Dr. Wendell Parkey leads his clinic in Seminole, Texas, amid the largest measles outbreak in the U.S. since 2019. With over 140 people diagnosed and a tragic death announced, the outbreak is particularly concentrated among the unvaccinated Mennonite community. The situation highlights the urgent need for vaccination and the challenges faced by rural health systems in combating vaccine hesitancy. With the outbreak’s severity escalating, local health officials are on high alert as they navigate this public health crisis.
Y'all ready to stomp out disease? he asks. Recently, the question has taken on a dark urgency. Seminole Memorial Hospital, where Dr. Parkey has practiced for nearly three decades, has found itself at the center of the largest measles outbreak in the United States since 2019.
Since last month, more than 140 Texas residents, most of whom live in the surrounding Gaines County, have been diagnosed and 20 have been hospitalized. Nine people in a bordering county in New Mexico have also fallen ill.
On Wednesday, local health officials announced that one child had died, the first measles death in the United States in a decade. It may not be the last.
Large swaths of the Mennonite community, an insular Christian group that settled in the area in the 1970s, are unvaccinated and vulnerable to the virus.
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