Texas Announces the End of Measles Outbreak

State health officials have declared an end to the measles outbreak that sickened at least 762 people in West Texas. Two unvaccinated school-age children died of the virus.
Public health officials consider a measles outbreak to be over after 42 days with no new cases. That period is double the disease’s maximum incubation time — the longest period it can take from exposure until illness.
“As far as we can tell based on available data, the outbreak has really ended in Texas,” says Amy Edwards, MD, an infectious disease expert at University Hospitals Rainbow Babies & Children’s Hospital in Cleveland.
“Still, I would expect outbreaks like this to happen with increasing frequency in the future, as more parents may opt to forgo childhood vaccination,” says Dr. Edwards, who also serves as an associate professor in the department of pediatrics at the Case Western Reserve School of Medicine.
Measles Has Not Disappeared
Even though the West Texas outbreak has ended, measles continue to cause illness in other parts of the country.
Protection Against a Measles Resurgence
While the end of the West Texas outbreak is encouraging, William Schaffner, MD, an infectious-disease specialist and a professor of preventive medicine and health policy at the Vanderbilt University School of Medicine in Nashville, warns that trouble could still be on the horizon.
“This is a time of year when measles can tend to be low, in part because children are out of school,” he says. “Now that kids are heading back to class, we will see if there are areas where the measles have been smoldering, and if there may be a burst of transmission.”
Vaccination programs in the United States have kept measles from becoming an epidemic, but outbreaks could grow bigger in the future if the population doesn’t keep up with immunizations on a large scale, Dr. Schaffner says.
“The vaccine is brilliantly effective,” he says. “If you get the appropriate two doses, it can give you lifetime protection. It’s also been used by millions of people around the globe, proving to be extremely safe.”
- Texas Announces End of West Texas Measles Outbreak. Texas Health and Human Services. August 18, 2025.
- Measles Cases and Outbreaks. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. August 6, 2025.
- Prokop D. 3 New Measles Cases Pushes New Mexico’s Total Count of Infections to 100. SourceNM. August 14, 2025.
- NJ Health Department Alerts Residents of New Potential Exposures from a Non-NJ Measles Case, Urges Individuals to Stay Up to Date on Vaccines. New Jersey Department of Health. August 15, 2025.
- Public Health Officials Release Information on Potential Measles Exposures. Colorado Department of Public Health and the Environment. August 15, 2025.
- Bletter D. Health Ministry Says Unvaccinated 18-Month-Old Dies of Measles. Times of Israel. August 16, 2025.

Emily Kay Votruba
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Don Rauf
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Don Rauf has been a freelance health writer for over 12 years and his writing has been featured in HealthDay, CBS News, WebMD, U.S. News & World Report, Mental Floss, United Press International (UPI), Health, and MedicineNet. He was previously a reporter for DailyRx.com where he covered stories related to cardiology, diabetes, lung cancer, prostate cancer, erectile dysfunction, menopause, and allergies. He has interviewed doctors and pharmaceutical representatives in the U.S. and abroad.
He is a prolific writer and has written more than 50 books, including Lost America: Vanished Civilizations, Abandoned Towns, and Roadside Attractions. Rauf lives in Seattle, Washington.