MEASLES - JAKARTA. In the past week, measles alerts have flooded official health feeds across three continents. On April 20, Rhode Island confirmed its first case of 2026. On the same day, Bangladesh launched a nationwide emergency measles-rubella vaccination drive. A day earlier, NSW Health in Australia warned Sydney residents about an imported case, while KTLA Los Angeles ran the headline: "CALIFORNIA SEES MOST MEASLES CASES IN 7 YEARS."
The social-media storm mirrors the numbers. The Pan American Health Organization (PAHO), in its Feb. 4 alert, logged 1,031 new cases in just the first three weeks of 2026 — a 43-fold jump from the same period in 2025.
For all of 2025, the Americas reported 14,891 confirmed cases and 29 deaths across 13 countries. The United States accounted for 2,242 cases, Canada for 5,436, and Mexico for 6,428. That’s 32 times higher than the 466 cases recorded in 2024.
Why measles spreads so fast
WHO describes measles as one of the world’s most contagious airborne diseases. It spreads when an infected person breathes, coughs or sneezes, and the virus can stay active in the air for up to two hours. One case can infect up to 18 others.
Symptoms appear 10–14 days after exposure. The first 4–7 days bring high fever, runny nose, cough, red watery eyes, and tiny white spots inside the cheeks (Koplik spots). A rash then starts on the face and neck 7–18 days after exposure, spreads downward over three days, and fades after 5–6 days.
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The real danger isn’t the rash
Most measles deaths come from complications: pneumonia, encephalitis (brain swelling), severe diarrhea, ear infections, and blindness. In 2024 alone, WHO estimates 95,000 people died from measles — mostly unvaccinated children under five.
There is no specific treatment. Care focuses on hydration, nutrition, and two doses of vitamin A to prevent eye damage.
Vaccination gap fuels the online fight
The measles vaccine has existed since 1963, costs less than US$1, and two doses provide lifelong protection. Vaccination has averted nearly 59 million deaths between 2000 and 2024.
Yet coverage is slipping. In 2024, only 84% of infants received a first dose (down from 86% in 2019), and 76% got both doses. About 30 million babies remained under-protected.
PAHO’s data shows 78% of confirmed cases with known status were unvaccinated. About 1.5 million children in the Americas received zero doses in 2024.
That gap is why comment sections explode. Gavi’s 2026 threat report notes that one in three young adults now trust social media more than doctors for vaccine advice. Common false claims — infertility, “toxic ingredients,” severe side effects — resurface under every official alert, from Rhode Island to Sydney.\
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The European CDC already listed measles as an active threat in its March 21–27 report, alongside dengue and avian flu.