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A top U.S. health official urged Americans to get measles vaccinations as outbreaks spread across multiple states, raising alarms that the country could lose its measles-elimination status.
On Feb. 8, 2026, Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services administrator Dr.
Mehmet Oz told CNN viewers, “Take the vaccine, please,” and said Medicare and Medicaid will continue to cover the shot.
South Carolina is facing the largest outbreak in years, with roughly 920 confirmed cases, and clusters have also been reported along the Utah–Arizona border and elsewhere.
The calls for vaccination come amid broader strains on trust in U.S. vaccine policy: an Annenberg survey (Nov. 17–Dec. 1, 2025) found perceptions of vaccine safety slipping — 83% view MMR as safe, 80% the flu vaccine and 65% COVID-19 vaccines — and a KFF poll shows public trust in the CDC has fallen dramatically.
Since 2025 the Health and Human Services department has altered federal guidance, moving several childhood vaccines to shared clinical decision-making and removing key advisory committee members, prompting major medical groups to push back.
On Feb. 10, 2026 the American Medical Association and the Vaccine Integrity Project said they would run independent evidence reviews for the 2026–27 respiratory season to restore confidence.
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Social Summary
Longstanding, monetized antivax networks rooted in the Wakefield fraud, plus eroding public trust and politicization of vaccine policy, have produced coverage gaps. Those gaps imperil vulnerable populations, raise outbreak and mutation risks, and threaten the U.S. measles‑elimination status.
















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