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Katie Drummond: Get it Wow! We are in the midst of this outbreak that we have talked to the top. What happens now? Once the ham goes out of the outbreak, spread to a community, how do you hold something like this? Will the United States really need to control the outbreak of the United States?
Emily Mulin: Yes Ok, that’s a great question. We have seen the outbreak of ham before. You may think that Ham had a huge outbreak in 2019 that was centered in the Orthodox Jewish community in New York. It took these strategic boots based on the community, dealing with misinformation, providing culturally sensitive information about the benefits of MMR vaccine. Because again, there is no effective treatment for ham. It takes isolation, vaccination because clearly, we are watching these hams happen because of the decrease in the rate of vaccination nationwide. People are not trusting in vaccines right now. For ham, the rate of vaccination in a community needs to be very high to prevent the outbreak, 95 percent because it is so contagious. In the Gains County of Texas, which is mostly in most cases, the vaccine rate for kindergarten ham is 12 percent.
Katie Drummond: Wow!
Emily Mulin: That’s why we are seeing such a heavy density of the case there. However, in New Mexico, where most New Mexico incidents are occurring in Lee County, the ham vaccine rate is quite high, about 94 percent. But again it is a very contagious virus. We really need these rates up to about 95 percent. Post -ists say this is the true need for a community protection.
Katie Drummond: Just to underscore it for the last time. MMR vaccine, how effective is the vaccine in preventing the person’s ham?
Emily Mulin: A dose of vaccine is 93 percent effective against ham and two doses are 97 percent effective. This first dose is usually recommended for children from the age of 12 to 15 months. Then that second dose is usually given when a child is in four to six years.
Katie Drummond: Get it We are just talking about the weakest people in a community again, at risk of children, young children, ham contracts. Of course it seems that vaccines are better than cod liver oil, if I can say it. We’re going to take a short break. Thank you, Emily. When we come back, what to read in your ward today. Welcome back Valleyy. I am Katie Drummond, Wired Global Editorial Director. I joined Emily Mulin of the wired. Now, Emily, before I give up on you, I want to pitch in a story to you and our audience that everyone should read at Ward.com today, except the great stories we mentioned in this episode. This is a feature that we have expressed today by Lauren Smiley, the wired contributor. Lauren is an incredible journalist, an incredible narrative author. He dipped deep in Boeing. If you are already running all things with FAA and not already terrified at the air travel with Boeing in the past several years, this story will not feel better. I say that I take a lot of janux before I get on the flight. This story will make you feel more nervous about air travel protection. However, it is said through the eyes of a person who worked in Boeing for many years, Boeing production facilities, aircraft protection and often playing the alarm inside the company. Until he eventually left the company, and only then the horrific aircraft began to crash, seriously with the Boeing aircraft that he was actually responsible for production and manufacturing. This is about his journey as a whistle blower, and after leaving Boeing and whistle blower, he has actually become the center of how he died in the Boeing Aircraft accident. He has become a center for other whistle blowers who have come forward with harmful information about what’s going on inside the company. It is truly a man’s story, his name is Ed Pyarson and his mission that continues today as a serious missatops and misdeeds on behalf of Boeing which we enter the plane when we enter the plane affect all our protection. This is an incredible story. Again, it won’t feel good to you, but it is very, very well read. I strongly advise everyone to see it once. Emily, I think you actually said that you have read this story before today, so I suspect you agree with me.