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Dr.
Mehmet Oz, administrator of the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services, urged Americans on CNN to “take the vaccine, please” as measles outbreaks spread across multiple U.S. states.
His comments on Feb. 8–9 came amid a large outbreak in upstate South Carolina and clusters on the Utah–Arizona border, with cases concentrated among unvaccinated children.
Public health experts warn falling vaccination coverage since 2019 and rising vaccine skepticism have contributed to the resurgence of a disease declared eliminated in the U.S. in 2000.
Federal officials have revised childhood immunization guidance this year, and critics say mixed messaging from the administration—including prominent skepticism from Health and Human Services Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr.—has undermined public confidence.
Oz said Medicare and Medicaid will continue to cover measles vaccination and urged access remain unimpeded.
Health authorities, including the Pan American Health Organization, have flagged the U.S. situation and are monitoring whether transmission could jeopardize the country’s measles-elimination status.
🔗 Based On
People Magazine Dr. Oz Urges Americans, ‘Take the Vaccine, Please’
New York Daily NewsDr. Oz urges Americans to get measles vaccine amid case surge
US news | The Guardian‘Take the vaccine, please,’ Dr Oz urges amid rising measles cases in US
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Social Summary
Key points: measles resurges where vaccine coverage fell; adults with uncertain records should check titers or get catch‑up MMRs. Scientific facts: two doses give near‑complete measles protection and measles infection can weaken immunity to other diseases, amplifying public‑health risk.







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