March 1, 2025

What RFK Jr. has said about the ongoing measles outbreak – Vox.com

Since Donald Trump took office, the news cycle has hit a frenetic new pitch. The daily torrent of push alerts, breaking news, and viral outrages has been relentless — and exhausting. It’s hard to tell what is real and what’s just bluster. That’s why our attention is focused on helping you make sense of it all. We want to explain what truly matters and how to think about itWe rely on readers like you to fund our journalism. Will you support our work and become a Vox Member today?The new Health and Human Services secretary is facing one of his first public health crises. Will he blow up the typical protocol?by Dylan ScottIn early February, Texas health officials reported that measles was spreading among an insular religious community in Gaines County, Texas, where nearly 14 percent of schoolchildren have an exemption (granted in some states for reasons of conscience, including for religious beliefs) from the required childhood vaccinations. The disease has since been detected in a bordering New Mexico county. And this week, the case count grew to at least 146 people. Last year, the US saw 285 measles cases nationwide — the fourth-highest total since 2000. The outbreak has escalated just as the US’s foremost vaccine skeptic, Robert F. Kennedy Jr., has ascended as its top health care official. On February 26, the Texas health department reported the first death in the outbreak, an unvaccinated school-aged child.Kennedy promises to probe the safety of childhood vaccines, and in his first actions as the new US Health and Human Services (HHS) secretary, Kennedy has already put vaccine advisory meetings on indefinite hold. He has helped cultivate a culture of skepticism toward medical science as the most prominent voice promoting a debunked link between childhood vaccinations and autism and other health issues — a view that corresponds to the re-emergence of measles over the past decade.Kennedy is no longer an outside agitator but the government official ultimately responsible for squashing public health threats in the US. The outbreak will be the first big test case for how he will lead the US health department during an active public health emergency. On February 26, Kennedy made his first public comments about the outbreak, saying, “We are following the measles epidemic every day.” (He also indicated there had been two deaths, although the Texas health officials have still reported only one so far.)“It’s not unusual. We have measles outbreaks every year,” Kennedy said.That’s true — but this is an outbreak that, on its own, has accounted for more cases than the US sometimes sees in an entire year. Twenty-five years after the US declared the disease eradicated, measles is making a comeback.When there is a disease outbreak that requires government action (i.e., not your standard sniffles), local governments are the first responders. County officials are typically the first to receive reports of a disease spreading and they will start ramping up testing and other kinds of surveillance to assess the situation. That was what happened in Texas: One Gaines County school district reported the first measles to their local community in late January. Within a week, the Texas state government stepped up once the outbreak had climbed to six cases, and began providing support for the local response. That’s also typical: While local authorities are on the front line, the state provides technical expertise, they may offer funding for communication and interventions (such as vaccine drive-throughs), and they otherwise serve as the top authority on how the response should be handled. The feds usually stay in the background with an outbreak the size of the current measles occurrence. They can offer expert or laboratory support, for example. But otherwise, they are supporting players, unless the outbreak poses a unique threat to the rest of the nation or becomes a large multi-state crisis. For now, the current outbreak is limited to a small geographical region, and the states appear well aligned on how to respond. But it is possible that further spread could demand federal officials get more involved — a development that would be worth watching closely, given its new leadership.The outbreak was already underway before Kennedy was confirmed and, though it’s easy to forget after the pandemic, local authorities are taking the lead as they should. Texas health officials — and their counterparts in New Mexico, now that cases have begun to spread there — have set up mobile vaccination and testing sites, encouraging unvaccinated people to get their shots now. Because local officials are among the community they serve, they may be considered more trustworthy (and in turn they can ultimately be more effective).If those efforts are allowed to continue unencumbered, that will be a hopeful sign that the RFK Jr.-led health department will not actively sabotage public health efforts when there is an acute crisis underway. After some observers pointed out that the CDC measles tracker had not been with the new outbreak, the web page was refreshed on Friday with a pledge to continue updating it every Friday. So far, there is no sign that local officials have requested support from the federal government and been denied it.Not exactly. Such outbreaks are still relatively rare and, when they do occur, they usually stay localized. But America is trending in the wrong direction when it comes to this ancient disease, which can cause painful skin rashes and be deadly for young unvaccinated children.The US declared measles eliminated in 2000. But it has regained a foothold as vaccination rates have dropped. In 2019, there was the largest outbreak in decades when more than 1,200 people became ill, mostly in New York. Now more than 120 individuals are sick along the border of Texas and New Mexico — larger than any outbreak last year and it is still only February.Nationally, the measles vaccination rate has slipped just below the 95 percent target that experts say is necessary to maintain population-level immunity. In some states, the situation is more dire: 14 states had vaccination rates below 90 percent for the 2023–2024 school year, per the health policy think tank KFF. But in individual communities, rates can slip even lower, creating the right conditions for an outbreak to explode; measles, after all, is one of the most contagious diseases known to man. In the Gaines County school district most affected by the outbreak, the vaccination rate is under 50 percent.The vast majority of Americans still believe the measles vaccine is safe and effective, and its benefits outweigh any risks. But as our collective faith in science deteriorates, vaccination rates are also declining.Update, February 28, 10:10 am ET: This story, originally published on February 25, has been updated multiple times, most recently to include the latest numbers in the ongoing outbreak.Understand the world with a daily explainer plus the most compelling stories of the day, compiled by news editor Sean Collins.Winter lovers share their tips for making the most of the season.The neglected ways climate change is affecting our health, explained by Valley fever.Why other people’s approval is so intoxicating.One scientist tried to find out.DOGE, please go to sleep. For your health.Here’s what Trump gets right — and wrong — about the WHO.© 2025 Vox Media, LLC. 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Source: https://www.vox.com/health/401130/texas-new-mexico-measles-rfk-hhs-response

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