CALIFORNIA FOCUS
FOR RELEASE: TUESDAY, AUGUST 26, 2025 OR THEREAFTER
BY THOMAS D. ELIAS
“MEASLES DEATHS IN
CALIFORNIA: IT’S ONLY A QUESTION OF WHEN”
With more cases of measles
already reported as of July in California than all of last year, it’s only a
matter of time when one of the unvaccinated victims will die. And that will be
a price the parents of that child will have paid for the election of Donald
Trump as president.
Go back just one year, to
last August, and you could see television pictures of Trump in the process of
buying off the presidential candidacy of Robert F. Kennedy Jr. in exchange for
a promise to appoint RFK Jr. as secretary of Health and Human Services.
RFK Jr. was never about to be
elected president, but Trump feared he might siphon off just enough votes in a
few places to toss what looked like a too-close-to-call election over to
Democrat Kamala Harris. So he bought off Kennedy, in plain language. This was
no secret, as the two men staged a widely-covered news conference to announce
their deal.
What’s happened since has
been the inevitable consequence of making the nation’s leading anti-vaccination
advocate the officer in charge of America’s vaccination program.
Measles are the first place
where his presence has been felt in a major way. The measles, mumps and rubella
(MMR) shot required for public school enrollment in many places – including
California, with a few exceptions – is now downplayed officially by the federal
Centers for Disease Control, the country’s authoritative source of public
health expertise until Kennedy changed things there.
One result is that across
America as of mid-June, there were 1,214 confirmed cases of measles with at
least three deaths. The vast majority of victims was unvaccinated. This, from a
disease that just a few years ago had been considered eradicated.
But that was before Kennedy
began using his new bully pulpit for promoting the idea that the MMR vaccine
could cause autism, a claim that medical experts writing in several
peer-reviewed journals thoroughly debunked. That did not stop Kennedy from
promoting the idea and appointing some of its advocates to national vaccine
panels.
So far, California had seen
just 16 measles cases this year as of midsummer, one more than all of last
year. There have been no deaths here. All three of those were in the Texas
panhandle and neighboring New Mexico, where more than half of the country’s measles
cases have turned up.
But the California cases are
very widespread, occurring in Fresno, Los Angeles, Orange, Placer, Riverside,
Sacramento, San Mateo, Santa Clara, Tuolumne and Yolo counties, and in Long
Beach, which has its own city health department.
The three deaths this year
are the first in more than a decade. All the victims were unvaccinated, an
increasing trend across the country as Kennedy promotes vaccine options.
One reason there may be many
more California cases in the offing is that the Texas outbreak is a likely
source of infection for people who travel there. Californians are less likely
to be infected at home, because vaccination rates here top 96.5 percent among
kindergarteners.
But children become infected
easily if taken into an area that’s already affected because of low local
vaccination rates like those where today’s outbreaks are most rampant.
Those rates are lower in
areas where Trump’s electoral performance was highest, as in the Texas cases.
Said Dr. Erica Pan, director
of the California Department of Public Health, “Today’s resurgence is a stark
reminder what happens if we fail to follow the science and give in to
political.”
And political posturing is
what the nation is getting today from Kennedy and Trump, who downplay the
importance of vaccines and question their safety, even for those like the MMR
shots that have safely been in common use for decades.
With Kennedy this summer replacing every
previous member of the CDC’s Advisory Committee of Immunization Practices, no
one knows what official government recommendations will look like a few months
from now.
That’s the danger when the
national public health is entrusted to a discredited vaccine skeptic as part of
a blatantly political deal.
-30-
Email
Thomas Elias at tdelias@aol.com. His book, "The Burzynski Breakthrough:
The Most Promising Cancer Treatment and the Government’s Campaign to Squelch
It," is now available in a soft cover fourth edition. For more Elias
columns, visit www.californiafocus.net.
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