Measles Outbreak Cases Cross 100 Mark In US, Australia Sees Sudden Surge Of The Infectious Disease

Updated Feb 23, 2025 | 11:46 AM IST

SummaryMeasles continues to create havoc with over 100 people infected in US. New health guidelines and advisories are being issued to ensure people remain safe and vigilant.
(Credit-Canva)

(Credit-Canva)

The current measles outbreak has gripped US states like Texas and New Mexico leaving people worried whether it would become a new pandemic. According to the Texas Department of State Health Services as of February 21, 90 cases were diagnosed in the last month in the South Plains area, with at least 77 of them were reported in children and teens under 17.

Measles is highly contagious and can be deadly. The outbreak, which started spreading in late January, has resulted in multiple hospitalizations, with at least nine confirmed cases and three probable cases as of early February. Health officials caution that at least one in five infected individuals will have to be hospitalized, highlighting the severity of the situation.

Misinformation surrounding vaccines and with the new Trump administration anti-vaccine campaigs, has causing parents to hesitate or refuse vaccination.

Furthermore, the country down under Australia is also witnessing a surge in measles cases as health officials in Sydney have issued an urgent alert, urging residents to watch for measles symptoms after an infected individual visited several places in Sydney over the last seven days.

Authorities report that the traveller had returned from South East Asia where there are ongoing outbreaks of measles.

What Are The Symptoms Measles?

Key symptoms of measles include fever, a runny nose, sore eyes, and a cough. Typically, a red, blotchy rash appears three to four days later, spreading from the head down to the body. Symptoms can manifest between 7 and 18 days after exposure.

Anyone who experiences these symptoms after potential exposure should immediately contact their doctor or emergency department. It is crucial to call ahead before visiting to avoid potentially exposing others in the waiting room. Dr. Selvey also highlighted that ongoing measles outbreaks are occurring in various parts of the world, making awareness and prompt action essential.

Why It Is Important To Get Vaccinated?

According to CDC everyone should get the MMR vaccine. It protects you from measles, mumps, and rubella. Getting vaccinated helps stop these diseases from spreading. There are two safe MMR vaccines available. They work the same way, so it doesn't matter which one you get. Kids can also get a shot that protects against chickenpox too, but this is only for children.

Who Should Get Vaccinated?

Kids Need Two Shots

All children should get two MMR shots. The first shot should be given when they are between 12 and 15 months old. The second shot should be given when they are between 4 and 6 years old. If needed, the second shot can be given earlier, but it must be at least 28 days after the first shot.

College Students Need to Be Protected

Students going to college or other schools after high school, need two shots if they are not already immune. The shots must be at least 28 days apart.

Adults Need at Least One Shot

Most adults need at least one MMR shot. Some adults need two shots, especially those who work in healthcare, travel a lot, or go to college. These people should get two shots, with 28 days between them.

Travelers Need to Be Extra Careful

Anyone traveling to other countries should make sure they are protected. Babies 6 to 11 months old should get one shot before traveling. Kids 12 months and older, teens, and adults need two shots, with 28 days between them.

Healthcare Workers Must Be Immune

People who work in healthcare should have proof that they are immune to measles, mumps, and rubella. If they are not immune, they need two MMR shots, spaced 28 days apart.

Women Thinking About Having Babies

Women who might get pregnant should talk to their doctor about the MMR vaccine. It's safe to get the shot while breastfeeding.

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US CDC Study Showcasing COVID Vaccine Benefits Blocked From Publication

Updated Apr 23, 2026 | 12:27 PM IST

SummaryThe rejected study used a methodology that has long been used by the CDC to evaluate vaccine effectiveness for respiratory viruses, including influenza. Recently, two other studies — on flu vaccine effectiveness and COVID vaccine effectiveness in children — were conducted using the same methodology and were published by CDC.
US CDC Study Showcasing COVID Vaccine Benefits Blocked From Publication

Credit: Canva/Wikimedia Commons

A US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) study that shows the efficacy of the COVID-19 vaccine has been blocked from being published in the agency’s flagship scientific journal, according to a media report.

The findings revealed that the COVID vaccine reduced emergency department visits and halved hospitalizations among healthy adults last winter.

The study, previously delayed by the head of the federal agency Dr. Jay Bhattacharya, was ultimately rejected for publication in the CDC’s Morbidity and Mortality Weekly Report, The Washington Post reported, citing officials familiar with the decision.

Also Read: Heatwave in India: Delhi Govt Issues Advisory For Schools, Urges Hydration And Reduced Outdoor Activity

The CDC initially delayed the publication based on concerns about "the observational method used in the study to calculate vaccine effectiveness".

Now, Andrew Nixon, a spokesman for the Department of Health and Human Services, was quoted as saying that “the MMWR’s editorial assessment identified concerns regarding the methodological approach to estimating vaccine effectiveness and the manuscript was not accepted for publication”.

What Is This Concerning?

According to current and former officials that The Post spoke to, the information about the vaccine’s benefits is being downplayed because it conflicts with the views of Health Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr.. Kennedy has been an outspoken critic of the vaccine. He once referred to COVID-19 shots as the “deadliest vaccine ever made.”

Notably, the CDC study had cleared the agency’s scientific-review process, which includes dozens of scientists, The Post reported. Stopping an MMWR report at that stage is highly unusual, former CDC officials were quoted as saying.

“I cannot recall CDC stopping an MMWR report in the publication phase after scientific clearance and editorial review. On rare occasions, we shifted the timing slightly to better align communications plans with competing or reinforcing pieces,” said Michael Iademarco, who was the director of the CDC center with oversight of the MMWR from 2014 to 2022.

The agency has to apply the “highest standards of scientific rigor” to the information it publishes, a CDC official said in response to a query from CIDRAP News.

“Responsible science requires careful review. Taking time to ensure analyses are methodologically sound and clearly communicated is always preferable to risking error,” the official added.

The rejected study used a methodology that has long been used by the CDC to evaluate vaccine effectiveness for respiratory viruses, including influenza.

Importantly, a study about flu vaccine effectiveness conducted using the same methodology was published in the MMWR a week earlier. Similarly, another study using the same methodology was conducted to gauge COVID vaccine effectiveness in children. It was published in MMWR in December.

Also read: A Year After RFK JR Promised To Make America Healthy Again, What Actually Happened?

The Post quoted an HHS official as saying that Bhattacharya met with scientific staff and that the study's authors did not want to adjust their methodology.

The cancellation of the report appears to be “cherry picking based on the bias of the director and others at HHS who don’t fully understand the importance of the methods used to assess the added benefit of vaccines in preventing poor outcomes,” Demetre Daskalakis, the former director of the CDC’s National Center for Immunization and Respiratory Diseases, said in an email to CIDRAP News.

HHS under Robert F Kennedy Jr

Robert F Kennedy Jr took charge of America's health as the Secretary of Health and Human Services in 2025.

Read: Who is Robert F. Kennedy Jr., the Controversial Nominee for U.S. Health Secretary?

No area defined Kennedy’s first year more than vaccines. He clearly did state during election debates that he is not against vaccine but planned to reshape a system he said had failed many families for decades.

However, in the first year, he fired members of a CDC advisory panel, replaced them, sometimes with skeptics, and cut the list of routinely recommended childhood vaccines from 17 to 11.

Several vaccines, including flu and hepatitis A, were removed from routine recommendations. He also directed the CDC to stop recommending the vaccine for healthy pregnant women and children.

Within days of Kennedy’s swearing-in, thousands of employees across CDC (including the Director), FDA and NIH were fired in a sweeping reorganization aimed at shrinking the department by about 20,000 workers.

Meanwhile, measles deaths returned after a decade. It puts the country at risk of losing its measles elimination status this year.

Republican Sen. Bill Cassidy of Louisiana said the gap in trust over vaccines has worsened during the past year “due to false statements about safety and efficacy of vaccines for preventable diseases like measles”, US News reported.

But as per Kennedy, the US has done better at controlling the measles outbreak “than any country in the world.”

He also deflected responsibility for the situation, noting that “it started before I came to office” and saying most children infected with measles are over 5 years old, “meaning their decision not to vaccinate predated my appointment.”

“We have a global pandemic,” Kennedy said. “It has nothing to do with me.”

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Type 1 Diabetes: US FDA Expands Sanofi’s Tzield To Treat Children Aged 1

Updated Apr 23, 2026 | 12:31 PM IST

SummaryTzield is a CD3-directed monoclonal antibody drug that was first approved in the US in November 2022 to delay the onset of stage 3 T1D in adults and children eight years and older diagnosed with stage 2 T1D. It has now been approved for use among children aged 1 and above.
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Credit: Sanofi

The US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) has approved Tzield (teplizumab-mzwv), for use in children at stage 2 of type 1 diabetes (T1D) ages one and older.

The drug was first approved in the US in November 2022 to delay the onset of stage 3 T1D in adults and children eight years and older diagnosed with stage 2 T1D.

Also Read: US CDC Study Showcasing COVID Vaccine Benefits Blocked From Publication

The FDA has now expanded its use to children as young as one year of age to delay the onset of stage 3 T1D. This means that children at risk for advancing to stage 3 T1D, which is when insulin therapy is required, can get an average of two extra years without T1D.

"This approval opens an important new chapter in diabetes care for young children with stage 2 type 1 diabetes and their families,” said Kimber Simmons, MD, MS, Associate Professor of Pediatrics at the Barbara Davis Center, Colorado, US.

“This is especially important because these children are often at the highest risk of progressing quickly and without warning. Delaying the onset of stage 3 type 1 diabetes during the years when management is often most difficult because of a child’s small size and dependence on caregivers could have a truly meaningful impact for families," Simmons added.

What is Tzield? How Its Administered?

Developed by drugmaker Sanofi, Tzield is a CD3-directed monoclonal antibody and is the first disease-modifying medicine in T1D.

It is a 14-day, once-daily intravenous (IV) infusion treatment designed to delay the onset of Stage 3 type 1 diabetes in adults and children (aged 8+) with Stage 2 diabetes.

Each dose is administered over at least 30 minutes, usually in a clinical setting, to stop the immune system from destroying insulin-producing beta cells.

Stage 2 T1D is defined by the presence of two or more T1D-related autoantibodies and abnormal blood sugar levels (dysglycemia).

Type 1 Diabetes: US FDA Expands Sanofi’s Tzield To Treat Children Aged 1

Tzield has also been approved in the EU (under the name Teizeild), the UK, China, Canada, Israel, Saudi Arabia, the UAE, Kuwait, and Brazil to delay the onset of stage 3 T1D in adults and children eight years and older.

The FDA is also reviewing Tzield for a potential indication to delay the progression of stage 3 T1D in patients eight years of age and older who have recently been diagnosed with stage 3 T1D.

The new approval was granted under a priority review process and is supported by one-year data from the PETITE-T1D Phase 4 study, which evaluated safety and pharmacokinetics in young children.

What Is Type 1 diabetes?

Around 2 million Americans have type 1 diabetes, which typically develops in childhood or early adulthood. It occurs when the immune system mistakenly attacks and destroys the islet cells in the pancreas. Without these cells, the body cannot produce insulin.

The progressive autoimmune disease develops in four stages:

The stage 1 T1D is presymptomatic, where the autoimmune attack on the beta cells has started, and this can be detected by the presence of two or more T1D-related autoantibodies in the blood. In this stage, the blood sugar levels are in a normal range.

Stage 2 is also presymptomatic, but blood sugar levels become abnormal due to the progressive loss of beta cells.

Stage 3 (also known as the clinical stage) sets in once a significant portion of the beta cells have been destroyed. At this point, rising blood sugar levels reach the point of clinical hyperglycemia (which defines diabetes), and many people will start to experience the classic symptoms such as:

  • increased thirst,
  • frequent urination
  • unexplained weight loss
  • blurred vision
  • generalized fatigue.
Management requires daily and burdensome insulin replacement therapy.

Stage 4 is defined as long-standing autoimmune T1D, often accompanied by evidence of chronic diabetic complications, where little to no beta-cell function remains.

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India Sets Roadmap For Universal Access To Safe Blood By December 2026

Updated Apr 22, 2026 | 06:00 PM IST

SummaryAccording to the Health Ministry, approximately 10 per cent of districts in the country currently do not have a blood center. There are also gaps in digital integration, with a significant number of blood centers yet to be onboarded on eRaktKosh and BBMS.
India Sets Roadmap For Universal Access To Safe Blood By December 2026

Credit: iStock

ndia’s Ministry of Health and Family Welfare (MoHFW) today outlined a roadmap to ensure universal access to safe blood in every district by December 2026.

The government’s goal of ensuring timely access to safe blood is in line with the National Blood Policy and was reiterated during a high-level national review meeting with States and Union Territories. The meeting, held via video conference, assessed the preparedness of blood banks and transfusion services across 36 States and UTs in the country.

Current Gaps

The review comprehensively assessed the status of blood transfusion services across the country, covering the five critical stages of service delivery:

  • Licensing and Renewal;
  • Donor Screening and Blood Collection;
  • Testing for Transfusion-Transmitted Infections (TTIs) and referral/linkage of reactive donors;
  • Processing, Storage, and Issuance;
  • Reporting and Record-keeping.
Performance was evaluated against a structured framework of 10 key performance indicators (KPIs), using data from eRaktKosh, the Central Drugs Standard Control Organization (CDSCO), Blood Bank Management System (BBMS), and inspection records of regulatory authorities.

According to the official statement by the Ministry, approximately 10 per cent of districts in the country currently do not have a blood center.

It also flagged other gaps in digital integration, with a significant number of blood centers yet to be onboarded on eRaktKosh and BBMS. This is limiting real-time visibility and monitoring, revealed the national-level meeting.

"While several states and Union Territories have demonstrated strong performance across multiple indicators, variability persists in areas such as district-level availability of blood centers, licensing compliance, voluntary blood donation rates, referral and linkage of TTI-reactive donors, component separation capacity, and real-time digital reporting," the review found.

Also read: Why Hemophilia Care in India Lags Behind Globally, Expert Reveals: World Hemophilia Day

Access To Safe Blood By 2026 End

Dr Rakesh Gupta, Additional Secretary (Public Health) and Director General, National AIDS Control Organization (NACO), reiterated the national goal of ensuring timely access to safe blood in every district, with zero transfusion-transmitted infections (TTI).

He emphasized "the milestone of establishing at least one blood center in every district by December 2026, in line with the National Blood Policy".

The review also noted encouraging practices in several states and Union Territories, including

  • high levels of voluntary blood donation,
  • strong testing proficiency under External Quality Assessment Schemes (EQAS)
  • Effective referral and linkage mechanisms for TTI- reactive donors.
Read: From HIV to Hepatitis B: How Reused Syringes Can Spread Deadly Infections

Priority Actions

The Ministry outlined a set of priority actions, which include:

  • strengthening district-level ownership and administrative convergence; ensuring 100 per cent licensing compliance of all operational blood centers;
  • enforcing standard operating procedures for blood collection and donation camps;
  • scaling up voluntary blood donation through structured outreach and awareness campaigns
  • adopting advanced testing protocols such as ELISA and CLIA-based screening
  • strengthening referral and linkage systems
  • 100 per cent digital integration of blood services through eRaktKosh and BBMS,
  • The use of biometric donor identification under the Ayushman Bharat Digital Mission aims to improve traceability and efficiency.
A time-bound action plan will be implemented in coordination with the National and State Blood Transfusion Councils, regulatory bodies, and organizations such as the Indian Red Cross Society. Progress will be monitored through monthly and quarterly reviews.

Advancing Blood Safety In India

According to data from the World Health Organization, India’s annual blood collection increased from 12.6 million units in 2023 to 14.6 million units in 2024. Voluntary blood donation accounted for 74.55 per cent of total collections, reflecting strong public participation and the impact of effective awareness campaigns.

In 2025, Union Minister of State for Health and Family Welfare Anupriya Patel told the Parliament that the country has made significant strides in strengthening blood transfusion services and has ensured its safety and availability.

Patel said that the country has established a multi-tiered system to ensure safe and efficient blood transfusion services. These include measures such as mandatory testing for five TTIs, expansion of Nucleic Acid Testing (NAT), proposed capital blood centers, National External Quality Assessment (EQA) program expansion, and transition to a community-based approach.

While the government has placed a complete ban on professional blood donation, every unit of collected blood undergoes mandatory testing for five transfusion-transmissible infections (TTIs) — HIV/AIDS, Hepatitis B, Hepatitis C, Syphilis, and Malaria, Patel said.

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