Another Measles Outbreak Leads To 3 Week Quarantine For Over 100 Children
from the sick-of-this dept
Measles is so back, baby! I know, you had thought we were done talking about this vile disease. After all, the outbreak that started in Texas among communities that are relatively unvaccinated finally slowed down at the tail end of the summer. That came after that outbreak almost single-handedly generated more cases of measles in America than had occurred since 1992, as well as caused three deaths. This all occurred under the watch of RFK Jr. as head of HHS. Kennedy is largely responsible for the disease’s return, thanks to his long anti-vaccine advocacy and due to his direct mismanagement of the measles outbreaks. He also blames the victims of the disease, too.
Those who wanted to cover for Kennedy and the Trump administration attempted to point to the Texas outbreak starting before Trump was in office. That’s both not really true and besides the point since the explosion of cases happened well into the year, but it’s also a moot point since there are more outbreaks than just that one. 44 outbreaks, in fact, according to the CDC, compared with only 16 outbreaks in all of 2024. And, as always, the cases largely effect children and the unvaccinated.

And to give you yet another real world example of how this is all playing out, an outbreak is South Carolina has resulted in the necessary quarantining of 150 children due to their being unvaccinated.
Last week, officials in Greenville identified an eighth measles case that is potentially linked to the outbreak. Seven outbreak cases had been confirmed since September 25 in neighboring Spartanburg, where transmission was identified in two schools: Fairforest Elementary and Global Academy, a public charter school.
Across those two schools, at least 153 unvaccinated children were exposed to the virus and have been put in a 21-day quarantine, during which they are barred from attending school, state officials said in a press conference. Twenty-one days is the maximum incubation period, spanning from when a person is exposed to when they would develop a rash if infected.
As the ArsTechnica post goes on to note, Spartanburg has more unvaccinated children as a result of religious exemption than anywhere else in the state. South Carolina as a whole used to have the 95%+ vaccination rate that experts indicate provides the kind of herd immunity that keeps everyone safe, but that has dropped in the past several years to 93.7%. That might not seem like a big deal, but it is. And it’s even worse nation-wide when it comes to school-aged children.
The latest data indicates that the MMR vaccination coverage for US kindergartners was just 92.5 percent in the 2024–2025 school year, down from 95.2 percent in 2019–2020. Non-medical exemptions are now at 3.4 percent, an all-time high.
I am confident that any Almighty that may exist, and certainly any one worth believing in, doesn’t want you to get measles. If we don’t reverse the trend on our MMR vaccination rates, these outbreaks will continue to sprout up and more people will become infected. Eventually more of them will die.
But I don’t see that trend reversing while RFK Jr. is still in charge of American healthcare.
Filed Under: cdc, health and human services, measles, rfk jr., south carolina, vaccines


Comments on “Another Measles Outbreak Leads To 3 Week Quarantine For Over 100 Children”
Well, the unvaccinated adults, being about 30% of the total, are not entirely innocent. I’m guessing some, though, are impacted by lack of availability; a quick search shows it’s not necessarily free, but “$0 co-pay with most insurance” (and the standard “talk to your doctor”, as if everyone has a doctor and insurance).
The infected children are victims of religion, but nobody ever wants to talk about that; religious freedom is only for adults.
Hey now, don’t start jumping down Junior’s throat about this! He’s about to discover next week that measles are caused by an imbalance of humors in the body and we just need to start bloodletting treatments for all vulnerable children. We should also bring them flowers to ward off any foul-smelling miasma that might infect them. Oh, and don’t play rock n roll music around them because that summons demons that might also cause stomach upset!
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I can expect RFK telling us that only Tylenol can heal measles, and Trumps confirms that theses outbreaks only appear in Democratic schools.
For the rest, we’ll need to wait few more years. This year, we’re getting all is to know about autism. Next year will certainly the comeback of cholera or the bubonic plague (that can be cured with cheeseburgers).
Also, Bobby still has to explain to us why AIDS is only transmitted by vegetables, and why yoga causes lung cancer (more Swedish studies to come).
Re: Imbalanced Humors
And where, pray tell, does one find leeches in this day and age?
I suggest looking in that big white building at 1600 Pennsylvania Ave NE in Washington, DC.
The current residents have certainly imbalanced MY humors.
In fact, I don’t find them funny at all.
Don't try religious arguments
The overall state of the world has always been incompatible with a naïve supposition that a benevolent God must not permit this and that.
It is pointless trying to argue in that manner about pretty much anything.
RFK is an idiot, but trying to pin him down as acting against God’s plan is not going to fly. Measles were created just as much as RFK if you ascribe to such views.
The medical profession in particular and many professionals in general are letting the public down.
The latest and most disappointing is that Dr. Peter Hotez has declared in writing he is willing to profess loyalty to Trump 🙁
https://bsky.app/profile/peterhotezmdphd.bsky.social/post/3m37aeoic3s2t
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Well that’s certainly one way to tell the world that you cannot be trusted to give honest and/or fact-based medical advice or treatment going forward, but good on them for notifying people about that fact so people know to avoid them I guess?
Ooh, let me guess which federal agency is about to have their administrator replaced!
That is why God enabled the invention of vaccines.
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People invented God so they could say things with un-earned authority. Any argument based on “what God wants” is indistinguishable from parody.
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Or in other words, any argument based on “what god wants” is indistinguishable from what older authoritarian men want.
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No, it’s not just men telling people to do stuff based on the will of God. If it were, abortion would’ve been legal long ago, for example. And it’s not just old people either.
are we "Great" again yet?
What does it say about a country that it’s ‘leader’ pretends to be taking the country ‘back to greatness’ while diseases formerly controlled are loose to threaten that country’s children again?
Are we “Great” again, yet – when America’s children are dying from fully preventable disease?
What’s wrong with these people, who put their children at risk for Trump and RFK Jr’s lies? The kids don’t have a choice – but oh are those parents failing their children. How can a parent live with themselves when their unvaccinated kid dies? Everyone one of those dead kids is a failure of leadership, and of parenting.
Re: 'Yes my kid died horribly and slowly, but he wasn't vaccinated so I still win!'
How can a parent live with themselves when their unvaccinated kid dies?
That’s disturbingly simple actually, either blame someone else, or shrug it off as an acceptable price to avoid the evil cabal running the world that they and their Dear Leader are fighting against.
As for how a good parent who actually deserves the label deals with themselves after something like that? A hell of a lot of grief, introspection, and dedication to doing better going forward so they don’t fail any other kids they might have by falling for such obvious fraudulent ‘science’ garbage.
'You say you're a catholic/muslim/mormon? Well in that case I'll infect someone else.'
As the ArsTechnica post goes on to note, Spartanburg has more unvaccinated children as a result of religious exemption than anywhere else in the state.
Out of all the privileges being religious shouldn’t grant you ‘exemption from vaccination requirements’ should be near if not at the very top of the list because, and this might surprise some people apparently, diseases don’t check the religious status of their intended victim before moving in and/or spreading around.
Claiming religious exemption to get out of vaccination is like claiming religious exemption to get out of drunk driving laws. In both cases you’re putting the safety and well-being of everyone around you at risk just because you want to claim that your religion prohibits it, which is an argument that should never be accepted because as much as you might believe in it your religion should never be considered more important that the safety or lives of those around you.
Is Junior going to bring back polio and TB next?
The Trump administration has a talent for finding the wrong side of anything and landing there with BOTH FEET.
Ironic....
They don’t believe in vaccines but they believe in quarantine?