Texas and New Mexico Face Largest Measles Outbreak in Decades
Nearly 100 cases have been reported, with low vaccination rates and federal leadership under scrutiny.
- The measles outbreak in rural West Texas and eastern New Mexico has infected at least 99 people, marking the largest outbreak in Texas in nearly 30 years.
- Low vaccination rates in affected areas, including a Texas county where less than 50% of schoolchildren are vaccinated, have facilitated the virus's rapid spread.
- Health officials in both states have launched public education campaigns and set up mobile vaccination and testing clinics to curb further infections.
- Measles, one of the most contagious diseases, can cause severe complications such as pneumonia, brain swelling, and death, particularly in unvaccinated children.
- The outbreak presents a critical test for newly appointed Health and Human Services Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr., a prominent vaccine skeptic, as federal involvement remains limited so far.























