South Carolina
Related: About this forumSouth Carolina's measles outbreak shows chilling effect of vaccine misinformation
BOILING SPRINGS, S.C. Near the back corner of the local librarys parking lot, largely out of view from the main road, the South Carolina Department of Public Health opened a pop-up clinic in early November, offering free measles vaccines to adults and children.
Spartanburg County, in South Carolinas Upstate region, has been fighting a measles outbreak since early October, with more than 50 cases identified. Health officials have encouraged people who are unvaccinated to get a shot by visiting its mobile vaccine clinic at any of its several stops throughout the county.
But on a Monday afternoon in Boiling Springs, only one person showed up.
Its progress. That progress is slow, Linda Bell, the state epidemiologist with the Department of Public Health, said during a recent press briefing. We had hoped to see a more robust uptake than that in our mobile health units.
As South Carolina tries to contain its measles outbreak, public health officials across the nation are concerned that the highly contagious virus is making a major comeback. The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention has tallied more than 1,700 measles cases and 45 outbreaks in 2025. The largest started in Texas, where hundreds of people were infected and two children died.
https://kffhealthnews.org/news/article/measles-outbreak-south-carolina-vaccine-misinformation-kennedy-rfk/
OldBaldy1701E
(9,674 posts)timms139
(459 posts)again letting stupidity allow almost eradicated disease make a comeback .
WmChris
(528 posts)They really don't get the fact that most of those who buy into their bogus health fantasies are their own cult member. They're thinning their own ranks. I wish them luck in this endeavor. When more science centered policy makers are in place after the dark age crew is removed from office we can get back to policy's based in reality.
da svenster
(76 posts)a few years ago i got a pop up message in mychart saying i might need an MMR booster. when i first asked the doc about it, she didn't seem worried. but i did do a little digging and found out something i wasn't aware of.
i was born and given the MMR vaccine during a period when a variant of the vaccine didn't wind up conferring long term immunity to measles. between 1963 and 1968 there were two variants: an inactivated (dead) and an attenuated (hain't dead). the inactivated virus version wasn't effective in the long term.
so, i got an MMR titer. found out i had no immunity to the two Ms. i.e., i must have gotten the inactivated version. as i told my doc, if there was a vaccine for snot i'd queue up for one.
so, i got a jab a few days ago, same time as i got my flu shot. not just because i didn't have immunity, but because a lot of other people have decided the safety of their kids and community are not important. and i happen to travel through parts of my state where a lot of people are vaccine hesitant or downright against.
i sometimes wonder if vaccine hesitation is because folks just don't like getting stuck with a needle. they can hide behind the oft debunked autism link because they don't like needles (or don't want to see their kids get jabbed with needles)