Call it what it is–the US has lost its hold on measles elimination
4 hours ago
- #Epidemiology
- #Public Health Policy
- #Measles Outbreak
- The article argues that measles has likely become endemic in the US, contradicting the cautious official messaging that its elimination status is still under review.
- Measles elimination is defined as interrupting continuous local transmission for at least a year. Evidence shows US transmission has been continuous since a major outbreak began in January 2025.
- Genomic sequencing reveals a single family tree of the virus across multiple states, with minimal mutation differences, indicating sustained domestic spread rather than separate imported outbreaks.
- Epidemiological data supports endemicity: outbreaks surged in 2025-2026, imported cases dropped sharply, and deaths occurred, with 2026 on track to exceed 2025's record case count.
- Surveillance systems have weakened due to funding cuts, undermining the ability to reliably distinguish between endemic transmission and elimination.
- Two potential ways to retain elimination status—delaying review or leveraging diplomatic influence—are criticized as procedural maneuvers that don't change the reality of endemic measles.
- Losing the status carries no formal penalties but officially acknowledges a cracked immunization system, similar to Canada's recent experience.
- Pretending elimination still holds harms public trust by offering false hope and obscuring accountability for systemic failures that led to the decline.
- Elimination was achieved through decades of robust vaccination programs and can be reclaimed by restoring high vaccination coverage and strengthening surveillance, not through procedural arguments.