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Earlier this year, a measles outbreak started in western Texas and spread into New Mexico. On March 20, there were 378 reported cases. As per the CDC’s latest update on April 17, there are now 800+ confirmed measles cases reported by more than 25 different states, which means that it more than doubled within a month. Also, key word: reported. We have no idea how many people have simply hedged their bets at home and not said anything. That’s pretty scary, actually.
Earlier reports listed these states grouped by geography. Now, they’re listed in alphabetical order, meaning that the outbreak has become too big to even easily keep track-of via map. We’re at the point that the US is at risk of losing its measles eliminations status (earned in 2000) by next January if we keep this rate up. To make matters even more frustrating, just about every case has occurred among unvaccinated individuals. The times, they are a-changin’.
Half of states in the US are now reporting measles cases, with the national total surpassing 800 cases so far this year, according to a CNN tally. Most of the cases are concentrated in a multistate outbreak involving Texas, New Mexico, Oklahoma and possibly Kansas that reached 709 cases Friday, according to state health department updates.
Texas has reported 597 outbreak-associated cases, New Mexico reported 63 cases, and Oklahoma reported 12 cases – nine confirmed and three probable – as of Friday. New Mexico and Oklahoma’s numbers have stayed the same since Tuesday.
Cases in Kansas, which the state health department says may be linked to the larger outbreak, have reached 37 as of Wednesday. Experts say these numbers are all a severe undercount because many cases are going unreported. The multistate outbreak has put 69 people in the hospital across Texas, New Mexico and Kansas, five more since Tuesday’s update.
Nationally, the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention reports that at least 85 people have been hospitalized, accounting for 11% of confirmed cases. CDC data shows that only 3% of cases this year have been reported in people who have gotten one or two doses of the measles-mumps-rubella (MMR) vaccine.
Local health officials are scrambling to increase vaccinations, especially in heavily undervaccinated communities. Clinics in Lubbock, Texas, near the epicenter of the outbreak, just expanded their hours.
These Lubbock clinics have administered 450 more doses of the measles-mumps-rubella (MMR) vaccine than typically would have been given by this time of year, Katherine Wells, director of Lubbock Public Health said this week. Two doses of the MMR vaccine are 97% effective against the measles virus.
Measles was declared eliminated in the United States in 2000. Experts warn that growing case numbers could threaten the country’s elimination status if spread of the outbreak continues.
“That … would happen after 12 months of ongoing circulation of the same sequence,” Dr. David Sugerman, a senior scientist at the CDC, said Tuesday at a meeting of the agency’s vaccine advisers.
That date would be around January 20, 2026, he said. Two children in Texas have died in the current multistate outbreak, and a third death in New Mexico is under investigation. They were all unvaccinated.
The World Health Organization said that cases in Mexico have also been linked to cases in Texas. Three cases in Colorado are being investigated for connection to the outbreak after two of the people traveled to Mexico. Another case was identified after a Pennsylvania resident traveled to Texas, though it is unclear what part of the state the person visited. In a news release last week, the Arkansas health department said that the second case of measles identified in the state this year was “exposed during out of state travel,” but no further details were provided.
Many cases in other states have been linked to international travel.
“Experts say these numbers are all a severe undercount because many cases are going unreported.” I have said since this outbreak started that the numbers we are hearing are only as good as what was being reported. We’re already at approx. 11% of confirmed cases nationally being hospitalized. It is bad enough that there are so many extreme members of our many American communities that are so rabidly against vaccination. This insane commitment to rugged individualism has caused many to lose the plot and forget that society is only as healthy as its most unhealthy member.
Since the election, I’ve been paying a lot of attention to the political posts on my local, non-political ‘mom groups’ on Facebook. About a month ago, there was definitely an uptick (more so than usual) in moms asking for advice on which pediatricians would take their kids without having to follow the vaccination schedule. Some mothers are open to doing a more spread-out schedule, but the majority have been so spooked by TikTok, Twitter, Instagram Live, etc, that they would literally rather risk their kids getting a deadly disease than vaccinate them.
Note by CB: If you’re in the US, you can schedule MMR boosters for you and your children at your local pharmacy such as CVS, Kroger or Walgreens. You do not need a prescription from your doctor. Vaccines are safe and effective.
Photo note by CB: Some photos are from an interview with parents in Texas who refuse to vaccinate their children. Their six-year-old daughter died of measles and they say it was God’s will. They won’t vaccinate their surviving children. This interview was conducted and promoted by a organization founded by HHS director Robert F. Kennedy, Jr.
WHY would you not vaccinate your children???? I get it if you’re an adult and you make that choice for yourself but these early years vaccines WORK. God help us.
I have a vax injured child who was immune compromised early in life. All these morons who refuse to vax regular childhood illnesses put kids w real health problems at risk. Sigh
How do you know if you need a booster? I got the vaccine as a kid and then I had to get a booster in college. It’s been 20 years since then. My daughter is 20 and got the MMR as a kid.
You can get a titer drawn, potentially without a doctor order depending on which state. It might not be covered by your insurance though, my bill for getting MMR & Hepatitis B titers done about 2 months ago was about $300 (went toward my deductible).
I’m 44, and a mom friend from school is the exact same age and works at a hospital. The hospital did her blood titer, and she only had immunity to rubella. I went to Walgreens and got an mmr within the week. It was free, I live in Dallas and it’s only a matter of time before it spreads here.
Don’t sleep on the DPT—Pertussis (Whooping Cough) is running rampant too. I got both shots at my CVS—easy, quick, insurance covered both shots.
As a doc, thus far everyone who had the vaccine previously who i have checked still has antibodies. It’s a very effective vaccine
Hi Dee,
Can you clarify something I read? I hear folks about 55+ had a different version of MMR vaccine – one shot, or maybe an inactive strain or something? – before they developed the 2-shot + booster method most people under ~55 would have received.
And therefore folks over 55 in particular should get a booster.
Does that track with your experience? Or in your experience everyone, regardless of age, has still had strong immunity?
Thanks for your thoughts on this!
You can get a titer done as others have said, but I skipped it and just scheduled the vaccine, since the titer would cost me money and the vaccine was free. I was born in the late 60s so I’m in the group that might not have received two doses as a child.
The pharmacist at Walgreens suggested just one vaccine for me at this point.
I can vouch for getting the shot at Walgreens. I got my MMR and my tetanus boosters there last month.
And by “people,” they mean “children.”
This is insane. It’s also a subject for which, traditionally, our First Ladies have been the strongest advocates. Abigail Adams required everyone working in the White House be vaccinated against small pox and while John was writing the Declaration of Independence, she was back home organizing neighborhood vaccination efforts. Eleanor Roosevelt promoted the Salk vaccine against polio. Rosalyn Carter started the Vaccinate Your Family program to vaccinate all kids by age 2. Jill Biden promoted Covid vaccines. Melania can’t be bothered
Some of these folks really want to go back to the 1890s, before modern medicine,— those halcyon days when a woman would have ten children and two or three would live to adulthood.
Gives women something better to do than excel academically and professionally.
Thanks Fancypants and Boxy Lady.
Michigan reported its first official outbreak in a town about 45 minutes from my house. These f*cking anti-vax morons are the reason we’ve been keeping our 11-month-old home, counting down the days until he can get his MMR on his 1st bday.
My youngest reacted poorly to the diphtheria, whooping cough, tetanus, polio shot about 15 years ago and we had to rush to the hospital with a swollen, screaming, floppy baby. They never found the reason, but we had to not vaccinate for one year to see if our kid could handle it when older. Thank goodness, yes! But at the time, a nasty combo of antivaxxers and an ineffective for whooping cough vaccine meant we lived in dread that our baby would wind up in the hospital or worse and we also avoided day care.
Good luck with the next few months, and I hope you’re able to successfully navigate this period, WordNerd!
And good luck to other parents in similar positions! It’s infuriating that something easily preventable is impossible due to fear and fake info.
Wordnerd, you can ask your pediatrician about getting an early shot. Our pediatrician has been posting on Facebook that they are making vaccines available to babies as young as 6 months because of the risk. I would think getting it a month early wouldn’t be a problem.
I recently got a measles booster (I’m in Texas and I’m in that age pocket of having only had one shot a zillion years ago) — I was chatting with one of my doctors about the measles outbreak and she told me her family went ahead and vaccinated their child before 12 months. Apparently the cheat code to get your pediatrician to ok it is to say you’re traveling.
I have to say one thing here — being anti-vaccination is not rugged individualism.
It’s just wildly selfish, and wildly ignorant.
/rant off
Yes and people also need to realize that public health is a national security issue. What this administration is doing both domestically and globally–by eviscerating programs and agencies intended to combat the spread of communicable diseases at home and abroad–makes our country and the rest of the world unsafe.
This used to be a thing is the US: preparedness and response to infectious outbreak. But now we just have a fascist dictator and a regime that quite literally wants to kill the middle class.
If we ever needed proof that ignorance and selfishness are communicable diseases, I think our current timeline has definitively provided it.
It’s really astonishing, not to mention terrifying, to watch what was once a deeply flawed but aspirational nation crumble under the weight of self-destruction.
My daughter recently received her 2nd MMR vax a bit early (In normal times, I would have waited until she turned 4 in August, which is the usual schedule). Her doctor said that was perfectly safe and effective. I am not messing around now that I know how stupid most of America is and that anti-vax Worm Brain is in charge of health.
I just got my MMR and TDaP last week. I was born in 1980 so I was of the generation that only got one and they’re now recommending two and I wanted to be covered in case that lunatic decides to remove approval. YMMV but it was really chill with no side effects other than being a little more fatigued than usual. You can get titers tested but that is money for a lab test and you can just get the vax for free.
THIS. ☝️☝️☝️💯
Folks, if you haven’t been vaccinated in over ten years, ask your doctor if there’s any reason you should not just go ahead and get a booster.
So much better safe than sorry!
Same! I got the MMR a few weeks ago and had no side effects. I usually have a sore arm from the flu and Covid vaccines but the MMR was nothing.
My husbands cousin got measles in the 70is when he was only three months old.
It developed to meningitis and he became deaf. Since they lived in the countryside there were no schools for deaf children so he was sent to a boarding school instead of growing up with his parents and siblings. So much could have been different for him if he wouldn’t have gotten the measles as such an early age. People don’t understand how bad measles can become.
I just heard this morning on the news that my state (Illinois) has had it’s first case in an adult in the southern (very maga for the most part – no surprise there) part of the state.
As a mother of an infant too young to be vaccinated, this outbreak terrifies me. I think we need to cancel our summer vacation plans as traveling with a 5 month old in a busy airport / crowded plane doesn’t sound safe at this point. I’m so mad at these idiots who aren’t vaccinating their children!!
I think they don’t do it early because babies have some immunity from the mother for the first few months. You can get the MMR vax at 6 months but then have to get it again at 1 year anyway, so I believe it’s only recommended if there’s an outbreak or you have plans to travel.
Vaccinations are important and you should definitely make sure yours is up to date, but one of the easiest ways to avoid getting measles is to start masking again if you’ve stopped. Measles is airborne and has an absolutely bonkers r naught.
Masking will also protect you from TB which has also been seeing larger than normal numbers this year.
So, to recap, we now have resurgences of measles, whooping cough, and TB.
I feel so badly for the kids who died and will never have the chance to grow up. I feel ZERO sympathy for their antivax parents. They deserve every second of grief they will suffer from losing a child. I hope it haunts them every minute for the rest of their ignorant, miserable lives.