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A leading U.S. health official, Dr.
Mehmet Oz, urged Americans on Feb. 8 to get inoculated against measles as outbreaks spread across several states and the nation faces the risk of losing its measles elimination status.
Speaking on CNN, the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services administrator said “take the vaccine, please,” defended recently revised federal vaccine recommendations and said Medicare and Medicaid will continue to cover measles vaccination.
Public health authorities reported sizable outbreaks — notably in South Carolina, which has recorded cases in the hundreds and has surpassed Texas’s 2025 outbreak — and clusters on the Utah-Arizona border, with most cases affecting children.
Officials and infectious disease experts have warned that falling vaccination rates and rising exemption levels are contributing to the resurgence.
The comments spotlight mixed messaging from the Trump administration and HHS leadership, including remarks about Robert F. Kennedy Jr.’s stance, and follow a recent overhaul of some childhood vaccine recommendations at the federal level.
States retain authority over school vaccine requirements and some are forming alliances in response to revised federal guidance.
🔗 Based On
Fortune - FortuneDr. Oz begs Americans to get inoculated against measles as outbreaks spiral around the country. ‘Take the vaccine, please’
The Washington Times stories: Politics'Take the vaccine, please,' a top U.S. health official says in an appeal as measles cases rise








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