KTLA

Teen With Measles Who Visited Disneyland Resort, L.A.-Area Tourist Destinations May Have Exposed Visitors: Health Officials

A teenager was infected with measles when she visited Disneyland and Disney California Adventure theme parks earlier this month, as well as various tourist destinations in the Los Angeles area, possibly exposing other visitors to the contagious disease, Orange County health officials warned Friday.

The teen girl, who traveled internationally from New Zealand, visited popular tourist locations in Orange and Los Angeles counties from Aug. 11-15.

Anyone who may have visited those locations on the specified dates may be at risk of developing measles, officials said, and should monitor themselves for illness, fever or an unexplained rash from 7 to 21 days after exposure.

If any symptoms develop, the person should stay home, call their doctor immediately and review immunization records. If an infant was exposed, or if you are pregnant or have a weakened immune system, you should also contact a health care provider as soon as possible.

“The measles virus can remain in an environment for several hours, so when we list public exposure sites we take that into consideration. Individuals that were in those potential sites while that person was infection could be at risk of being exposed,” health officer Nichole Quick told KTLA. “Measles is very contagious, individuals who do not have immunity to measles, about 90 percent of them, will develop measles after being exposed.”

A Tustin woman in her 50s was diagnosed last week with West Nile virus fever, becoming the first person to contract the virus in Orange County this year, officials said. An Imperial County man died in early July after contracting the virus.

In Los Angeles County, there have been 16 cases of measles in residents in 2019.

Anyone with questions about measles or potential exposure to this case can call the HCA Health Referral Line at 1-800-564-8448.

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