Several mumps cases confirmed at Texas ICE facility, health officials say

Health officials on Saturday confirmed seven mumps cases at a U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) facility in Houston.

The Houston Health Department said in a press release that the cases involved seven adults who were detained during their infectious period -- meaning there was no evidence that anyone outside the facility was infected.

“Since these individuals were isolated inside the facility during the period they were infectious, we do not anticipate these cases posing a threat to the community,” said Dr. David Persse, Houston’s local health authority and EMS medical director.

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Health officials are working with the ICE facility to control the transmission of the disease and provide on-site treatment.

The Houston Health Department describes mumps as a “vaccine-preventable contagious disease caused by a virus.”

Outbreaks of infectious illness have been very much in the news of late. For instance, a recent outbreak of the measles in the Northwest has reignited a debate over childhood vaccinations.

At least 44 people in Washington and Oregon have fallen ill in recent weeks with the extraordinarily contagious virus, which was eradicated in the U.S. in 2000 as a result of immunization but arrives periodically with overseas travelers.

Officials say that 37 of the confirmed cases were people who were not immunized and that the  majority of the cases were children under 10

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Nine out of 10 unvaccinated people who are exposed will get the disease. Someone who has no immunity can get sick up to three weeks after they have been exposed to the virus.

The Associated Press contributed to this report.

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