Summary

A measles outbreak in rural West Texas has surged to 49 confirmed cases, mostly among unvaccinated school-age children, with officials suspecting hundreds more unreported infections.

The outbreak is centered in Gaines County, home to a large Mennonite population with low vaccination rates. Despite CDC support, Texas has not requested federal intervention.

The outbreak has now spread to Lubbock, raising wider public health concerns.

Experts warn it could persist for months without increased vaccination efforts, but skepticism toward vaccines remains a significant barrier.

  • @[email protected]
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    fedilink
    85 days ago

    You know what’s interesting is that the first real anti-vaxxers started because old vaccines would use pus from an infected cow. Something about it being unholy worship of cow or some nonsense.

    Now the anti-vaxx crowd is all crying about synthetics… Can’t make anyone happy.

    • @CharlesDarwin
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      135 days ago

      The truly OG anti-vaxxers had some among them that thought it was against their god’s will to combat disease, if you can fucking believe it (people are stupid and horrible, it turns out):

      https://newrepublic.com/article/121000/puritanical-roots-anti-vaxxer-movement-go-back-300-years

      To treat small pox was seen as a form of blasphemy—a moral evil that refused to recognize that epidemics were acts of God.

      I just don’t understand how such a “god” could be worthy of worship, then. Imagine losing 9 children before they reached adulthood. I’d flip this “god” of theirs the bird, and try the cure, thankyouveryfuckingmuch.

    • @Joeffect
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      55 days ago

      Well puss is gross man…