County overall, there were four cases, two each in 2013 and 2014.
Houstonâs MMR (measles, mumps and rubella) vaccination rate for children under 2 is 94.5 percent, better than the national rate of 91.1 percent and the Texas rate of 89.8 percent.
Texas Childrenâs reported the case to the Houston health department Monday. It is still being treated as a âsuspectedâ case of measles, pending verification from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.
Texas Childrenâs Hospital has contacted families of any other children who may have come in contact with the boy, according to a statement from the hospital.
Measles is spread through direct contact with discharge through the nose and mouth as well as coughing and sneezing. Common symptoms include fever, a runny nose, a hacking cough, red eyes with severe sensitivity to light and a distinctive rash.
In one of the posts, the nurse seemed to realize that she had overshared.
âSorry guys, I worked way too hard (and owe too much in student loans to jeopardize my license) so I deleted a lot of my responses,â she wrote. âI love my job, I love being in health care. I really want to keep info to a minimum and if/when this case makes news Iâll elaborate. Keep strong in your beliefs! We are all on this journey for a reason!â
The nurseâs Facebook page could not be found Tuesday.
samantha.ketterer@chron.com
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Source: Google News US Health | Netizen 24 United States
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