Return To Full Article
You can republish this story for free. Click the "Copy HTML" button below. Questions? Get more details.

Anguished Parents. Doctors in Tears. Utah鈥檚 Long Measles Outbreak Takes a Toll.

SALT LAKE CITY 鈥 Ben Dowse hadn鈥檛 expected to treat measles when he became a doctor, but there he was, examining a newborn exposed to the virus in the womb. The infected mother had given birth just hours earlier. The hospital had alerted Dowse to the case before delivery, and he鈥檇 braced himself for the worst.

Dowse wore a full-body protective suit with a plastic face mask. As a pediatrician in southern Utah, he couldn鈥檛 risk getting even a mild infection, because many of his patients are babies too young for measles vaccines or children whose parents choose not to protect them with immunizations. 鈥淚 went in looking like a scientist in E.T.,鈥 he said.

Measles can cause brain damage, deafness, or death in newborns. If the baby entered the world with a measles rash and fever, Dowse was prepared to give the infant a spinal tap to assess the risk of neurological damage.

Luckily, flushed and crying, the baby looked healthy. To keep it that way, Dowse wanted to inject the baby with concentrated antibodies against the measles virus. To his surprise, the parents objected, promising to give their child 鈥渁ll kinds of vitamin A,鈥 Dowse said. He begged them not to, saying, 鈥淵ou can鈥檛 see it on the surface, but the baby鈥檚 body is fighting the measles.鈥 They were afraid of vaccines, so Dowse explained that antibodies were different and that they would stop measles from replicating in the infant.

鈥淭hat shot is going to basically give the baby ammo to fight,鈥 Dowse said.

The parents relented. A couple of days later, they left the hospital with a child who had narrowly skirted an infection that killed many thousands of babies a century ago. Nonetheless, Dowse said he doubted they would be returning for childhood vaccinations to protect their baby against a bevy of illnesses. Like more than a dozen Utah doctors and health officials who spoke with 麻豆女优 Health News, Dowse has adjusted his expectations.

He is part of a reluctant cohort of medical professionals now on the front line of America鈥檚 regressive next chapter in health history, one in which dangerous and preventable diseases return.

鈥淚 wish that people could see what I see,鈥 said Nathan Money, a hospital pediatrician in Utah whose eyes welled up with tears as he described children he鈥檚 treated for measles struggling to breathe. 鈥淭his train is going in the wrong direction, and it can feel like a helpless situation, because we鈥檙e just not seeing the public messaging and leadership that鈥檚 needed to turn this around.鈥

Since measles was deemed eliminated in the U.S. a quarter century ago, public health workers have extinguished sporadic outbreaks in close-knit, undervaccinated communities with targeted methods: Isolate people with measles and quarantine their contacts to contain the virus. But as vaccination rates , the virus is moving beyond insulated communities, overwhelming public health departments constrained by shoestring budgets. Larger outbreaks, the kind not seen for a generation, have forced health officials into a new paradigm: They have stopped racing to 鈥渃ontain鈥 infections and shifted gears into what they call 鈥渕itigation.鈥

Utah made that transition early this year, once the outbreak hit 鈥渁 point where you no longer have control over it,鈥 said state epidemiologist Leisha Nolen. By March, measles had been detected in every health jurisdiction in the state and in northern Arizona. More than 950 people have tested positive in the two states since the outbreak began in August, but many people with measles haven鈥檛 been tested. A of measles viruses suggested that the true number of cases last year could have been 6.5 times what was known.

Last year under President Donald Trump, U.S. measles cases exceeded 2,000 for the first time since 1992. Six months into 2026, the U.S. has already surpassed that threshold. Prolonged outbreaks exact a toll on children, who have spent days in hospitals for severe infections and missed weeks of school for mild ones. Adults with measles miss work. Parents delay daycare to keep their babies safe. Doctors in Utah have enacted labor-intensive protocols to keep measles from spreading in clinics. Newborns and people with weakened immune systems who have been exposed to the virus receive infusions of concentrated antibodies costing $500 to $1,000. Medical visits for measles . Health departments spend millions trying to curb infections.

A woman sits at a table in front of a children's playground.
Emilie Morris, a hospital pediatrician in Utah, has cared for multiple unvaccinated children who were severely sick with measles. She鈥檚 learning how to communicate with parents who hadn鈥檛 expected the virus to cause so much harm. (Amy Maxmen/麻豆女优 Health News)

鈥淭his is like a snowball that gathers speed as it rolls downhill,鈥 said Emilie Morris, a hospital pediatrician in Salt Lake County and Utah County. A full-throttle campaign to educate communities on the safety of vaccines and the diseases they prevent could turn the situation around, doctors and health officials said. It would require an effort similar to what the anti-vaccine movement has long done in videos, blogs, and podcasts. For example, the anti-vaccine organization that Robert F. Kennedy Jr. founded before taking the helm at the Department of Health and Human Services, Children鈥檚 Health Defense, visits , , and has bought that downplay the threat of viruses while wildly exaggerating the risk of vaccine side effects. Kennedy鈥檚 and as health secretary are adding to parents鈥 doubt.

After the development of vaccines and antibiotics in the mid-1900s, virologist and Nobel laureate Frank Macfarlane Burnet wrote, 鈥淥ne can think of the middle of the twentieth century as the end of one of the most important social revolutions in history, the virtual elimination of the infectious diseases as a significant factor in social life.鈥

He couldn鈥檛 have imagined what was coming.

鈥榊ear of Sickness鈥

A view of rocky formations along a road leading into a town in southwest Utah.
A view of St. George, a city in southwest Utah that鈥檚 been hit hard by an ongoing measles outbreak that started in August. Nearly 40% of the state鈥檚 cases have occurred in the region. (Amy Maxmen/麻豆女优 Health News)

In communities nestled among the red sandstone cliffs and riparian forests of southern Utah, measles took hold last summer. At the main school in Hildale, a town along the Arizona border, just 30% of kindergartners are considered adequately immunized by Utah鈥檚 health department, meaning they鈥檝e gotten recommended vaccines against measles, tetanus, polio, and more. Exemptions from childhood vaccine requirements are easily acquired in the state: Parents need only claim personal, religious, or medical reasons.

Many people in Hildale and the surrounding towns are connected to the Fundamentalist Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints, a sect that has been leery of the government since a police raid in 1953 separated polygamous parents from their children. Shirlee Draper, a southern Utah resident who grew up in the faith, said they became ever more isolated in the early 2000s under the leadership of Warren Jeffs. Before he was sentenced to life in prison for sexual assault against minors, Jeffs instructed his followers to withdraw from public schools and mainstream medicine.

鈥淕rowing up, we all got our vaccines,鈥 said Draper, who left the group during Jeffs鈥 reign. 鈥淚t wasn鈥檛 until Warren Jeffs came along that there started to be more and more resistance.鈥

After Jeffs went to prison, many people left the faith but remained concerned about vaccines because of online misinformation, such as claims that the shots are toxic. Today a small shop in Hildale sells mouth sprays and oral drops professing to detoxify vaccines. Water, glycerin, and 鈥渨hole grain alcohol鈥 are listed as ingredients in one called Vxx-Dtx.

A mother who 麻豆女优 Health News agreed not to name, because she fears stigmatization, said she considered getting her kids vaccinated when schools in southwest Utah started seeing measles cases last summer. She had split from the fundamentalist group but still worried about vaccines giving her children autism or other complications. in top-tier scientific journals have refuted a link between vaccines and autism, but the anti-vaccine movement has kept the notion alive.

Then the woman鈥檚 son told her that his classmate had a rash and spit on him, she said. A few days later, he fell ill with a fever, followed by vomiting, diarrhea, and a head-to-toe rash.

鈥淗e felt downright sick for 10 to 14 days,鈥 the woman said. 鈥淚t was hard to see the end of the tunnel.鈥

Then her daughters came down with measles. She had a fleeting case, too, even though she had been vaccinated as a child. Breakthrough infections and are relatively rare. Only 4% of reported this year and last have been people who鈥檝e had two doses of the measles, mumps and rubella vaccine.

By the time the family recovered, the son had missed nearly three weeks of school, the daughters a month, and the mother had postponed an important family gathering because she didn鈥檛 want to spread infections. 鈥淚 just got my youngest鈥檚 missed-school report and it鈥檚 super high,鈥 she said. 鈥淭his is the year of sickness.鈥

A photo of vaccines stored in a refrigerator.
The Southwest Utah Public Health Department stocks vaccines against measles, whooping cough, tetanus, hepatitis B, and other diseases. (Amy Maxmen/麻豆女优 Health News)

The woman said she regretted not getting her kids vaccinated when the outbreak started. She said she knows about 30 people who have fallen sick with the measles. Except for a few who needed medical care, they haven鈥檛 been tested. 鈥淚 bet there鈥檚 been thousands of cases,鈥 she said.

Measles doesn鈥檛 have a cure. She and others have tried to ease symptoms with cod liver oil, vitamin C, zinc, and 鈥渆ssential oils,鈥 plant extracts long used in folk medicine that have become a lucrative industry in Utah. People in southwest Utah are trying a lot of things: One resident sells homemade lotion on Facebook, writing, 鈥淏reastmilk & Honey has been a life saver for the measles rash.鈥

Beyond Containment

The outbreak may have started among a fundamentalist community, but it鈥檚 spread far beyond because Utah鈥檚 vaccination rates have dropped steadily since the covid pandemic. Fewer than 80% of kindergartners in the 2024-25 school year in southwest Utah, with only 87% adequately immunized in the state as a whole 鈥 far below the 95% threshold required for herd immunity.

Several Utahns told 麻豆女优 Health News that 鈥渁lternative health鈥 or 鈥渨ellness鈥 drives the trend, rather than religion. The state has a thriving supplement industry, , aided by deregulatory policies supported by the late Utah senator Orrin Hatch and a high concentration of people who earn income from multilevel marketing. These networks of people sell supplements, essential oils, peptides, and other alternative therapies on social media, YouTube, and podcasts, according to and .

Alternative health isn鈥檛 necessarily anti-vaccine, but many people who sell unconventional remedies online and in podcasts and mainstream medicine.

鈥淧eople are suspicious, and it鈥檚 well founded,鈥 Draper said. She described dismissive doctors, exorbitant medical bills, hospital systems that over care, and pharmaceutical companies that drove . Communities already wary of government authorities are poised to interpret failings in American healthcare as signs that medical authorities aren鈥檛 to be trusted, either, she said.

鈥淎cross America, we have entire populations who find safety in clinging to whatever confirms their deeply held beliefs,鈥 she said.

A mistrustful disposition gave way to covid conspiracy theories in 2020 and 2021. In southwest Utah, for example, a tricked out with digital billboards showed up to covid vaccination sites to advertise Plandemic, a rife with , including that masks 鈥渁ctivate鈥 the coronavirus and that global elites planned covid-19 to control the population. Misinformation added fuel to anger about public health rules, and there was political backlash under the umbrella of a largely Republican 鈥渕edical freedom鈥 movement. Utah enacted laws reining in public health, including one that eases exemptions to childhood vaccinations and another that prohibits most employers from requiring vaccines.

In the wake of the covid backlash, health officials tread lightly. Rather than enforce containment measures, 鈥渨e give our advice and focus on personal responsibility,鈥 said David Heaton, public information officer at the Southwest Utah Public Health Department.

A woman stands outside a building. A sign next to her reads, "288 Department of Health and Human Services."
Utah state epidemiologist Leisha Nolen says that with a larger budget she would invest in connecting with communities. 鈥淲e have a scientific solution,鈥 she says about measles, 鈥渂ut we need a societal solution, too.鈥 (Amy Maxmen/麻豆女优 Health News)

One of the most contagious diseases in the world, measles spreads with astonishing speed among the unvaccinated. One of a New York school outbreak in 1974 found that a second-grader with measles infected 28 other students in 14 classrooms because measles can spread through ventilation systems.

As cases doubled then quadrupled in southern Utah, the regional health department couldn鈥檛 keep up with calling the contacts of everyone infected. It shifted its efforts to announcements guiding the public at large. For example, it asks people to call before showing up to clinics with measles symptoms. Still, patients in plenty of hospitals have been exposed. For example, when parents brought a sick, unvaccinated child to a large pediatric hospital in Utah in September, they shared the space with 11 infants too young to be vaccinated. Doctors rushed to give the babies infusions of antibodies and they remained healthy, according to a .

On the radio and in posts on social media, Heaton warns that measles is spreading and that vaccines are the best defense. 鈥淚f you鈥檙e not immunized and you鈥檙e anywhere in public,鈥 Heaton said, 鈥測ou鈥檙e fair game for this virus.鈥

The department doesn鈥檛 have the capacity to talk with people directly in the five counties it serves. For a few years, it leaned on community health workers who went to churches, town halls, and other gathering places, listening to people鈥檚 concerns and telling them what the science said about covid, vaccines, and other matters of public health. But these workers were laid off early last year, after the Trump administration clawed back more than $12 billion in federal public health grants to states.

鈥淲e were starting to get a little bit of traction,鈥 Heaton said of the community workers. 鈥淎nd then we lost all of our team.鈥

The department offers free measles vaccines to children, but uptake is slow. Nursing director Mindy Bundy said that when she started the job 20 years ago, demand was so high that she would give parents tickets while they waited, as if they were crowding around a deli counter.

鈥淣ow even in an outbreak,鈥 she said, 鈥渨e aren鈥檛 seeing a huge increase of people wanting vaccination.鈥

A photo of a nurse standing by a folding table inside of a school.
Anna Fajardo, a public health nurse, offers vaccines at a school registration event in Milford, in southwest Utah. A few mothers trickled in to get their children immunized or to find out their child鈥檚 vaccination status. (Amy Maxmen/麻豆女优 Health News)

As officials tried to do the best they could, the outbreak spread north, hopping from one undervaccinated community to the next. When health officials in Utah County spoke with people who had tested positive, they often had no connection to other known cases. 鈥淧retty quickly, we started to lose the links,鈥 said Michael Leman, the county health department鈥檚 nursing director. Contact tracing, the cornerstone of containment, was failing.

Every week, the state health department posted a growing list of locations on its website 鈥 a Trader Joe鈥檚, a Mormon temple, an aquarium, preschools 鈥 that people had visited while contagious. But many people who tested positive hadn鈥檛 been to those places, Leman said. 鈥淭hey could have gotten it at Walmart. They could have gotten it walking through a mall,鈥 he said. 鈥淚 mean, just anywhere in the public they could have been exposed.鈥

In February, high school students throughout Utah tested positive after a state wrestling tournament at Utah Valley University in Orem. A dashboard monitoring measles viruses in wastewater lit up with notifications around the state. 鈥淲restling really feels like our turning point,鈥 said Nicholas Rupp, communications director at the Salt Lake County Health Department.

A photo of an LDS temple: a large white church. People are gathered in front of it, some of them holding umbrellas to protect from the sun.
The new Lindon Utah Temple, belonging to the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints, was one of many locations listed as a potential measles exposure site in April by the Utah Department of Health and Human Services. (Amy Maxmen/麻豆女优 Health News)
A photo of a university building with several electric scooters parked in front of it.
A science building at the University of Utah in Salt Lake City was also among the potential exposure sites listed in April. (Amy Maxmen/麻豆女优 Health News)
An exterior shot of a Utah Valley University building with mountains seen behind it.
Many measles cases traced back to a high school wrestling tournament at Utah Valley University in Orem in February. (Amy Maxmen/麻豆女优 Health News)

Salt Lake County鈥檚 shift from containment to mitigation meant prioritizing high-risk situations and relaxing control everywhere else. When a student has a confirmed case, for example, health officials meet with the school nurse to figure out which kids are most vulnerable. Unvaccinated children in the same classroom as someone infected are asked to stay home for 21 days, but those in other classrooms might not be, said Melanie Crossland, an epidemiologist at the Salt Lake health department. Some schools with high vaccination rates have opted to monitor student temperatures daily instead of requesting quarantines. One school created a separate space for the unvaccinated.

Crossland said such bespoke strategies entail a 鈥渉uge鈥 amount of effort but have staved off blowback that deflated her during covid.

鈥淲e give everything when we鈥檙e here,鈥澛爏he said, 鈥渂ut the days of killing ourselves, when legislatively no one is going to give us any help, are done.鈥

Daycare Dilemma

The outbreak has lasted so long that some children who have recovered from measles have since been hospitalized for what should be mild illnesses from common bugs, said Kerri Smith, a hospital pediatrician in southwest Utah. Measles can , impairing a body鈥檚 ability to fight other viruses. 鈥淚t鈥檚 making children very susceptible to getting sick again,鈥 Smith said.

Her eyes were bloodshot, and she looked drained from a week of long shifts. Since the outbreak began, she鈥檚 treated more than a dozen babies and children severely sick from measles.

鈥淭hey鈥檙e usually admitted to the hospital with measles pneumonia, so they鈥檙e struggling to breathe, pulling for air below their ribs,鈥 she said. 鈥淗igh fevers, 104 to 105, absolutely miserable, extremely fatigued, really dehydrated with sunken eyes.鈥 Most children fully recover from measles, but a fraction develop permanent , a small percentage die, and in , measles kills a person years after the infection.

No one has died so far in Utah鈥檚 outbreak. And barring that tragic outcome, Smith and other doctors said, some parents fail to grasp the gravity of measles, even as their own children have tubes inserted into their small nostrils to deliver oxygen. Despite repeated warnings, doctors said, some unvaccinated family members of patients 鈥 who could be contagious 鈥 walk around the hospital while visiting their loved one. This means the waiting room, the elevator, the cafeteria, and other places need to be shut down for cleaning, and vulnerable people alerted.

鈥淧eople don鈥檛 realize how easily this spreads,鈥 Smith said.

Morris, the pediatrician working in two counties, recalled a conversation with a nonchalant father who didn鈥檛 seem to understand the need for quarantine. 鈥淚 know this is an inconvenience to you,鈥 she said. 鈥淚t鈥檚 also a huge inconvenience to the parent who has an infant who could be severely impacted by this disease.鈥

On top of feeling depleted, doctors with young children said they are anxious. Emily Chin, a physician in Salt Lake County, worries she鈥檒l bring measles home to her newborn. One evening, she sat in her garage after caring for a child with a rash. The patient鈥檚 measles test was still being processed, so Chin isolated herself in a room for the night, wearing an N95 mask instead of holding her infant.

A photo of a baby in a carrier sleeping. Next to it is a play mat and a chair.
Emily Chin's 4-month-old, sleeping here at home, is too young to be vaccinated, and Chin, a doctor in Salt Lake County, Utah, worries that she might acquire measles at work and pass it to him. (Amy Maxmen/麻豆女优 Health News)

Like many mothers in Utah, Chin plans to give her baby an early dose of the measles vaccine at 6 months old because of the outbreak, in addition to two doses at ages 1 and 4. Several mothers said they avoid travel and public places because they fear their babies could be infected. Some are delaying daycare. Others, like Kandace Hyland, a marketing director in Salt Lake County, don鈥檛 have that option.

Hyland was shocked when her daycare told her that it didn鈥檛 track the vaccine status of staff, even amid the outbreak. In March, she posted an calling for the state to require daycare staff to be vaccinated against the measles when the virus is spreading. Even if daycare staff file for vaccine exemptions, she said, parents could at least find out what portion of their babies鈥 caretakers pose a life-threatening risk.

Hyland sent her idea to the state health department. Nolen, the state epidemiologist, said she agreed with the concern, and was 鈥渢alking with the division of licensing about the issue,鈥 in an email shared with 麻豆女优 Health News. Hyland also wrote the Division of Licensing and Background Checks. In an email, its director, Shannon Thoman-Black, replied that the division does 鈥渘ot have the legislative authority to implement a mandate.鈥

鈥淭hey always talk about parents鈥 choice,鈥 Hyland said. 鈥淏ut I don鈥檛 feel like I have a really good 鈥榩arents鈥 choice鈥 right now.鈥

Measles鈥 Comeback

The U.S. will almost certainly this year or next, but it could be regained if political leadership backed nationwide campaigns to boost confidence in vaccines, said Demetre Daskalakis, a former director of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention鈥檚 national immunization center and now the chief medical officer at the Callen-Lorde community health center in New York.

鈥淯nder Secretary Kennedy鈥檚 leadership, that鈥檚 unlikely to happen,鈥 he said. 鈥淲e鈥檙e going back to a pre-vaccine era.鈥

A sign in front of a hospital reads, "Please tell us immediately if you are not vaccinated against Measles and have the following symptoms: fever and two or more of the below 鈥 cough, rash, recently exposed to measles, runny nose, red and runny eyes, white spots in mouth."
A sign outside a hospital in southwest Utah warns people who haven鈥檛 been vaccinated against measles to wait outside if they have a fever and other symptoms, such as coughing or a runny nose. Vulnerable people, including infants too young for vaccination, have been exposed to measles at hospitals and clinics. (Amy Maxmen/麻豆女优 Health News)

HHS spokesperson Emily Hilliard defended the secretary and his agency in an email, writing that the CDC has 鈥渟urged resources鈥 to contain measles outbreaks. 鈥淭he CDC, HHS principles and the Secretary have been vocal that the MMR vaccine is the best way to protect yourself against measles,鈥 she said.

Kennedy鈥檚 words and actions suggest otherwise. He鈥檚 said that the measles vaccine leads to 鈥渄eaths every year,鈥 which is . He continues a potential link between autism and vaccines, no matter how many there is none. And he oversaw abrupt changes to the recommended childhood vaccine schedule, a move called dangerous and not backed by science. A federal judge blocked those changes in March, but Trump recently issued an executive order to reexamine the schedule.

鈥淚t鈥檚 been confusing for the public,鈥 said Dorothy Adams, executive director of the Salt Lake County Health Department.

In May, Kennedy met with Republican Utah Gov. Spencer Cox, who has said little about the state鈥檚 ongoing outbreak. Kennedy praised Utah鈥檚 action on Make America Healthy Again priorities, such as banning fluoride in public drinking water and easing restrictions on raw milk sales, according to Salt Lake City鈥檚 . Cox declined to comment for this article.

Meanwhile, the U.S. public health system has been further weakened by the Trump administration鈥檚 cuts and delays to public health grants.

鈥淚f you鈥檙e in the thick of it and you don鈥檛 know if you will be reimbursed, you adjust your response,鈥 said Angela Dunn, a doctor and former Utah state epidemiologist. 鈥淭his outbreak is a perfect storm of disinformation, trauma from the covid pandemic, and the drop in funding.鈥

Measles isn鈥檛 the only preventable malady making a comeback. As children played nearby in a sun-speckled park in Salt Lake City, Morris talked about a baby in the intensive care unit who was bleeding uncontrollably after a fall. The baby鈥檚 parents had refused an injection of vitamin K that helps blood clot in newborns. As they fretted over their infant, Morris said, she felt awful for them and regretted not being able to overcome mistrust in basic, lifesaving interventions. She had the same swirl of emotions when an unvaccinated toddler in her care recently died of whooping cough.

鈥淚 was one of the only people in the room with the nurse when the child coded,鈥 she said with tears in her eyes. 鈥淵ou think, 鈥業 wish this child was vaccinated,鈥 but it鈥檚 hard because I also see how much grief these parents are holding.鈥

麻豆女优 Health News is a national newsroom that produces in-depth journalism about health issues and is one of the core operating programs at 麻豆女优鈥攁n independent source of health policy research, polling, and journalism. Learn more about .

Help 麻豆女优 Health News track this article

By including these elements when you republish, you help us:
  • Understand which communities and people we鈥檙e reaching.
  • Measure the impact of our health journalism.
  • Continue providing free, high-quality health news to the public.
Canonical Tag

Include this in your page's <head> section to properly attribute this content.

Tracking Snippet

Add this snippet at the end of your republished article to help us track its reach.