The US has surpassed 1,100 measles cases in two months. Expect more deaths next
Source: CNN Health
PUBLISHED Feb 27, 2026, 10:17 AM ET
The US has recorded more than 1,100 measles cases so far this year, according to data published Friday by the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Its a troubling milestone that has many in public health bracing for the worst.
According to the CDC, out of every 1,000 children who are infected with measles, one may develop encephalitis, which is a dangerous swelling of the brain. Up to 3 out of every 1,000 infected children will die.
The US is on track for another record-breaking year for measles: The number of measles cases reported in the first eight weeks of the year 1,136 as of February 26, according to CDC data is already six times more than typical for an entire year. A tracker from the Johns Hopkins University Center for Outbreak Response Innovation has tallied an even higher the annual case total than the CDC.
The current US trajectory for measles cases is disappointing and depressing and ominous, said Dr. William Schaffner, an infectious disease expert at Vanderbilt University Medical Center especially because there is a safe and highly effective vaccine available to protect against measles infection and its complications.
Read more: https://www.cnn.com/2026/02/27/health/measles-thousand-cases-deaths
twodogsbarking
(18,270 posts)C Moon
(13,576 posts)Multichromatic
(104 posts)C Moon
(13,576 posts)ShazzieB
(22,451 posts)I can't remember where I read this, but it's not exactly a state secret.
So he's evidently a big freaking hypocrite on top of being
Bengus81
(10,032 posts)After he called it a Democrat hoax and killing nearly a million people in a years time.
wiggs
(8,756 posts)BaronChocula
(4,351 posts)thanks to the Incompetent Incontinent Conman. Cuts to the World Health Organization meant cuts to Global Measles and Rubella Laboratory Network (GMRLN). As a result, measles is spreading worldwide. I actually feel worse for the children in need elsewhere.
FakeNoose
(41,126 posts)Since I grew up in the 1950s and early 60s - the height of the Baby Boom era - childhood diseases were a regular thing. Every schoolroom and neighborhood playground was crowded with kids. At the time it seemed we were all sharing germs with every other kid in the neighborhood. If anyone got chickenpox, we all got it eventually, and it was the same with measles.
But the big danger with measles was the high fever that accompanied the rashes and the itchy spots. My little brother must have been a toddler when one of the older sibs brought home the measles. His temperature spiked up to 104 degrees and Mom was terrified. The doctor told her over the phone to put my brother into a cold water bath and try to bring his temperature down. Bro wasn't happy about it, screamed the entire time, but that cold water bath worked. It brought his temperature back down after 15 minutes or so.
When the measles, mumps and chickenpox vaccines came out in the mid-60s, my Mom made sure we all got them.
LiberalArkie
(19,605 posts)The reason it is different then from now, is the neighborhoods and towns generally consisted of people from that town and vicinity. Their parents were from there. Their grandparents from there. Everyone had a general natural low level immunity to the various strains running around.
But now is different. People in neighborhoods, schools and towns come and go. People from around the world the world move in and out. All with different levels of immunities. I figured that out when I was young. A new guy moved in the neighborhood from ST. Louis. After his kid, a boy my age, started in the school, he got sick as a horse with the measles. No one else did. Later in the year we all got the mumps and he never had a sniffle.
Just different immunities. I think that is why measles is so dangerous now compared to before. The vaccine allowed people from different areas to live together without each other making the others sick.
That is just my thinking.
FakeNoose
(41,126 posts)Our "community medical knowledge network" has improved greatly since the 1950's. Neighborhoods used to be stable but now there are a lot of families moving in and out.
When I was a kid we didn't even know about the danger to pregnant women being exposed to measles. (It turns out that fetal exposure to measles is a big cause of birth defects, etc.) It seemed like so many young mothers were pregnant in those days, including my own Mom who eventually had 9 kids.
NickB79
(20,297 posts)It wipes out your acquired immunity from all previous diseases, leaving you susceptible to dozens of childhood diseases even if you once had immunity.
ShazzieB
(22,451 posts)I caught chickenpox in 1st grade, when it was going around at my school. Gave it to my sister who was a toddler at the time. Months later, I came down with measles (fortunately a mild case). I can't remember if I gave that to little sis, but I doubt it. At least I don't recall her being sick at the time, and I remember us both having chickenpox quite clearly.
I can't remember when my sister had rubella (we called it German measles back then), but I had it during my freshman year of high school during what I later learned was the last major outbreak of that disease in the U.S. prior to the vaccine coming out. Rubella is typically a mild disease, but if a pregnant woman catches it early in pregnancy, it is likely to cause miscarriage or very severe birth defects.
Neither of us ever had mumps (the 2d M In the MMR vaccine), and I've found myself wondering if I need to get that vaccine now that people are being advised by the federal freaking government to skip vaccinating their kids. Fortunately, I live in a blue state where people are less prone to being antiscience and the state has laws in place requiring vaccinations for kids to attend school.
Just one small correction to your comment: the chickenpox vaccine was not licensed for use in the U.S. until 1995 (although it was in use earlier in Japan). When my daughter was little, chickenpox epidemics were still a routine thing, and she caught it before the vaccine came out. It wouldn't have been a big deal, except that she gave it to her dad, who had somehow missed catching it as a kid, and it made him much, much sicker than it did her!
FakeNoose
(41,126 posts)About the mumps it's a different story. I grew up as the oldest of (eventually) 9 kids in my family. All of us kids got the mumps sooner or later, but my Dad who was born in 1925, never had the mumps as a kid.
So my Dad was at risk whenever one of us kids came home from school with mumps. The symptoms were usually slight fever and swollen neck glands for a few days. But for mature and post-adolescent men, the mumps meant painful swelling in the gonads and possible other complications (even infertility!)
My Dad had to run to the doctor for some kind of vaccine every time one of us kids got sick with mumps.
Bengus81
(10,032 posts)Someone should ask that POS about that one day and show us how it harmed him.
Jean Genie
(542 posts)As someone who got measles, got damn sick, but survived; who remembers all too well the death of a school friend's little sister from measles, whose heart leapt with joy when measles was theoretically eradicated when I was a teenager, who, as a parent, eagerly brought my own children to their pediatrician for their measles shots when they became available, I now ache for the poor fools who "do their own research," and come to the decision not to immunize their own children. That's all.
llmart
(17,513 posts)I was one of seven children who grew up in the 50's. When one of us got something it went right down the line. We were a poor family and I can only remember going to a doctor once or twice, one of the times being when I had the measles. I look back on that memory and now realize that they must have been extremely worried about me if they took me to the doctor. I remember that there was some information that said it could affect eyesight, so the doctor gave me some little cheap sunglasses to wear and told my mother that she should put me in a dark room with the shade pulled down when we got home which she did. I rarely got any individual attention since I was the fifth of seven kids, so I felt really special since my mother actually sat next to the bed and read me a story.
When my two children were little I was damned sure they would be vaccinated with every thing that was recommended. They didn't have the chicken pox vaccination yet, so they both got the chicken pox.
progressoid
(52,987 posts)At this rate, we're gonna break a record from the early 90's soon.
twodogsbarking
(18,270 posts)riversedge
(80,339 posts)BERNIE SANDERS: Do vaccines cause autism?
BHATTACHARYA: I do not believe that the measles vaccine causes autism
SANDERS: Nah. Uh uh. I didn't ask measles. Do vaccines cause autism?
BHATTACHARYA: I have not seen a study that suggests any single vaccine causes autism
Link to tweet
?s=20
riversedge
(80,339 posts)"Only very sick kids should die from measles"
No, Secretary Kennedy
NO child should die from measles.
Because there's a vaccine to prevent it.
Link to tweet
?s=20
calimary
(89,570 posts)Not to mention the SUPER-STUPID bastard who appointed him???
ananda
(34,726 posts)She got over it fine, but not everyone does.
Vaccines are good.
not fooled
(6,640 posts)--Ruth Ben-Ghiat, scholar of authoritarian regimes.
Also, the fascists want us to think that life is cheap, for a variety of reasons, including to diminish outrage when they kill us in the streets and societal pressure to spend money on healthcare for the masses.
Furity
(236 posts)markodochartaigh
(5,347 posts)median age, 53; percentage who voted for Trump, 66%; number of measles cases this year, 85 and counting (cases are reported one week in arrears and were up 17 last week alone). Availability of schadenfreude, the streets are paved with it.