Nationwide, the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) has confirmed 607 measles cases across 21 states this year
A second unvaccinated child has died from measles in Texas, as the United States confronts its worst outbreak of the disease in more than 30 years.
The school-aged child, with no underlying conditions,
died from complications while hospitalised, according to the University Medical
Center (UMC) Health System in Lubbock, a leading regional hospital and teaching
institution.
The death follows
another fatal pediatric case in Texas in February and an adult death in
neighbouring New Mexico in early March.
Nationwide, the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) has confirmed 607 measles cases across 21 states this year, more than double the total for all of 2023. Texas has reported 481 cases, the highest statewide tally in decades.
"If this trend continues, we may surpass the 2019 outbreak -- the worst in
nearly 30 years," Dr Peter Hotez, a leading vaccine expert at Baylor
College of Medicine, told PTI. "And what's tragic is that these deaths are
entirely preventable." Measles remains one of the most contagious
viruses globally, but it is vaccine-preventable. The CDC reports that 97% of
current US cases are among unvaccinated individuals or those with unknown
vaccine status.
"This is a
global wake-up call," Hotez warned. "Even wealthy nations are not
immune if vaccine misinformation and hesitancy are allowed to spread." The
US had declared measles eliminated in 2000, meaning there was no continuous
transmission for over a year. But experts warn that ongoing outbreaks could put
that status at risk.
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