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Washington, D.C., health officials have warned that multiple confirmed measles cases visited several city locations while contagious, potentially exposing thousands who attended the National March for Life rally on Jan. 23.
DC Health said exposures occurred between Jan. 21 and Feb. 2 and listed specific sites including the National Mall (March for Life rally and concert), the Basilica of the National Shrine of the Immaculate Conception (Jan. 21), Catholic University of America (Jan. 24–25), Ronald Reagan Washington National Airport (Jan. 26), Washington Metro lines (Jan. 26–27), Union Station and Amtrak concourse (Jan. 27), and Children’s National Hospital emergency department (Feb. 2). Officials urged anyone potentially exposed to check vaccination status, monitor for symptoms for 21 days and contact health providers or DC Health for guidance.
The warning comes amid a large U.S. resurgence of measles this year — federal authorities have reported several hundred confirmed cases and major outbreaks, notably in South Carolina and Texas — driven largely by unvaccinated populations.
Two MMR doses are about 97% effective; public-health authorities emphasize vaccination, isolation of suspected cases and quarantine of contacts to limit further spread.
















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