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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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
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 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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When a child is born, parents must decide whether to vaccinate them against a range of preventable illnesses. While immunisations are not mandatory, health authorities strongly recommend them to protect both individual children and the wider community. Some professions, particularly in healthcare, require certain vaccinations as a condition of work.
Since 2022, no childhood vaccine in the UK has reached the World Health Organization’s recommended 95 per cent uptake, which is crucial for safeguarding vulnerable populations. As a result, preventable diseases like measles are making a comeback.
What’s Driving The Decline In Vaccination
Several factors contribute to falling vaccination rates. Parents may worry about safety, distrust healthcare systems, or follow religious or philosophical beliefs, such as preferring “natural immunity.” Access issues, like difficulties booking GP appointments, have also played a role, according to a BBC report. A malfunctioning NHS IT system has left thousands of children without appointment letters for essential vaccines.
As per Mirror, NHS GP Dr Bhasha Mukherjee has shared a crucial message for parents. “Every parent wants to keep their child safe,” she wrote. “But here’s what the data reveals about the real risks today.” Dr Mukherjee highlighted that fewer children receiving full immunisation is directly linked to a surge in vaccine-preventable diseases. “This isn’t theoretical – it’s happening right now,” she added.
In 2024, confirmed measles cases in the UK jumped to nearly 3,000, compared with just 367 in 2023, marking the highest annual figure since 2012. Most cases were children aged one to four and five to ten, with 710 and 730 cases respectively, according to the UK Health Security Agency. Global data also shows over 10 million measles cases in 2023, a 20 per cent increase from 2022, linked directly to drops in routine vaccination coverage.
Pertussis, commonly known as whooping cough, is rising too. In England alone, more than 14,000 lab-confirmed cases were recorded in 2024, including hundreds among infants under three months old – the age group most vulnerable to severe illness. Sadly, several deaths were reported. Other diseases, like polio, are also reappearing in regions where children are missing essential jabs.
Many parents fear side effects, but Dr Mukherjee emphasised the dangers of avoiding vaccination. “Diseases like measles can lead to pneumonia, brain inflammation, hearing loss, long-term disability, or even death,” she said. “Vaccines aren’t perfect, but high coverage protects the whole community, especially infants and children with weakened immune systems.”
MMR (measles, mumps, rubella) vaccination rates in 2023–24 were 88.9 per cent, far short of the 95 per cent needed to prevent outbreaks. Dr Mukherjee warns that this shortfall is driving a resurgence in these serious illnesses.
Choosing not to vaccinate increases your child’s risk of catching real, rising threats – and contributes to outbreaks that put many other children at risk too,” Dr Mukherjee concluded.
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The human heart can grow new cells in damaged areas after suffering from a heart attack, an Australian study shows.
Heart attacks occur when blood flow to the heart is severely reduced or blocked due to a buildup of plaque which is made of fat, cholesterol and other substances in the heart's arteries.
During a heart attack, a lack of blood flow causes the cells and tissue in the heart muscle to die, leading to irreversible damage that can result in serious complications like arrhythmias, heart failure, cardiogenic shock, or cardiac arrest
It is one of the leading causes of death in the country. Four Indians experience a heart attack every minute, with one in four dying of the cause. Experts have also noticed a rising trend of nearly 50 percent of heart attack patients being under the age of 40, with half of all heart attacks in Indian men occurring under 50.
However scientists in Australia have found that organ can regrow new cells to replace the damaged ones after an attack through increased mitosis.
Until now, the phenomenon of new heart cells growing in scarred areas of the heart had only been seen in mice however, the team made a breakthrough using living heart tissue samples collected from human patients undergoing bypass surgery at Australia’s Royal Prince Alfred Hospital.
The study, published in Circulation Research, found that while sections of the heart remain that had been left scarred following a heart attack, new heart muscle cells were also being produced in the same area through mitosis.
This process involves a parent cell dividing itself to create two genetically identical daughter cells, each with the same number of chromosomes as the parent for growth, repair and replacing old cells in humans.
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Robert Hume, a research fellow at the University of Sydney and the study’s first author, said: "Until now we’ve thought that, because heart cells die after a heart attack, those areas of the heart were irreparably damaged, leaving the heart less able to pump blood to the body’s organs.
"In time, we hope to develop therapies that can amplify the heart’s natural ability to produce new cells and regenerate the heart after an attack."
The scientists are yet to discover the exact mechanism between how cells regrow in scarred regions of the heart.
Coronary artery disease (CAD) is one of the most common illnesses that can cause a heart attack in people. It develops over years and has no clear signs and symptoms apart from a heart attack.
The illness begins due to a buildup of fats, cholesterol and other substances known as plaque in and on the artery walls.
Over time, this can cause narrowing or blockage of the coronary arteries and block the supply of oxygen-rich blood to heart which can lead chest pain (angina), shortness of breath and ultimately, heart attacks.
Typically, those above the age of 45, having a biological family member with heart disease, lack of sleep, smoking, consuming saturated fats along with other autoimmune diseases such as lupus and rheumatoid arthritis can increase the risk of developing CAD.
Nearly one in 10 Indian adults suffer from CAD and about two million people die from the disease annually. Apart from this, about 18 to 20 million American adults aged 20 and older are also affected about the disease.
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Ongoing measles outbreaks across several parts of the country are raising questions about whether the United States could lose its long-held status of having eliminated the virus, yet a senior CDC official said on Tuesday that such a shift would not be a major cause for alarm.
According to CNN, the briefing marked federal officials’ first public comments on a continuing outbreak in South Carolina that has reached at least 646 cases, based on data from the state health department. Last year, a separate outbreak in West Texas recorded around 760 cases, making it one of the largest and deadliest measles outbreaks the U.S. has faced in decades.
At the briefing, U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention Principal Deputy Director Dr. Ralph Abraham, a former Louisiana surgeon general who previously scaled back some vaccine promotion efforts in his state, said there is no clear evidence proving that transmission is occurring between states involved in the outbreaks. He also stated that even if the U.S. were to lose its elimination status, it would not be a serious concern.
“Losing elimination status does not mean measles would suddenly become widespread, nor would it change the core strategies used to control it,” Abraham said. He emphasized that vaccination remains the most effective protection against measles, while also reiterating his support for personal choice.
CDC data shows the U.S. recorded 2,242 measles cases in 2025, the highest number reported since 1991. The disease was officially declared eliminated in the country in 2000. The Pan American Health Organization (PAHO) is expected to review that designation when it meets in April. When asked whether losing the status would be a significant setback, Abraham responded, “not really,” adding that the CDC’s focus is on supporting affected communities and reducing the impact of outbreaks.
Measles, also known as rubeola, is an extremely contagious viral illness that typically causes high fever, cough, runny nose, red and watery eyes, and a characteristic rash that begins on the face and spreads downward across the body. It spreads through respiratory droplets and can lead to severe and sometimes fatal complications, including pneumonia and inflammation of the brain known as encephalitis.
Although it is preventable through the safe and effective MMR vaccine, measles remains a serious threat in many regions. There is no specific cure, and treatment focuses on managing symptoms, according to the Cleveland Clinic.
About a year ago, health officials identified measles cases in a small town in western Texas. The virus soon moved into nearby counties, and other states, including Utah and South Carolina, began reporting outbreaks of their own. By the end of 2025, more than 2,200 measles cases had been confirmed nationwide, marking the highest annual total in the U.S. in 33 years, based on CDC figures.
The country also recorded its first measles-related deaths in more than a decade. Two unvaccinated school-aged children in Texas died, along with an unvaccinated adult in New Mexico. It remains unclear whether the cases confirmed in Texas on January 20 are connected to outbreaks elsewhere. If they are, it would indicate that the U.S. has experienced a full year of uninterrupted measles transmission.
If officials determine that measles has been spreading continuously for 12 months, the U.S. could lose the elimination status it achieved in 2000. In that case, measles would once again be classified as endemic, meaning it is consistently circulating within the country.
Last year, the CDC confirmed 2,144 measles cases across 44 states, along with nearly 50 distinct outbreaks, the highest numbers seen since 1991. Experts say the situation has been building for years, driven by declining routine childhood vaccination rates, parental exemptions, limited access to health care, and widespread misinformation. More recently, health officials under the Trump administration questioned long-established vaccine safety and cut funding for local programs aimed at boosting vaccination coverage.
State health department data shows that the first known case in the Texas outbreak developed the classic measles rash on January 20, 2025. From there, the outbreak rapidly escalated. Officially, 762 people became ill, most of them in rural Gaines County, and two children died. Health officials believe the true number is higher. In March 2025 alone, 182 possible measles cases among children in Gaines County were never confirmed, suggesting the outbreak may have been undercounted by as much as 44 percent in that area.
Gaps like these are common and make it harder to accurately track outbreaks. Many people in affected communities face barriers to health care and have deep mistrust of government institutions.
Genetic sequencing has helped clarify some of the missing links. Ultimately, the decision may hinge on how PAHO experts interpret incomplete data, said Dr. Andrew Pavia, a Utah-based physician and longtime CDC adviser, as per CNN.
“My best guess is that we will lose elimination status,” Pavia said. “The argument that this hasn’t been continuous transmission is weak, and I think they will likely err on the side of declaring a loss.”
PAHO will also review Mexico’s measles-free status at the same time, Oliel said. Mexico’s largest outbreak has been linked to Texas. It began when an 8-year-old boy from Chihuahua became ill after visiting family in Seminole, Texas. Since February last year, Mexico has reported about 6,000 measles cases, with 21 deaths in Chihuahua state alone.
Under PAHO’s current definition of elimination, international borders play a key role. For example, if a chain of transmission started in the U.S., spread to Mexico, and then re-entered the U.S., it would be considered a new chain. Many experts argue that this standard no longer reflects modern patterns of disease spread.
What is clear, however, is that measles found widespread opportunity to spread in the U.S. in 2025. The virus moved through schools, day-care centers, churches, hospital waiting rooms, and even a detention center. New Mexico reported 100 cases and one adult death. Kansas spent seven months trying to contain an outbreak that sickened nearly 90 people across 10 counties. Ohio confirmed 40 cases, while Montana, North Dakota, and Wisconsin each reported 36.
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