A child has died in the Texas measles outbreak

A school-age child has died from measles in west Texas. The death of the child, who was not vaccinated for measles, was confirmed by state and local health officials and comes after weeks of a growing outbreak that spans Texas and New Mexico.

It’s the first reported U.S. death from the illness since 2015.

More than 130 people have been sickened with measles in the two states, most of them children under the age of 18.

The outbreak started in Gaines County in West Texas, which has a population of about 23,000. It has been home to a community of Mennonite ranchers since 1977 according to the Seminole, Texas chamber of commerce.
 
Measles is a very contagious respiratory disease that was declared to be eliminated from the U.S. in 2000 due to high rates of inoculation with the measles, mumps and rubella vaccine, known as the MMR shot.

Before vaccination became widely available in 1963, an estimated 400-500 people died from measles each year and 48,000 were hospitalized.

In the last five years or so, U.S. average school vaccination rates have fallen below 95% — which is the CDC’s recommended level for preventing outbreaks.

The vaccination rate is far lower, in pockets like the Texas county at the center of the current outbreak — where the rate has dropped to around 80%.

 

More than 20 dead after tornadoes sweep through Kentucky and Missouri

Powerful storms and tornadoes tore through several Midwestern and Southern states overnight Friday, leaving carnage and flattened buildings in their wake.

Opinion: A wealth of wisdom for a bargain price

NPR's Scott Simon reflects on the discovery that what Harvard University thought was a copy of the Magna Carta is actually an original.

Amid global competition for production business, Hollywood is hurting

Hollywood's plummeting film and TV production levels have studio executives and grassroots groups pushing for better incentives to keep business in California.

Bessemer residents want answers about a four-million-square-foot data center coming to their backyards

Residents in and around Bessemer are furious over Project Marvel, a plan to build a 4.5-million-square-foot data processing facility on 700 acres of wooded land. Public officials have been sworn to silence.

A Russian drone strike in northeastern Ukraine kills 9 people, officials say

The drone hit a bus evacuating civilians from a front-line area in Ukraine's northeastern Sumy region Saturday, hours after Moscow and Kyiv had held their first direct peace talks in years.

Trump’s DOJ focuses in on voter fraud, with a murky assist from DOGE

President Trump and his allies have long made false claims of widespread noncitizen voting. Now, as the GOP pursues new restrictions, experts worry isolated arrests will be used to push the new rules.

More Front Page Coverage