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Colorado's measles outbreak is over, and the weekly US case count continues to diminish

Colorado's measles outbreak is over, and the weekly US case count continues to diminish

Health officials in Colorado say the state's measles outbreak is over, and the U.S. added just 10 confirmed cases nationally in the last week.
Wednesday's national case count stood at 1,319, according to the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Earlier this month, the U.S. passed the total count for 2019, when the country almost lost its status of having eliminated measles.
A vast majority of this year's cases are from Texas, where a major outbreak raged through the late winter and spring. Other states with active outbreaks — which the CDC defines as three or more related cases — include Arizona, Georgia, Iowa, Kansas, Kentucky, Michigan, Missouri, Montana, New Mexico, Oklahoma and Utah.
There have been three deaths in the U.S. this year, and all were unvaccinated: two elementary school-aged children in West Texas and an adult in New Mexico.
North America has three other large outbreaks. The longest, in Ontario, Canada, has resulted in 2,276 cases from mid-October through July 15. The province logged its first death June 5 in a baby who got congenital measles but also had other preexisting conditions.
Another outbreak in Alberta, Canada, has sickened 1,472 as of Tuesday. And the Mexican state of Chihuahua had 3,296 measles cases and 10 deaths as of Tuesday, according to data from the state health ministry.
Measles is caused by a highly contagious virus that's airborne and spreads easily when an infected person breathes, sneezes or coughs. It is preventable through vaccines and has been considered eliminated from the U.S. since 2000.
How many measles cases are there in Texas?
Texas did not add any cases in the last week, coming in at 762 measles cases Tuesday across 36 counties, most of them in West Texas.
Throughout the outbreak, 99 people have been hospitalized. State health officials estimated less than 1% of cases — fewer than 10 — were actively infectious as of Tuesday.
Statewide, only Lamar County has ongoing measles transmission, officials said. In total, though, more than half of Texas' cases (414) have been in Gaines County, where the virus started spreading in a close-knit, undervaccinated Mennonite community.
The April 3 death in Texas was an 8-year-old child, according to Health Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. Local health officials said the child did not have underlying health conditions and died of 'what the child's doctor described as measles pulmonary failure.' A unvaccinated child with no underlying conditions died of measles in Texas in late February; Kennedy said the child was 6.
How many measles cases are there in New Mexico?
New Mexico also stayed steady at 95 measles cases on Tuesday.
Lea County has seen the most with 67, but Lea and six other counties no longer have active measles spread, officials said Tuesday.
An outbreak of 14 cases tied to a jail in Luna County remains active.
An unvaccinated adult died of measles-related illness March 6. The person did not seek medical care. Seven people have been hospitalized since the state's outbreak started.
How many cases are there in Oklahoma?
Oklahoma held steady a third week at 17 confirmed and three probable cases.
The state health department is not releasing which counties have cases, but no counties have recent public exposures.
How many cases are there in Arizona?
Arizona has four cases in Navajo County. They are linked to a single source, the county health department said June 9. All four were unvaccinated and had a history of recent international travel.
How many cases are there in Georgia?
Georgia has an outbreak of three cases in metro Atlanta, with the most recent infection confirmed June 18.
The state has confirmed six total cases in 2025. The remaining three are part of an unrelated outbreak from January.
How many cases are there in Iowa?
Iowa announced another measles case on Tuesday, bringing the state's total to eight in 2025. The state health department said the new case isn't linked to others in the state, and occurred in a person who was fully vaccinated.
An outbreak in eastern Johnson County involves four cases in members of the same household.
How many cases are there in Kansas?
Kansas was steady this week with 90 cases across 11 counties in the southwestern part of the state, with eight hospitalizations. All but three of the cases are connected, and most are in Gray County.
How many measles cases are there in Kentucky?
Kentucky has 13 cases this year.
Central Kentucky's outbreak rose to nine cases as of July 8. The cases are in Fayette County, which includes Lexington, and neighboring Woodford County.
How many cases are there in Michigan?
The state has had 18 cases total in 2025; eight are linked to outbreaks.
In northern Michigan, Grand Traverse County has an outbreak of four cases as of Wednesday. An earlier outbreak of four cases in Montcalm County was declared over on June 2.
How many cases are there in Missouri?
Missouri stayed steady with seven cases as of Wednesday.
Five cases are in southwestern Cedar County, and four of those are members of the same family. The fifth case is still under investigation, according to county health director Victoria Barker.
How many cases are there in Montana?
Montana added two measles cases this week for a total of 27. Cascade County confirmed its first case.
Seventeen were in Gallatin County, which is where the first cases showed up — Montana's first in 35 years. Flathead County has two cases, Yellowstone County had three and Hill County had four cases.
There are outbreaks in neighboring North Dakota and the Canadian provinces of Alberta, British Columbia and Saskatchewan.
How many cases are there in Utah?
Utah's measles case count rose by one to 11 as of Tuesday.
At least three of the cases are linked, the state health department said last week. State epidemiologist Dr. Leisha Nolen has said there are at least three different measles clusters in the state.
Where else is measles showing up in the U.S.?
Measles cases also have been reported this year in Alaska, Arkansas, California, District of Columbia, Florida, Hawaii, Louisiana, Maryland, Minnesota, Nebraska, New Jersey, New York, North Carolina, Oregon, Rhode Island, South Carolina, South Dakota, Vermont, Virginia, Washington and Wyoming.
Earlier outbreaks in Illinois, Indiana, North Dakota, Ohio, Pennsylvania and Tennessee are over.
Cases and outbreaks in the U.S. are frequently traced to someone who caught the disease abroad. The CDC said in May that more than twice as many measles have come from outside of the U.S. compared to May of last year. Most of those are in unvaccinated Americans returning home.
What do you need to know about the MMR vaccine?
The best way to avoid measles is to get the measles, mumps and rubella vaccine. The first shot is recommended for children between 12 and 15 months old and the second between 4 and 6 years old.
Getting another MMR shot as an adult is harmless if there are concerns about waning immunity, the CDC says. People who have documentation of receiving a live measles vaccine in the 1960s don't need to be revaccinated, but people who were immunized before 1968 with an ineffective vaccine made from 'killed' virus should be revaccinated with at least one dose, the agency said.
People who have documentation that they had measles are immune and those born before 1957 generally don't need the shots because so many children got measles back then that they have 'presumptive immunity.'
Measles has a harder time spreading through communities with high vaccination rates — above 95% — due to 'herd immunity.' But childhood vaccination rates have declined nationwide since the pandemic and more parents are claiming religious or personal conscience waivers to exempt their kids from required shots.
What are the symptoms of measles?
Measles first infects the respiratory tract, then spreads throughout the body, causing a high fever, runny nose, cough, red, watery eyes and a rash.
The rash generally appears three to five days after the first symptoms, beginning as flat red spots on the face and then spreading downward to the neck, trunk, arms, legs and feet. When the rash appears, the fever may spike over 104 degrees Fahrenheit, according to the CDC.
Most kids will recover from measles, but infection can lead to dangerous complications such as pneumonia, blindness, brain swelling and death.
How can you treat measles?
There's no specific treatment for measles, so doctors generally try to alleviate symptoms, prevent complications and keep patients comfortable.
___
The Associated Press Health and Science Department receives support from the Howard Hughes Medical Institute's Science and Educational Media Group and the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation. The AP is solely responsible for all content.
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What this Mennonite healthcare provider learned working during the measles outbreak
What this Mennonite healthcare provider learned working during the measles outbreak

CBC

time7 hours ago

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What this Mennonite healthcare provider learned working during the measles outbreak

The measles outbreak in southwestern Ontario has put the spotlight on vaccine hesitancy in some of the province's Mennonite communities in recent months. Public health units were dealing with hundreds of sick people, primarily children, this past spring, with the number of cases only recently dropping off in July. Southwestern Public Health, which covers an area with a large Mennonite community, translated material in Low German to try to educate people about the risk. Catalina Friesen is a personal support worker who was raised Mennonite in Mexico and moved to Canada with her family as a child. She's now a personal support worker with a mobile clinic that works with Mennonite families in the Aylmer area. She recently wrote an editorial for MacLean's magazine about her experience during the measles outbreak. Here's her conversation with London Morning guest host Travis Dolynny. This interview has been edited for clarity and length. Travis Dolynny: What did you see in your job when the measles outbreak started in the communities where you work? Catalina Friesen: There was a lot of fear within our clientele. They came to us with a lot of questions to see what they should do. So we tried our best to explain the benefits of the vaccines. TD: Did you have any idea how fast and how many people would be affected when the measles spread? CF: I had an idea that it would probably go quickly because of the hesitancy for the vaccines, but honestly, I didn't realize how many would get it so fast. TD: What were you thinking at the time? CF: I thought 'yikes,' let's see how we can help them. That's basically what we were trying to do. TD: How did you end up working in healthcare as a personal support worker? CF: I started because my grandmother was put in a nursing home and couldn't understand the language. My compassion just grew to try to help them out with translating. So when I started here at the Central Community Health Centre in St. Thomas, I was introduced to this program with the mobile unit, bringing it out to Aylmer. It just grew so fast. TD: How successful do you think you've been at earning the community's trust? CF: I will tell you it started with about 100 Mennonite community clients. We're now close to 700, and they're coming to us with a lot of questions. I would say we've been able to get about three-quarters of them to understand the importance of vaccines and actually get them vaccinated. TD: Can you give us a sense of how many people you knew who were infected? CF: I would say about 200 to 300 people that I talked to myself who came to the clinic. And just because of not wanting to vaccinate. Once I was able to help a lot of them understand that God has created doctors for the purpose of helping them, they would listen a little bit more.- Catalina Friesen, PSW​​​ TD: What were some of the barriers or challenges that you faced when working with people? CF: The biggest thing, obviously, is the language barrier. It's really hard for them to come to us, to come to any health professional, because of misunderstanding the diagnosis or misunderstanding what the big words are. When they learned that I was able to speak Low German, I was able to help them understand everything. We gained quite a few people that way. TD: Can you give us a sense of why there's vaccine hesitancy in some Mennonite communities? CF: The biggest thing is that they don't want to not trust God. So their faith has a lot to do with it. Once I was able to help a lot of them understand that God has created doctors for the purpose of helping them, they would listen a little bit more. TD: What lessons do you think you've learned working with Mennonite communities during this measles outbreak? CF: The biggest thing for us, my coworker and I, is to just get them to trust us. If they don't want to vaccinate, we respect that. Because they see that we respect their values, they start to really trust and understand that we're here to help them, not to hurt them. CF: Yes, we have. The biggest thing I'm doing now is I'm just trying to get them to come and do their vaccines early before fall comes around.

Addressing fear in Alberta's Mennonite community amid a measles outbreak
Addressing fear in Alberta's Mennonite community amid a measles outbreak

Winnipeg Free Press

time9 hours ago

  • Winnipeg Free Press

Addressing fear in Alberta's Mennonite community amid a measles outbreak

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The next step is taking that outstretched hand and placing knowledge into it. 'We can invite our families to start thinking from a different lens, or see things through a different lens, and maybe start to answer those questions.' MEASLES IN ALBERTA Health-care hesitancy is rooted in fear for many Low German-speaking Mennonites. Meggison would know. She remembers a public health nurse rolling into her Mexican hometown of Durango on horse-and-buggy with a cooler of vaccines. The nurse told Meggison's mother to line up her 12 children in the yard, asked for their ages, and immunized them, without explanation. 'She didn't know what had been given to her kids. She didn't have the language skills to ask the questions,' Meggison said about her mother, whose primary language was Low German. Her family moved from Durango to Ontario when she was four years old, returned to Mexico more than a decade later, and then to Alberta in 2001. 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There, 68 per cent of kids had one dose and 56 per cent had two doses of the measles vaccine by age two in 2024, according to the province's figures for southern Alberta. Local breakdowns for the age group show 40 per cent two-dose measles vaccine coverage in Lethbridge, 29 per cent in Taber, and 71 per cent in Medicine Hat. Dr. Joan Robinson, a pediatric infectious diseases physician in Edmonton, said the rest of the province is not much better off. Alberta has an average immunization of 80 per cent with one dose, and 68 per cent with two doses for two-year-olds. Robinson says Alberta's low vaccination rates are due to myriad of factors, including a broader mistrust in the health-care system and a public shift towards misinformation during the COVID-19 pandemic. She says people began getting information on immunizations on social media, rather than from medical experts, and began believing that vaccines are harmful. 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Got the sniffles? Here's what to know about summer colds, COVID-19 and more
Got the sniffles? Here's what to know about summer colds, COVID-19 and more

CTV News

time2 days ago

  • CTV News

Got the sniffles? Here's what to know about summer colds, COVID-19 and more

Summer heat, outdoor fun ... and cold and flu symptoms? The three may not go together in many people's minds: partly owing to common myths about germs and partly because many viruses really do have lower activity levels in the summer. But it is possible to get the sniffles — or worse — in the summer. U.S. federal data released Friday, for example, shows COVID-19 is trending up in many parts of the country, with emergency department visits up among people of all ages. Here's what to know about summer viruses. How much are colds and flu circulating right now? The number of people seeking medical care for three key illnesses — COVID-19, flu and respiratory syncytial virus, or RSV — is currently low, according to data from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Flu is trending down and RSV was steady this week. But COVID-19 is trending up in many mid-Atlantic, southeast, Southern and West Coast states. The expectation is that COVID-19 will eventually settle into a winter seasonal pattern like other coronaviruses, but the past few years have brought a late summer surge, said Dr. Dean Blumberg, chief of pediatric infectious diseases at University of California Davis Children's Hospital. Other viruses circulating this time of year include the one that causes 'hand, foot and mouth' disease — which has symptoms similar to a cold, plus sores and rashes — and norovirus, sometimes called the stomach flu. Do viruses spread less in the summer? Many viruses circulate seasonally, picking up as the weather cools in the fall and winter. So it's true that fewer people get stuffy noses and coughs in the summer — but cold weather itself does not cause colds. It's not just about seasonality. The other factor is our behavior, experts say. Nice weather means people are opening windows and gathering outside where it's harder for germs to spread. But respiratory viruses are still around. When the weather gets too hot and everyone heads inside for the air conditioning, doctors say they start seeing more sickness. In places where it gets really hot for a long time, summer can be cold season in its own right. 'I grew up on the East Coast and everybody gets sick in the winter,' said Dr. Frank LoVecchio, an emergency room doctor and Arizona State University researcher. 'A lot of people get sick in the summer here. Why is that? Because you spend more time indoors.' Should you get another COVID-19 booster now? For people who are otherwise healthy, timing is a key consideration to getting any vaccine. You want to get it a few weeks before that big trip or wedding, if that's the reason for getting boosted, doctors say. But, for most people, it may be worth waiting until the fall in anticipation of winter cases of COVID-19 really tick up. 'You want to be fully protected at the time that it's most important for you,' said Dr. Costi Sifri, of the University of Virginia Health System. People at higher risk of complications should always talk with their doctor about what is best for them, Sifri added. Older adults and those with weak immune systems may need more boosters than others, he said. Are more younger kids getting sick with COVID-19? Last week, the CDC noted emergency room visits among children younger than four were rising. That makes sense, Blumberg said, because many young kids are getting it for the first time or are unvaccinated. U.S. Health Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. said in May that the shots would no longer be recommended for healthy kids, a decision that health experts have said lacks scientific basis. The American Academy of Pediatrics still endorses COVID-19 shots for children older than six months. How else can I lower my risk? The same things that help prevent colds, flu and COVID any other time of the year work in the summer, doctors say. Spend time outside when you can, wash your hands, wear a mask. And if you're sick, stay home. The Associated Press Health and Science Department receives support from the Howard Hughes Medical Institute's Department of Science Education and the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation. The AP is solely responsible for all content. Devi Shastri, The Associated Press

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