So here’s the thing about measles: we all thought it was pretty much gone. Like, gone-gone. But this week, Connecticut got a stark reminder that viruses don’t check expiration dates.
State health officials confirmed the first measles case in over four years—an unvaccinated child under ten from Fairfield County who recently traveled internationally. The child is now symptomatic, which typically happens about a week to two weeks after exposure. And while this is just one case, it’s got public health folks on edge, and for good reason.
The timing couldn’t be more troubling. Across the country, measles is having a moment we really wish it wasn’t—1,912 confirmed cases nationwide as of December 9th, according to the CDC. Nearly two dozen of those popped up in international visitors, proving that all it takes is one infected traveler landing in the wrong place at the wrong time.
But here’s what makes Connecticut’s situation simultaneously reassuring and infuriating: we’re actually doing the right things. The state’s MMR vaccination rate for kindergarteners sits at 98.2%—well above that critical 95% herd immunity threshold. The vaccine works, plain and simple. One dose gives you about 93% protection; the full two-dose series bumps that to 97%. Those aren’t just good numbers; they’re the reason measles has been largely absent from our state.
Yet that one unvaccinated child? They’re now battling a disease that can cause pneumonia, brain swelling, and serious complications—especially if you’re under five.
Dr. Manisha Juthani, the state’s Public Health Commissioner, didn’t mince words: get vaccinated. It’s the best protection, full stop. And she’s right. This isn’t about politics or personal beliefs—it’s about a virus that doesn’t care about either.
The Fairfield County case feels personal because it is. We’ve done everything right as a state, and measles still found a crack. That’s how contagious this thing is. You can practically hear epidemiologists across Connecticut sighing wearily: This is why we can’t have nice things.
If there’s any silver lining, it’s that this could serve as a reality check. Maybe it’s the nudge someone needs to catch up on their kid’s vaccines. Maybe it’s the reminder that “eradicated” and “eliminated” aren’t synonyms. Maybe it’s just the universe’s way of saying, “Hey, remember that thing you learned in history class? It’s back.”
For now, health officials are doing what they do best—contact tracing, monitoring, and repeating the same message until they’re blue in the face: vaccinate. Vaccinate. Vaccinate.
Because measles isn’t asking permission. And it’s definitely not waiting another four years to remind us it’s still here.
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