Minnesota can’t quite shake the measles this year, as the highly infectious disease is spreading one by one to unvaccinated people in the Twin Cities — mostly preschool-age children — presenting the risk of a broader outbreak.
The 59 infections so far make up the second-highest total of any U.S. state in 2024 and the second-highest annual tally in Minnesota in 35 years.
Public health officials said the total, including 12 severe cases requiring hospitalization, could have been worse if not for their rapid response. Epidemiology investigations linked 51 cases and identified 1,900 close contacts of infected people at risk of contracting and spreading measles, including 240 people who didn’t have immunity as a result of vaccinations or prior infections.
Those unprotected people were asked to stay away from others until their infection risks were established, and their compliance over some difficult days and weeks made a difference, said Jayne Griffith, a senior epidemiologist for infectious diseases at the Minnesota Department of Health.
“When it comes to measles, once we have conversations with families, and they certainly understand how sick their child has been, they do want to cooperate,” she said. “We hear from parents all the time that they don’t want someone else’s child to be that sick.”
The measles virus is one of the most infectious agents on the planet, capable of lingering in the air and spreading to others long after sick people have left. Known by its characteristic head-to-toe rash, measles also causes high fevers, cold symptoms and breathing problems. A two-dose vaccine is 97% effective at preventing measles, but the infectious disease is making a comeback in the U.S. as parents decline the shots for their children.
Minnesota had the sixth-worst rate of children vaccinated in time for kindergarten at the start of the 2022-23 school year, a recent federal report showed. A decade ago, the state’s measles vaccination rate of 94% was among the best, but it has since declined to 87%.
Sunday marked about 12 days since the last identified infection, but state health officials don’t feel relief until 21 days — which is how long it can take in extreme cases for exposure to the measles to produce symptoms. Measles outbreaks aren’t considered over until two incubation cycles, or 42 days, have passed, so the threat will remain in Minnesota until almost Halloween.