ad
CURRENT

Measles outbreak worsens as Texas cases rise 20 pct in three days

1 Apr 2025, 7:24 AM
Measles outbreak worsens as Texas cases rise 20 pct in three days

SEMINOLE, April 1 — The Texas Health Department said on Friday that the number of measles cases in the state rose 20 per cent since its last report three days ago, as experts warn they expect the outbreak to further spread in coming weeks.

Texas now has 400 cases, the department said, 270 of which are in Gaines county, where the current measles outbreak started. Texas has reported two deaths from measles since this outbreak began.

New Mexico reported one additional case, bringing its total count to 44. Kansas and Oklahoma have also linked local outbreaks to the Texas cases.

The United States’ Centres for Disease Control and Prevention, whose data is one day behind the Texas and New Mexico report, said there were 483 confirmed measles cases as of March 27, a jump of 105 from a week earlier.

Infectious disease experts said the magnitude of the outbreak’s acceleration was uncertain, but it was clear that more cases would emerge. The number of US measles cases so far this year has already exceeded those reported for all of 2024.

Dr Sapna Singh, chief medical officer for Texas Children’s Paediatrics, said the worry is that cases are “still continuing active spread in those areas of outbreak that we’re not even catching”. She warned holiday gatherings and travel could seed more infections.

Experts have warned that declining US vaccination rates can make the population vulnerable to highly contagious measles.

The disease, which can be especially serious in young children, was considered eradicated in the US in 2000, but vaccination rates have since fallen, and just 80 per cent of those in the Texas county where the outbreak began were inoculated against measles, well below the 95 per cent needed for so-called herd immunity.

Dr Amesh Adalja, an infectious disease expert at the Johns Hopkins University Centre for Health Security, said he expects rates to rise in the next several weeks either because of the pace of infections or the pace of diagnosis as more resources are poured into that community.

“When you’re in a population that has low vaccination rates, and you’re dealing with a virus like measles, the general consensus is that this is going to take some time to quench and it’s going to continue to spread rapidly until that virus runs out of people to infect,” he said.

US Health Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr, who for years has sown doubts about the safety and efficacy of vaccines, has said curbing the Texas measles outbreak is a high priority, but stopped short of urging people to get vaccinated, despite decades of evidence that immunisation is the best protection against the measles virus.

This year, cases have been reported by 20 jurisdictions across the US: Alaska, California, Florida, Georgia, Kansas, Kentucky, Maryland, Michigan, Minnesota, New Jersey, New Mexico, New York City, New York State, Ohio, Pennsylvania, Rhode Island, Tennessee, Texas, Vermont and Washington.

As of March 26, Kansas had reported 23 cases, and according to the state health department, genetic sequencing showed the first case had an epidemiological link to Texas and New Mexico.

The Ohio Health Department said the state has identified 10 measles cases. Nine of those infections have been linked to the first case in the state who had contact with someone who had recently traveled internationally.

Dr William Schaffner, an infectious disease expert at the Vanderbilt University Medical Centre, said travel in and out of the affected community in West Texas means there will probably continue to be “daughter outbreaks” in neighboring areas.

“Each of those other little outbreaks, depending upon the communities in which they occur, could also spread,” he said.

— Reuters

Latest
MidRec
About Us

Media Selangor Sdn Bhd, a subsidiary of the Selangor State Government (MBI), is a government media agency. In addition to Selangorkini and SelangorTV, the company also publishes portals and newspapers in Mandarin, Tamil and English.