US hits grim measles milestone as nearly 1,000 cases are recorded in just TWO months

The US is closing in on a new measles milestone of 1,000 cases recorded over just the past two months.
The country has logged 982 measles cases so far this year, nearly four times the number at this time last year, 284. The total number of infections in 2025 reached 2,281, according to the CDC.
South Carolina has been the epicenter of the months-long outbreak. The South Carolina Department of Public Health has confirmed 979 cases of measles since the outbreak began in early October 2025. The state has recorded more than 800 cases in the past two months alone.
The ongoing measles outbreak nationwide that started last year has proven the largest since the disease was officially eliminated 26 years ago. At least 38 people with the virus have been hospitalized. According to the CDC, over 10 percent of measles infections in 2025 resulted in hospital care and the vast majority were children and teenagers.
Hospitalizations stem from the most life-threatening complications of measles, including pneumonia, respiratory failure and brain swelling, or encephalitis.
Encephalitis, which affects one in 1,000 measles patients and kills 20 percent of them, can lead to permanent intellectual disability or deafness and in some cases, turn fatal.
Florida is also seeing an uptick. Since the start of the year, the health department has confirmed 92 cases, 66 of them in Collier County, where the outbreak is largely centered at Ave Maria University, just outside Naples.
America is on the brink of losing the measles-elimination status it has maintained for 26 years, a designation that would officially mean the virus is once again spreading routinely within US borders between people.
Measles causes more than just a rash. It can lead to pneumonia, severe diarrhea, brain swelling (encephalitis) and permanent brain damage and it kills roughly 1 to 3 of every 1,000 children who become infected (stock)
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Many of the measles outbreaks raging across the country carried over to 2026 from last fall, at which point two children and one adult had died.
South Carolina health officials have confirmed six new measles cases since Friday, pushing the outbreak total to 979.
The CDC has a delay in reporting, resulting in numbers between state and national databases often differing.
Following South Carolina in the states with the most concerning ongoing outbreaks are Utah with 300 cases, Florida with 64, Arizona with 36 and Washington state with 24.
Measles is 97 percent preventable with two doses of the MMR vaccine. Even a single dose provides 93 percent protection that lasts for decades
But measles vaccination rates have been on the decline for years.
In the US, children receive the first dose of the measles, mumps, and rubella (MMR) vaccine between 12 and 15 months of age, and the second dose between four and six years old.
MMR vaccination rates among US kindergarteners have fallen below the 95 percent target needed to prevent measles outbreaks every year since the pandemic began.
That leaves roughly 286,000 kindergarteners unprotected. And the more unvaccinated children in a school, the greater the risk of an outbreak.
For the 2024-2025 school year, 39 states fell below the 95 percent threshold for widespread immunity, up from 28 before the pandemic.
South Carolina’s outbreak now stands at 973 total cases after adding 11 this week. The state leads the nation in 2026 with 632 cases since January. Meanwhile, the CDC has confirmed seven new outbreaks so far this year
The US has confirmed 982 measles cases in 2026 alone, threatening to strip the nation of the ‘eliminated’ status it has held since 2000
Sixteen states dropped below 90 percent, compared to just three in 2019-2020. Idaho reported the lowest rate at 78.5 percent, while Connecticut reported the highest at 98.2 percent.
Health officials in South Carolina said on Tuesday: ‘Vaccination continues to be the best way to prevent measles and stop this outbreak.’
Unlike some vaccines that mainly prevent severe illness, the measles shot is potent enough to stop most infections before they ever take hold.
Studies consistently show that when vaccinated people do get measles, their cases are far milder, and potentially less contagious, than those in unvaccinated individuals.
The latest data from the CDC shows that 94 percent of people infected with measles this year were not previously vaccinated.



