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As Measles Exploded, Officials in Texas Looked to CDC Scientists. Under Trump, No One Answered.

As Measles Exploded, Officials in Texas Looked to CDC Scientists. Under Trump, No One Answered.

As a measles outbreak exploded in Texas in February, local health officials struggled to reach CDC scientists who were grappling with changes under the new Trump administration, according to interviews and emails obtained by 杨贵妃传媒視頻 Health News. The first three clips above are excerpts of emails from Katherine Wells, the public health director in Lubbock, Texas. The bottom clip is from Scott Milton, at the Texas Department of State Health Services. (杨贵妃传媒視頻 Health News illustration; 500Px Plus; photo of Lubbock, Texas, from Getty Images)

As measles surged in Texas early this year, the Trump administration鈥檚 actions sowed fear and confusion among CDC scientists that kept them from performing the agency鈥檚 most critical function 鈥 emergency response 鈥 when it mattered most, an investigation from 杨贵妃传媒視頻 Health News shows.

The outbreak soon became the worst the United States has endured in over three decades.

In the month after Donald Trump took office, his administration Centers for Disease Control and Prevention communications, stalled the agency鈥檚 reports, its data, and abruptly staff. In the chaos, CDC experts felt restrained from talking openly with local public health workers, according to interviews with seven CDC officials with direct knowledge of events, as well as local health department emails obtained by 杨贵妃传媒視頻 Health News through public records requests.

鈥淐DC hasn鈥檛 reached out to us locally,鈥 Katherine Wells, the public health director in Lubbock, Texas, wrote in a Feb. 5 email exchange with a colleague two weeks after children with measles were hospitalized in Lubbock. 鈥淢y staff feels like we are out here all alone,鈥 she added.

A child would die before CDC scientists contacted Wells.

鈥淎ll of us at CDC train for this moment, a massive outbreak,鈥 one CDC researcher told 杨贵妃传媒視頻 Health News, which agreed not to name CDC officials who fear retaliation for speaking with the press. 鈥淎ll this training and then we weren鈥檛 allowed to do anything.鈥

Delays have catastrophic consequences when measles spreads in undervaccinated communities, like many in West Texas. If a person with measles is in the same room with 10 unvaccinated people, nine will be infected, . If those nine go about their lives in public spaces, numbers multiply exponentially.

The outbreak that unfolded in West Texas illustrates the danger the country faces under the Trump administration as vaccination , misinformation flourishes, public health budgets are cut, and science agencies are subject to political manipulation.

While the Trump administration stifled CDC communications, health secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. in vaccines and exaggerated to ward off disease. Suffering followed: The spread to , , , , and 鈥 at minimum. Together these have sickened more than 4,500 people, killed at least 16, and levied exorbitant costs on hospitals, health departments, and those paying medical bills.

鈥淭his is absolutely outrageous,鈥 said Jennifer Nuzzo, director of the Pandemic Center at Brown University. 鈥淲hen you鈥檙e battling contagious diseases, time is everything.鈥

鈥楾he CDC Is 鈥淪tressed鈥 Currently鈥

Wells was anxious the moment she learned that two unvaccinated children hospitalized in late January had the measles. Hospitals are legally required to report measles cases to health departments and the CDC, but Wells worried many children weren鈥檛 getting tested.

鈥淚 think this may be very large,鈥 she wrote in a Feb. 3 email to the Texas Department of State Health Services. Wells relayed in another email what she鈥檇 learned from conversations around town: 鈥淎ccording to one of the women I spoke with 55 children were absent from one school on 1/24. The women reported that there were sick children with measles symptoms as early as November.鈥

In that email and others, Wells asked state health officials to put her in touch with CDC experts who could answer complicated questions on testing, how to care for infants exposed to measles, and more. What transpired was a plodding game of telephone.

One email asked whether clinics could decontaminate rooms where people with measles had just been if the clinics were too small to follow the CDC鈥檚 recommendation to keep those rooms empty for two hours.

鈥淲ould it be possible to arrange a consultation with the CDC?鈥 Wells wrote on Feb. 5.

鈥淚t never hurts to ask the CDC,鈥 said Scott Milton, a medical officer at the Texas health department. About 25 minutes later, he told Wells that an information specialist at the CDC had echoed the guidelines advising two hours.

鈥淚 asked him to escalate this question to someone more qualified,鈥 Milton wrote. 鈥淥f course, we know the CDC is 鈥榮tressed鈥 currently.鈥

A clipping of a redacted email that reads, "I just called the CDC and spoke to the information specialist. He reviewed the same guidelines that we have seen recommending 2hours. I asked him to escalate this question to someone more qualified. They have my work e-mail and I'm told to expect a response in the near future. Of course, we know the CDC is 'stressed' currently."
A Feb. 5 email from Texas health official Scott Milton, obtained through a public records request. He wanted to reach scientists at the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention who could answer urgent questions about measles from front-line workers in West Texas. Emails have been redacted to protect the privacy of individuals and facilities.(Screenshot by 杨贵妃传媒視頻 Health News)

Local officials resorted to advice from doctors and researchers outside the government, including those at the , a Texas nonprofit.

鈥淭he CDC had gone dark,鈥 said Terri Burke, executive director of the partnership. 鈥淲e had anticipated a measles outbreak, but we didn鈥檛 expect the federal government to be in collapse when it hit.鈥

Technically, the Trump administration鈥檚 had ended Feb. 1. However, CDC scientists told 杨贵妃传媒視頻 Health News that they could not speak freely for weeks after. 

鈥淭here was a lot of confusion and nonanswers over what communications were allowed,鈥 one CDC scientist said.

Georges Benjamin, executive director of the American Public Health Association, said the situation was not unique to measles. 鈥淟ike most public health organizations, we weren鈥檛 able to get ahold of our program people in February,鈥 he said. Information trickled out through the CDC鈥檚 communications office, but CDC scientists gave no press briefings and went dark on their closest partners across the country. 鈥淭he CDC was gagged,鈥 he said.

Through private conversations, Benjamin learned that CDC experts were being diverted to remove information from websites to comply with executive orders. And they were afraid to resume communication without a green light from their directors or the Department of Health and Human Services as they watched the Trump administration CDC staffers in droves.

鈥淚t鈥檚 not that the CDC was delinquent,鈥 Benjamin said. 鈥淚t鈥檚 that they had their hands tied behind their backs.鈥

To work on the ground, the CDC needs an invitation from the state. But Anne Schuchat, a former CDC deputy director, said that during her 33 years with the agency, federal health officials didn鈥檛 need special permission to talk freely with local health departments during outbreaks. 鈥淲e would always offer a conversation and ask if there鈥檚 anything we could do,鈥 she said.

Lara Anton, a press officer at the Texas health department, said the state never prevented the CDC from calling county officials. To learn more about the state鈥檚 correspondences with the CDC, 杨贵妃传媒視頻 Health News filed a public records request to the Texas health department. The department refused to release the records. Anton called the records 鈥渃onfidential under the Texas Health and Safety Code.鈥

Anton said the state sent vaccines, testing supplies, and staff to assist West Texas in the early weeks of February. That鈥檚 corroborated in emails from the South Plains Public Health District, which oversees Gaines County, the area hit hardest by measles.

鈥淭exas will try to handle what it needs to before it goes to the CDC,鈥 Zach Holbrooks, the health district鈥檚 executive director, told 杨贵妃传媒視頻 Health News.

Responding to an outbreak in an undervaccinated community, however, requires enormous effort. To keep numbers from exploding, public health workers ideally would notify all people exposed to an infected person and ask them to get vaccinated immediately if they weren鈥檛 already. If they declined, officials would try to persuade them to avoid public spaces for three weeks so that they wouldn鈥檛 spread measles to others.

Holbrooks said this was nearly impossible. Cases were concentrated in where people relied on home remedies before seeking medical care. He said many people didn鈥檛 want to be tested, didn鈥檛 want to name their contacts, and didn鈥檛 want to talk with the health department. 鈥淚t doesn鈥檛 matter what resources I have if people won鈥檛 avail themselves of it,鈥 Holbrooks said.

Historically, Mennonites faced persecution in other countries, making them leery of interacting with authorities, Holbrooks said. A backlash against covid restrictions deepened that mistrust.

Another reason Mennonites may seek to avoid authorities is that some , having immigrated to Texas from Canada, Mexico, and Bolivia in waves over the past 50 years. the population of Seminole, the main city in Gaines County, is far larger than the count.

鈥淚 have no idea how many cases we might have missed, since I don鈥檛 know how many people are in the community,鈥 Holbrooks said. 鈥淭here鈥檚 a lot of people in the shadows out here.鈥

Public health experts say the situation in Gaines sounds tough but familiar. Measles tends to take hold in undervaccinated communities, and therefore public health workers must overcome mistrust, misinformation, language barriers, and more.

A clipping of a redacted email that reads, "Below is some info I learned from speaking with the Mennonite women and also from talking to providers and staff today. Hopefully this gives you some perspective. Younger people in the Mennonite community are not vaccinated鈥攖hose over 25 are more likely to be vaccinated. Young parents are not vaccinating their children. Older community members understand that Measles is dangerous. [Redacted] During the last week of January at least two German School closed for a few days because of illness. There are reports this week that schools are closed for the entire week. According to one of the women I spoke with 55 children were absent from school on 1/24. The women reported that there were sick children with measles symptoms as early as November. The community fdeels burned by COVID-19 restrictions; we need to be mindful of this. We need to respect the culture; don't go in telling people what to do. By-in from men is important. We should focus on education 鈥 signs/symptoms, how it's spread. There are large WhatsApp groups 鈥 used more than Facebook 鈥 best way to get info out to everyone (we have identified people that will post to these groups for us). Outreach should focus on the broader community, not just Mennonites 鈥 make sure everything is in English, Spanish, and Low"
A Feb. 3 email from Katherine Wells to a Texas state health official, Imelda Garcia, warning of a far larger measles outbreak than case numbers suggested. 杨贵妃传媒視頻 Health News obtained emails through Freedom of Information Act requests to local health departments. The emails have been redacted to protect the privacy of individuals and facilities.(Screenshot by 杨贵妃传媒視頻 Health News)

About 450 people 鈥 including local health officials, CDC scientists, nurses, and volunteers 鈥 helped control a measles outbreak sparked in an Eastern European immigrant community in , Washington, in 2018.

Alan Melnick, Clark County鈥檚 public health director, said his team spoke with hundreds of unvaccinated people who were exposed. 鈥淲e were calling them basically every day to see how they were doing and ask them not to go out in public,鈥 he said.

Melnick spoke with CDC scientists from the start, and the intensity of the response was buoyed by emergency declarations by the county and the state. Within a couple of months, the outbreak was largely contained. No one died, and only two people were hospitalized.

In , hundreds of people in the city鈥檚 health department responded to a larger measles outbreak in 2018 and 2019 concentrated among Orthodox Jewish communities. The work included meeting with dozens of rabbis and distributing booklets to nearly 30,000 households to combat vaccine misinformation.

The effort cost more than $7 million, but Jane Zucker, New York City鈥檚 assistant health commissioner at the time, said it yielded immense savings. The average medical bill for measles hospitalizations is roughly $18,500, according to . Then there鈥檚 the cost of diverting hospital resources, of children missing school, of parents staying home from work to care for sick kids, and of some measles infections, including .

鈥淚 don鈥檛 think there鈥檚 a price tag to put on a child鈥檚 death that would otherwise be prevented,鈥 Zucker said.

Local health departments in West Texas were understaffed from the start. About 18 people work at the South Plains health department, which oversees four vast rural counties. About 50 staff the department in Lubbock, where patients were hospitalized and health workers struggled to figure out who was exposed. In mid-February, Wells emailed a colleague: 鈥淚鈥檓 so overwhelmed.鈥

A Death Ignites a Response

On Feb. 26, Texas announced that of measles. Wells heard from CDC scientists for the first time the following day. Also that day, the CDC issued a on the outbreak. The notice recommended vaccines, but it worried public health specialists because it also promoted vitamin A as a treatment under medical supervision.

In emails, Texas health officials privately discussed how the CDC鈥檚 notice might exacerbate : Doctors were with measles for toxic levels of vitamin A, suggesting that parents were delaying medical care and administering the supplements at home. A local Lubbock news outlet where vitamin A supplements and cod liver oil, which contains high levels of vitamin A, were 鈥渇lying off the shelf.鈥

Too much vitamin A can cause liver damage, blindness, and during fetal development.

A clipping of a redacted email that reads, "Good morning. The CDC team arrived and began working in our office on Friday, 3/7. They have already connected with several hospital providers and providing much-needed support to our lead epidemiologists. I am in the process of arranging a formal meeting between CDC, DSHS, hospital leadership and infection control later this week. In the meantime, if you need assistance from the CDC team, please let me know. Yesterday, UMC had some questions regarding the treatment of pregnant women. The CDC will be reaching out directly to the UMC Infection Prevention team today. Unfortunately, I think we are seeing an uptick of pregnant women infected with measles along with a steady number of children needing a higher level of care."
A March 9 email from Katherine Wells announcing the arrival of CDC scientists in Lubbock, Texas, some six weeks after the first cases were detected. Emails obtained by 杨贵妃传媒視頻 Health News have been redacted to protect the privacy of individuals and facilities.(Screenshot by 杨贵妃传媒視頻 Health News)

Milton worried that parents were listening to misinformation from anti-vaccine groups 鈥 including by Kennedy 鈥 that diminished the need for vaccination by that vitamin A staved off the disease鈥檚 worst outcomes.

鈥淗ow many people will choose Vitamin A and not a vaccine because it appears to them there are two options?鈥 Milton asked in an email.

Scientists at the CDC privately fretted, too. 鈥淗HS pressed us to insert vitamin A into all of our communications with clinicians and health officials,鈥 one CDC scientist told 杨贵妃传媒視頻 Health News, referring to the agency鈥檚 notices and alerts. 鈥淚f pregnant women took too much vitamin A during the outbreak, their babies could be profoundly disabled. We haven鈥檛 seen those babies born yet.鈥

Another CDC official said they鈥檝e had to 鈥渨alk a fine line鈥 between protecting the public based on scientific evidence and aligning with HHS.

While CDC scientists held their tongues, Kennedy exaggerated the power of nutrition and vitamin A while furthering mistrust in vaccines. 鈥淲e鈥檙e providing vitamin A,鈥 Kennedy said in an interview on . 鈥淭here are many studies, some showing 87% effectiveness,鈥 he claimed, 鈥渁gainst serious disease and death.鈥

The were conducted in low-income countries where children are malnourished. Evidence suggests that vitamin A supplementation is against measles in the United States, because deficiency is exceedingly rare.

Kennedy deflected criticism from those who call him anti-vaccine, any parent in Texas who wants a measles vaccine can get one. He followed this with dangerously . 鈥淭here are adverse events from the vaccine. It does cause deaths every year,鈥 he said. 鈥淚t causes all the illnesses that measles itself causes, encephalitis and blindness, et cetera.鈥 There is that measles vaccines 鈥渃ause deaths every year.鈥 Scores of studies show that the vaccine encephalitis, that most potential side effects resolve quickly on their own, and serious adverse reactions are far rarer than measles complications.

In Kennedy said, 鈥淭he MMR vaccine contains a lot of aborted fetus debris.鈥 The measles, mumps, and rubella, or MMR, vaccine an iota of fetal cells.

HHS spokesperson Andrew Nixon and spokespeople at the CDC did not respond to queries from 杨贵妃传媒視頻 Health News.

鈥楽taff Are Exhausted鈥

Despite national attention after the country鈥檚 first measles death in a decade, West Texas was overwhelmed. In late February and March, hospital administrators and health officials exchanged emails about how to lobby for resources.

鈥淟ocal hospitals are at capacity,鈥 wrote Jeffrey Hill, a senior vice president at the University Medical Center Health System in Lubbock. 鈥淭he state reports emergency funds that typically cover a response like the measles outbreak are not available from the federal government right now,鈥 he added.

鈥淚 am writing to express our urgent need for additional staff and funding,鈥 Ronald Cook, medical director for Lubbock, said in an email, drafted with other Lubbock health authorities, to the deputy city manager. 鈥淥ur Capacity is Stretched Thin: The health department has been operating seven days a week since February 2nd. Staff are exhausted.鈥

The city of Lubbock fronted money to help the local health department hire temporary staff. The state did not provide money, but it asked the CDC to send epidemiologists. Some came to Texas in early March. Then Texas requested federal funds.

None arrived, even as the outbreak approached 500 cases. It when an unvaccinated Mennonite child returned home after visiting family in Seminole. This would fuel the largest outbreak Mexico has seen , with at least 3,700 cases and in the state of Chihuahua.

Then another child in West Texas .

In a rare moment of openness, CDC scientist David Sugarman mentioned the outbreak at a vaccine in late April. 鈥淭here are quite a number of resource requests coming in, in particular from Texas,鈥 Sugarman said. 鈥淲e are scraping to find the resources and personnel needed to provide support to Texas and other jurisdictions.鈥

Federal funds arrived in Texas on May 21, said Anton, the state health department spokesperson. By then, the crisis was fading. The outbreak seemed to have burned until every unvaccinated person in Seminole was infected, said Richard Eby, a doctor at Permian Regional Medical Center who treated some measles patients. Hundreds, if not thousands, of cases have probably gone undetected, he said. 鈥淎 lot of people presumed their kids had measles,鈥 he said, 鈥渁nd didn鈥檛 see the need to confirm it.鈥

On Aug. 18, health officials declared the West Texas , but the consequences of the catastrophe will be lasting.

The outbreaks it sparked across the U.S. and Mexico are still spreading.

More are inevitable, Nuzzo said. A growing number of parents are deciding their kids, worried over unfounded rumors about the shots. Misinformation is flourishing, especially after Kennedy fired vaccine experts who advise the CDC and replaced them with doctors and researchers on the fringes of the scientific establishment. For example, one of his recent appointees, Robert Malone, with measles on 鈥渕edical mismanagement,鈥 .

At the same time, states are downsizing programs for emergency response, disease surveillance, and immunization after the Trump administration clawed back more than in public health funds earlier this year.

Amid Lubbock鈥檚 toughest months, Wells sent an email to the department鈥檚 exhausted staff. 鈥淭he future is uncertain, and I know this is an unsettling time for many of us,鈥 she wrote. 鈥淓very day we show up and do our jobs is an act of resilience.鈥