A growing measles outbreak in Utah had alarmed health officials as case numbers climbed into the hundreds, with doctors reporting that many families underestimated the severity of the disease until it spread through their communities.
Since June 2025, Utah has recorded more than 350 confirmed measles cases, according to the Utah Department of Health and Human Services. The outbreak has resulted in over 120 emergency room visits, at least 31 hospitalizations, and several patients requiring intensive care.
State epidemiologist Dr. Leisha Nolen said conversations with infected families have revealed a pattern of regret.
“It is not a mild infection, it is not a mild virus; it is a severe illness. And they kept on telling me they wish they’d known beforehand how bad measles was, so that they could have protected their family,” Nolen said, according to Utah news outlet KSL.
Health officials say the outbreak began spreading last summer and has since reached multiple counties across the state. Southern Utah has been particularly hard hit, though cases have been reported statewide as the virus moves through communities with lower vaccination coverage.
Vaccination gaps fuel spread
Thought of by some as a harmless childhood illness, measles is among the most contagious viruses known, capable of infecting up to 90% of unvaccinated people who are exposed. The measles, mumps, and rubella (MMR) vaccine is about 97% effective after two doses, according to Utah health officials.
Despite the vaccine’s effectiveness, vaccination coverage in Utah has slipped below the level needed to maintain herd immunity. State data shows roughly 10% of kindergarten students either have exemptions from the MMR vaccine or lack documentation of vaccination, while overall MMR coverage among kindergarteners sits around 89%, well below the 95% threshold public health experts recommend to prevent outbreaks.
Utah also has one of the highest rates of vaccine exemptions in the United States, with more than 10% of kindergarteners receiving immunization waivers, many for personal or religious reasons. Health officials say the vast majority of infections in the current outbreak have occurred in people who were not vaccinated.
National resurgence of measles
The Utah outbreak is part of a broader resurgence of measles across the United States. The country recorded hundreds of cases in 2025 and more outbreaks emerging in 2026, raising concerns among epidemiologists that declining vaccination rates could allow the disease to regain a foothold.
Researchers have warned that if vaccination rates drop further, the U.S. could face millions of measles cases over the coming decades, reversing progress made since the disease was declared eliminated nationally in 2000.
The resurgence is unfolding amid renewed national debate about vaccines. Robert F. Kennedy Jr. (RFK Jr.), now serving as U.S. Secretary of Health and Human Services, has long expressed skepticism about vaccine safety and has supported efforts to change federal vaccine guidance.
A Justice Department lawyer recently argued in federal court that Kennedy has broad authority to reshape federal vaccine policy, including recommendations around measles immunization, a move criticized by major medical organizations.
Kennedy has acknowledged that measles outbreaks are concerning but has previously stopped short of strongly recommending vaccination, instead discussing alternative approaches to prevention and treatment.
Published: Mar 9, 2026 04:29 pm