
South Carolina's measles outbreak exploded into one of the worst in the U.S., with state health officials confirming 99 new cases in the past three days.
The outbreak centered in Spartanburg County grew to 310 cases over the holidays, and spawned cases in North Carolina and Ohio among families who traveled to the outbreak area in the northwestern part of the state.
State health officials acknowledged the spike in cases had been expected following holiday travel and family gatherings during the school break. A growing number of public exposures and low vaccination rates in the area are driving the surge, they said. As of Friday, 200 people were in quarantine and nine in isolation, state health department data shows.
“The number of those in quarantine does not reflect the number actually exposed,” said Dr. Linda Bell, who leads the state health department's outbreak response. “An increasing number of public exposure sites are being identified with likely hundreds more people exposed who are not aware they should be in quarantine if they are not immune to measles."
Since the outbreak started in October, Bell has warned that the virus was spreading undetected in the area. Hundreds of school children have been quarantined from school, some more than once.
South Carolina is one of two active hot spots for measles. The other outbreak is on the Arizona-Utah border, where 337 people have gotten measles since August.
Last year was the nation's worst year for measles spread since 1991, end-of-year data from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention shows. The U.S. confirmed 2,144 cases across 44 states.
And as the one-year anniversary of the Texas-New Mexico-Oklahoma outbreak approaches — which sickened at least 900 people and killed three — health experts say the vaccine-preventable virus is on the verge of making a lasting comeback in the U.S.
At that point, the U.S. would lose its status of having eliminated local spread of the virus, as Canada did in November. International health experts say the same strain of measles is spreading across the Americas.
___
The Associated Press Health and Science Department receives support from the Howard Hughes Medical Institute’s Department of Science Education and the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation. The AP is solely responsible for all content.
LATEST POSTS
- 1
Dependable Savvy Locks to Update Your Home Security - 2
EU calls on Western Balkans to step up reforms for membership - 3
Limited Rain Chances in Brazil Boost Coffee Prices - 4
Two IDF officers, civilian face indictment in alleged Gaza aid-truck smuggling scheme - 5
Climate engineering would alter the oceans, reshaping marine life – our new study examines each method’s risks
Teen drug use remains low, but survey finds small rise in heroin and cocaine use
Interstellar comet 3I/ATLAS reveals weird wobbling jets in rare sun-facing tail
Moon rush: These private spacecraft will attempt lunar landings in 2026
The Best 15 Applications for Efficiency and Association
The Specialty of Cleaning up: Change Your Space and Brain
Greenland’s melting ice and landslide-prone fjords make the oil and minerals Trump is eyeing dangerous to extract
Commonsense Ways to work on Your Funds with a Restricted Pay
Telecommute Arrangement: What's Pivotal for Your Efficiency?
US healthcare spending soars to over $5 trillion in 2024













