Obama's Refugee Migration Responsible For SIX Eradicated Diseases Returned To United States
There are devastating
consequences to Barack Obama allowing thousands of refugees and illegals
into the United States without properly vetting them.
These six diseases were virtually eradicated in the United States and
until recently, most Americans believed these diseases were gone from
our shores for good.
According to
Pew Research,
the U.S. admitted 84,995 refugees in the fiscal year ending in
September 2016, the most in any year during the Obama administration. An additional 31,143 refugees have been admitted to the U.S. from Oct. 1 through Jan. 24, 2017.
Though refugee admissions has drastically dropped under President Trump’s proposal, the U.S. had been on pace to reach the
Obama administration’s goal of admitting 110,000 refugees in fiscal 2017, which would have been the highest number since 1994.
In fiscal 2016, the highest number of refugees from any nation came from the Democratic Republic of Congo.
The Congo accounted for 16,370 refugees followed by Syria (12,587),
Burma (aka Myanmar, with 12,347), Iraq (9,880) and Somalia (9,020). Over
the past decade, the largest numbers of refugees have come from Burma
(159,692) and Iraq (135,643).
Nearly 39,000 Muslim refugees entered the U.S. in fiscal 2016, the highest number on record, according to a Pew Research Center analysis of data from the
State Department’s Refugee Processing Center.
A politicized public health system, and
a rise in the subsidized migration into the United States, have
combined to reverse a century of progress.
The number of foreign-born residents of the country has increased by 31 million
in three decades, from 11 million in 1986 to 42 million in 2015.
Immigration to the United States during this period has come from Middle
Eastern, African, Asian, South American and Central American countries
where all these diseases are prevalent. The
extra 31 million have arrived in a number of ways: approximately 3
million are refugees, 11 million are illegal immigrants, and the
remainder are legal immigrants, asylees, and parolees.
Breitbart reports that the
returning diseases are:
- Tuberculosis
- Measles
- Whooping Cough
- Mumps
- Scarlet Fever
- Bubonic Plague
Tuberculosis
The number of communicable TB cases, dubbed active TB,
increased by 1.7 percent to 9,563 in 2015, after 23 years of steady decline in the United States.
Medical experts agree that this increase is attributable to the
dramatic increase in the number of foreign born residents of the country
over the past three decades.
In 1986, 22 percent of the 22,000 active TB cases in the U.S. were foreign born. By
2015, 66 percent of the 9,563 active TB cases were foreign born—
a tripling.
The number of active cases of TB among native-born Americans declined
from 17,000 in 1986, down to just over 3,200 in 2015. At the same time,
the number of foreign born cases increased from 5,000 to a little over
6,300.
Refugees are arriving in the United States with active TB. As Breitbart News
recently reported,
the number of refugees who have arrived with active TB over the past
five years is huge: 21 in Louisiana, ten in Colorado, eleven in Florida,
four in Indiana, eleven in Florida, and nine in one county in Kentucky.
Refugees are also arriving with high rates of non-communicable ‘latent TB’ infection (LTBI):
35 percent in Vermont, 27 percent in Tennessee, 26 percent in Indiana,
22 percent in Minnesota, 15 percent in Texas, and 12 percent in
California. A large number of people with latent TB gradually acquire
active or communicable TB.
A recent
UC San Diego study
concluded that high rates of LTBI among recently resettled refugees
poses a health risk to the local community and general public.
Measles
“
In 2014, the United States experienced a record number of measles cases,
with 667 cases from 27 states reported to CDC’s National Center for
Immunization and Respiratory Diseases (NCIRD); this is the greatest
number of cases since
measles elimination was documented in the U.S. in 2000,” the Centers for Disease Control (CDC)
reports. (emphasis added)
It’s not been much better since then. “From January 2 to May 21,
2016, 19 people from 9 states (Arizona, California, Georgia, Hawaii,
Illinois, Massachusetts, Minnesota, Tennessee, and Texas) were reported
to have measles.
In 2015, 189 people from 24 states and the District of Columbia were reported to have measles,” the CDC adds.
“The majority of people who got measles were unvaccinated,” the CDC
notes, adding that “[m]easles is still common in many parts of the world
including some countries in Europe, Asia, the Pacific, and Africa.”
In 2015, a woman in Washington State
died of measles, the first death from measles in the United States since 2003.
Refugees are not required to have vaccines, including the critical
MMR vaccine, which protects against measles, mumps, and
rubella: “Refugees, unlike most immigrant populations, are not required
to have any vaccinations [including the critical MMR vaccine] before
arrival in the United States,” the CDC
reports.
At least one outbreak of measles in the United States in 2016 raises
the question of whether an unvaccinated refugee was the original person
who transmitted the disease. “The first reported case of a person with
measles in the recent Memphis outbreak, which now numbers seven
confirmed cases, was at a local mosque on April 15, according to the
Shelby County Health Department,” Breitbart News
reported recently.:
“Dr. Alisa Haushalter, Director of the Shelby County Health
Department … acknowledged, however, that the measles outbreak could have
originated with an unvaccinated for measles adult or child brought to
Tennessee under the federal refugee resettlement program, something she
called “a possibility amongst many”
There had been no reported cases of measles in Shelby County for the
previous 24 months, according to a spokesperson for the Tennessee
Department of Health. “There have been nine previous cases of measles in
the entire state of Tennessee in the past 12 years,” WREG reported. . .
The prevalence of communicable disease among refugee populations is
well documented. In January 2016, for instance, a severe outbreak of
measles occurred in a refugee camp in Calais, France.
Whooping Cough
“Pertussis, a respiratory illness commonly known as whooping cough,
is a very contagious disease caused by a type of bacteria called
Bordetella pertussis. These bacteria attach to the cilia (tiny,
hair-like extensions) that line part of the upper respiratory system.
The bacteria release toxins (poisons), which damage the cilia and cause
airways to swell,” the CDC
reports.
In 1926, there were over
200,000 cases of whooping cough (pertussis) reported in the United States.
Half a century later, the disease had been virtually eradicated here, and only
1,010 cases were reported in 1976.
But a decade later, in 1986, the number of reported cases had crept back up
over 4,000. Now,
in 2014, the reported number of cases have increased to 32,971, more than thirty times the number of cases reported just four decades earlier.
“Following the introduction of pertussis vaccines in the 1940s when
case counts frequently exceeded 100,000 cases per year, reports declined
dramatically to fewer than 10,000 by 1965,” the CDC
notes.
“During the 1980s pertussis reports began increasing gradually, and
by 2014 more than 32,000 cases were reported nationwide,” the CDC
admits, but fails to point out the simultaneous quadrupling of foreign-born residents of the United States.
Mumps
“Once a common illness among children and young adults, cases of
mumps in the US have dropped by 99% since a vaccine was introduced in
1967,”Health.com
reports:
“But occurrences crop up, particularly among close-knit communities.
The CDC reports that there have been 688 reported cases of mumps in the US in 2015,
including small outbreaks at universities in Pennsylvania, Iowa, and
Wisconsin. In 2014, there was a mini-outbreak among professional hockey
players,” Health.com
reports.
The only way to prevent the mumps (aside from avoiding people with
it) is to get the MMR (measles-mumps-rubella) vaccine. Though usually
administered to kids, you can get the vaccine at any time. It’s not
foolproof (two doses are 88% effective at preventing the disease, per
the CDC), and its protection can wear off over time, but it’s vastly
better to get the shot than not. Booster doses are often recommended
during outbreaks.
As noted, refugees are not required to have the MMR vaccine that prevents mumps.
Scarlet Fever
“Largely forgotten over the past century thanks to the rise of
antibiotics … scarlet fever … [has been making a]comeback in Asia (with
more than 5,000 cases over the past five years in Hong Kong and 100,000
in China) and the United Kingdom (roughly 12,000 cases over the past
year),” Health.com
reports.
It is a serious disease that mainly affects children, as the CDC
notes:
Scarlet fever – or scarlatina – is a bacterial infection caused by
group AStreptococcus or “group A strep.” This illness affects a small
percentage of people who have strep throat or, less commonly,
streptococcal skin infections. Scarlet fever is treatable with
antibiotics and usually is a mild illness, but it needs to be treated to
prevent rare but serious long-term health problems. Treatment with
antibiotics also helps clear up symptoms faster and reduces spread to
other people.
Although anyone can get scarlet fever, it usually affects children
between 5 and 15 years old. The classic symptom of the disease is a
certain type of red rash that feels rough, like sandpaper.
Bubonic Plague
The United States experienced a significant outbreak of bubonic
plague in San Francisco during the first decade of the 20th century.
This outbreak was much smaller than those in China and India just a few
years earlier, but was frightening to many Americans. As PBS
reported:
In the summer of 1899, a ship sailing from Hong Kong to San Francisco
had had two cases of plague on board. Because of this, although no
passengers were ill when the ship reached San Franscisco, it was to be
quarantined on Angel Island. When the boat was searched, 11 stowaways
were found — the next day two were missing. Their bodies were later
found in the Bay, and autopsy showed they contained plague bacilli.
Despite this scare, there was no immediate outbreak of disease. But rats
from the ship probably had something to do with the epidemic that hit
San Francisco nine months later.
If you “think this notorious killer died with the Middle Ages,”
think again. “The
disease actually persists in parts of Africa, Asia, and South America.
And there have been 16 reported cases of plague, with four deaths, in
the United States this past year. Most recently, a 16-year-old girl from
Oregon was sickened and hospitalized after apparently being bitten by a
flea on a hunting trip,” as Health.com
reported recently.:
You can get plague from fleas that have carried the Yersinia
pestis bacteria from an infected rodent, or by handling an infected
animal, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention
(CDC). Bubonic plague is the most common form in the U.S., while
pneumonic plague (affecting the lungs) and septicemic plague (affecting
the blood) are less prevalent but more serious. Symptoms of bubonic
plague include fever, chills, headache, and swollen lymph glands.
These six “comeback” diseases are not the only ones of concern to America’s public health.
A number of other diseases, some of which are prevalent among foreign
born residents of the United States and foreign visitors, also present a
current problem, to varying degrees, including zika, flesh eating
parasites—cutaneous leishmaniasis, ebola, leprosy, intestinal parasites,
HIV, scabies, and diptheria.