Measles is costing the U.S. millions of dollars. The true losses can't be counted.

In early 2025, as measles began to tear through West Texas, Katherine Wells knew she needed money.

NBC Universal Spartanburg, S.C., mobile health unit. (Patrick Martin / NBC News)

Though the outbreak was concentrated in Gaines County, a community an hour away, Wells, who heads Lubbock's public health department, needed more staff to respond to numerous exposures at local pediatricians' offices, urgent care centers, restaurants and day cares.

"We were really relying on staff that aren't hourly, because I can work them for 80 hours if I have to, which is horrible," Wells said. In emergency planning meetings with the Texas Department of State Health Services, she pleaded for roughly $100,000 to hire temporary workers to help her exhausted staff.

"I was like, can I just have money so that if I need a few hours of work from a retired school nurse who we've worked with before, I can just pay them?" Wells said.

The answer, she said, was consistently "no." The state did send a few travel nurses from other areas to help, but no extra funding.

To stop a measles outbreak from escalating out of control, public health workers have to snap into action, contacting every person exposed to the virus as fast as possible, determining their vaccination status or health risk, and then try to woo them into either getting vaccinated or staying home for three weeks in quarantine.

Wells pulled at least half of her staff to work the outbreak response on top of their other daily duties.

What's the real cost of a measles outbreak?

Wells couldn't estimate what it cost the Lubbock Health Department to contain the virus before the outbreak, which began in a mostly unvaccinated Mennonite community in late January of last year, ended months later.

Since 2019, more than two-thirds of counties and jurisdictions have reportednotable drops in vaccination rates, an NBC News/Stanford University investigation found. Among states that track MMR rates, more than half their counties — 67% — fall below the level needed to stop a measles outbreak.

An alarming new report calculates the price tag for the U.S. if those rates continue to fall.

If measles vaccination rates continue to drop just 1% annually for the next five years, the cost to the U.S. could reach $1.5 billion a year, according to a new report from theYale School of Public Health.

Armed with existing county-level vaccination coverage data, Yale researchers used mathematical models to calculate predicted increases in measles cases, hospitalizations and their associated medical and societal costs.

Based on their projections, $41.1 million would be needed each year to cover patients' basic medical needs, including health insurance, and $947 million for public health response efforts such as surveillance and contact tracing. Lost productivity in the workforce, the report found, could reach $510.4 million each year.

Dr. Dave Chokshi, chair of Common Health Coalition, a nonprofit, nonpartisan public health group that partnered with Yale for the project, said a measles outbreak reverberates through all parts of "the health ecosystem."

The human consequences of measles outbreaks "are important for us to face very squarely," said Chokshi, who was previously health commissioner of New York City. "But we also wanted to make it clear that there are economic consequences, including employees absorbing lost work, public health departments that are stretched too thin to respond, and health care systems straining to shoulder the burden of emergency response."

Measles was declared eliminated in the U.S. in 2000. Since then, outbreaks here and there have generally been stopped quickly. But backsliding vaccination rates have increased the risk of massive eruptions and now threaten the nation's measles elimination status.

In late January 2025, as President Donald Trump was taking his second oath of office, measles cases were beginning to spread in West Texas. Under his presidency, following the guidance of Health Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr., the administration has not strongly endorsed vaccines as a way to end such outbreaks.

Instead, the messaging on childhood vaccination has focused on "personal choice" rather than public health necessity.

In the first two months of 2026, there have beenmore than 1,000 confirmed cases of measles, nearly half of the 2,281 in all of 2025. Ninety-four percent of the people infected were unvaccinated.

According to a recent analysis from Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health, the initial financial hit to a community from a measles outbreak is about $244,480. That's the money local and state public health departments can expect to pay for resources like vaccine clinics and staffing until the outbreak is over, said study author Bryan Patenaude, an associate professor of health economics.

"We know the ingredients that go into dealing with a measles outbreak, how many cases wind up becoming severe and seeking care, because they have to be really well-traced and documented," Patenaude said.

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The report, which was posted in Octoberon medRxiv, a site that releases research before it's gone through peer review, tracked measles outbreaks in 18 states since 2004 (not including the 2025 cases in Texas, Utah and Arizona).

On top of the upfront cost, each additional case of measles averages $16,000 a pop for contact tracing, medical expenses and quarantine monitoring. Five measles cases could reach $324,480, while an outbreak of 50 might cost $1 million, the Johns Hopkins report estimated.

In 2019, Clark County, Washington, experienced an outbreak of 72 measles cases. Health officials spent hours making certain that people adhered to quarantines.

"We brought in staff from the state, the CDC, even from other jurisdictions as far away as Idaho to help us with the case investigation and contact tracing," said Dr. Alan Melnick, the public health director for Clark County. The team contacted people who were quarantined every day. Ultimately, 87% of subsequent measles cases occurred among people who'd been quarantined, Melnick said.

An assessmentfound that productivity losses from the relatively small outbreak in Clark County soared to over a million dollars.

The measles vaccine is free in the U.S.

"The public should be aware of what a good deal vaccines are," Melnick said, "because they save a lot of money in addition to saving lives."

As a former California legislator, pediatrician Dr. Richard Pan helped strengthen state vaccine requirements following a 2015 measles outbreak linked to Disneyland. "People need to recognize that there's a tremendous cost to these outbreaks," he said. "That cost, by the way, is being borne by American families."

South Carolina is wrestling to contain the country's largest single outbreak in more than a generation. Spartanburg County has been on high alert since fall, with at least 1,000 cases and possible exposures in fast food restaurants, stores, medical clinics and a government office.

Spartanburg, S.C., mobile health unit. (Patrick Martin / NBC News)

The South Carolina Department of Public Health wouldn't divulge how much contact tracing, mobile vaccine clinics and increased staffing have cost.

A department official said the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention had approved a request to redirect several hundred thousand dollars previously allocated for emergencies.

"Additionally, South Carolina requested and received $100k from CDC available for vaccine-preventable disease responses," Louis Eubank, deputy incident commander for the South Carolina Department of Public Health, said in a statement to NBC News. "South Carolina and the CDC continue to discuss additional funding needs and resource support."

A senior official at the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services said the CDC sent $8.5 million to seven areas of the country experiencing measles outbreaks over the past year, but declined to say where or give additional details.

"Amounts were awarded based on requests from the state or local health agency and availability of funding at CDC," the person said.

As the South Carolina outbreak spilled over into North Carolina, Dr. David Wohl, a global health and infectious disease specialist at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, has scrambled to prevent a surge beyond the 23 cases already confirmed.

"There's so many people working on this in my health care system," Wohl said. "I can't tell you how many calls, how many hours, how stretched people are."

Intangible, indirect costs

The potential economic burden of measles outbreaks is easily calculated. The personal cost of having children unprotected against the world's most contagious virus is impossible to measure.

Hundreds of people infected with measles over the past year — more than 1 in 10, according to the CDC — have been hospitalized with dangerously high fever, pneumonia, trouble breathing and dehydration.

Mothers and fathers have spent countless, blurry hours by their child's bedside. Most recovered. Some are left with the long-term consequences of encephalitis — inflammation of the brain that can lead to seizures, blindness, deafness and learning disabilities.

Rarely, measles can hide in the body for a decade before re-emerging by attacking the brain and nervous system. The condition, calledsubacute sclerosing panencephalitis, is almost always fatal.

Two little girls in Texas, ages 6 and 8, died of measles much sooner, within weeks of their diagnosis.

While the economic consequences of measles outbreaks are real, the human impact cannot be ignored, Chokshi said. "Behind every number is a child struggling with a devastating illness, or a family reckoning with an unexpected hospitalization, and, in the worst circumstances, a death or a long-term consequence from what is a preventable disease."

Measles is costing the U.S. millions of dollars. The true losses can't be counted.

In early 2025, as measles began to tear through West Texas, Katherine Wells knew she needed money. Though the ...
9 people injured in Cincinnati mass shooting

CINCINNATI – Nine people were injured in amass shooting during an event at concert venue in Cincinnatiearly Sunday, March 1, police said.

USA TODAY

The people injured atRiverfront Livewere taken to local hospitals and their injuries are not considered life-threatening, according to Adam Hennie, interim chief of the Cincinnati Police Department.

The call for the shooting came in about 1 a.m. ET, Hennie said. The music venue and the area around it were blocked off as police investigated at 3 a.m. ET.

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Police have not said anything about suspects or what led up to the shooting. An event was in progress at the venue, Hennie said, but he did not say what it was.

The shooting occurred the same day at least three people died and 14 were injured during amass shooting at a bar in Austin, Texas. There have been 56 mass shootings, in which four or more people are injured, so far in 2026, according to theGun Violence Archive.

Contributing: Reuters

This article originally appeared on Cincinnati Enquirer:9 people injured in Cincinnati mass shooting

9 people injured in Cincinnati mass shooting

CINCINNATI – Nine people were injured in amass shooting during an event at concert venue in Cincinnatiearly Sunday, March...
Villanova starting forward Matt Hodge injured against No. 15 St. John's

NEW YORK (AP) — Villanova starting forward Matt Hodge injured his right leg Saturday night against No. 15 St. John's at Madison Square Garden.

Associated Press Villanova forward Matt Hodge goes to the floor with an apparent injury during the second half of an NCAA college basketball game against St. John's, Saturday, Feb. 28, 2026, in New York. (AP Photo/John Munson) Villanova forward Matt Hodge, right, shoots over St. John's forward Ruben Prey during the first half of an NCAA college basketball game Saturday, Feb. 28, 2026, in New York. (AP Photo/John Munson)

Villanova St Johns Basketball

With the Wildcats trailing by 24 early in the second half, Hodge lost the ball as he tried to make a move and went down in a heap clutching his right knee in obvious pain near the basket.

After the Red Storm scored quickly at the other end, a whistle blew and play was stopped. Hodge received attention from the athletic training staff as he remained on the floor. He didn't put any pressure on his right leg as he was helped off the court, and the 6-foot-8 redshirt freshman from Belgium never returned to the game.

Hodge finished with six points and two rebounds in the89-57 loss.Following the game, Villanova coach Kevin Willard said he didn't have any update on the injury yet.

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Hodge began the night averaging 9.4 points and 3.6 rebounds per game. He was shooting 36.4% on 132 attempts from 3-point range.

It could be a costly loss for Villanova, which entered 22-6 andappears headed to the NCAA Tournamentfor the first time in four years. In their first season under Willard, the Wildcats sit third in the Big East standings and are assured the No. 3 seed in the conference tournament.

Get poll alerts and updates on the AP Top 25 throughout the season. Sign uphereandhere(AP News mobile app). AP college basketball:https://apnews.com/hub/ap-top-25-college-basketball-pollandhttps://apnews.com/hub/college-basketball

Villanova starting forward Matt Hodge injured against No. 15 St. John's

NEW YORK (AP) — Villanova starting forward Matt Hodge injured his right leg Saturday night against No. 15 St. John's ...
Title IX impact: How California is setting the standard for equity in wrestling

This is Part 2 ofa two-part series examining girls wrestling, one of the fastest growing sports for high schoolers. In this installment, we check in on California, which is No. 1 among states in girls wrestling participation.

USA TODAY Sports

BAKERSFIELD, CA — Danica Torres stepped onto the mat for her quarterfinal match at the 2026 California Interscholastic Federation (CIF) State Wrestling Championships on Friday. She looked over to the mat next to her, saw her older brother wrestling in his match, and said a quick prayer.

"God, if there's only supposed to be one of us to win, please let it be my brother," Torres, a junior at Brawley Union High School, said. "He works so much harder than me and he deserves it way more than me."

As soon as she won her match to advance to the semifinals, Torres looked back over and began to cry. Her brother, a senior, had lost.

"It shattered me," Torres told USA TODAY Sports.

Forty-seven state high school athletic associations (including Washington, D.C., which has its own association) hold official state championships for girls wrestling. California adds a twist: it holds girls' matches together with the boys' state championships. After becoming just the third state to officially sanction a girls wrestling state championship in 2011, it was a standalone event until six years ago, when the CIF combined both events under one roof.

"It grew and grew," CIF executive director Ron Nocetti told USA TODAY Sports. "It got to the point where we needed to have them in the exact same venue, getting the exact same experience."

In the final round of the tournament, two mats are placed side by side. Two matches are brought out — one girls' and one boys' — and they wrestle simultaneously inside a packed Dignity Health Arena in Bakersfield, which seats approximately 10,000 people.

When the CIF first introduced the new format in 2021, Nocetti says there was some skepticism from parents, schools and athletes, "and then, people saw the wrestling and saw that this is something that needs to be together."

Since then, Nocetti said the feedback has been "nothing but positive."

California not seeing the same lawsuits as other states over girls wrestling

At a time when Title IX legal battles have arisen in other states such as Illinois, Oregon and Tennessee over a lack of access and resources for girls wrestling, Nocetti hasn't really seen the same sentiment in California. Part of the reason for that is the sheer size of the CIF, with over 1,600 member schools and 852,574 student-athletes, per the National Federation of State High School Associations. For reference, the NCAA has approximately1,100 member schoolsand over 550,000 student-athletes combined across all three divisions, according to theirlatest Sports Sponsorship and Participation Rates Report.

"It doesn't mean that that's not happening anywhere," Nocetti said. "I can't tell you it's not happening. I would hope if things like that were happening that going back to the process of raising concerns and letting our schools handle those concerns."

Nocetti added that California has a "mechanism" to lodge complaints directly with schools and school districts. Parents, guardians, students, employees, and district and school advisory committee members can file aUniform Complaint Procedures form— a written and signed statement alleging a violation of federal or state law or regulation, including Title IX — through the California Department of Education. The UCP complaint is then filed directly to the respective district superintendent or their designee.

"I think their goal is to avoid those to begin with," Nocetti said. "And provide the opportunity for girls that want to participate in sport wrestling to be able to do so."

'Girls wrestling has really taken off in California'

The result of those opportunities has been a boom in girls wrestling in California. Out of the 74,064 girls that participated in high school wrestling nationwide in the 2024-25 school year, according to the annual NFHS Sports Participation Survey, California is No. 1 with 8,831 participants.

It's the reason Torres and her family decided to move to the state a year ago in the first place. As a freshman in Arizona, Torres won state and went undefeated through the entire season.

"The competition was a little too easy," she told USA TODAY Sports. "I wanted to get better competitors, and I wanted to beat the best."

And it wasn't just competing against the best from other schools; Torres' teammates at Brawley Union want to be great just as bad as her. Her coaches want it just as much, too. In Arizona, her school's girls wrestling team only consisted of two or three others. Brawley Union has a full lineup, a far cry from when she started out wrestling against boys nine years ago.

Maile Nguyen wanted to start wrestling when she was 6 years old. Her older brother was a wrestler; growing up watching him compete and going to all his tournaments inspired her to pick up the sport as well. The only problem was, there were no girls for her to wrestle. It took two years of wrestling against boys before her family found a coach in her area with a girls wrestling program.

Aubreyelle Baeza was never drawn to any other sport. Or really, any sport.

"I never wanted to do dance or swim, or anything like that," she told USA TODAY Sports. "My mom just threw me into the sport with my brothers, and I just turned out to be good."

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Just 8 years old at the time, Baeza didn't want to wrestle. There was a lot of crying at first, "but I always kept going back."

She just kept going until one day, she beat the whole room, most of which were boys.

Even when Nguyen started at Granada High School in Livermore, she was one of just three girls on the team. Now, in her senior year, Nguyen says there's about eight or nine.

"It's been amazing," Nguyen told USA TODAY Sports. "... It's been super cool to see the family that we've grown not just with our guys team, but also with our women's team."

It speaks to the growth that Torres and Nguyen have seen first-hand when Baeza, now a sophomore at San Dimas High School, says she's pretty sure her school has always had a girls wrestling team.

Where girls wrestling in California can still do better

There's still room for improvement, though. Mainly in the way that women's wrestling is perceived.

Nguyen still hears a lot of people say things along the lines of, "You placed at state,but it's a girls' bracket."

Torres' real first name is Camille. When she was growing up, she would get made fun of for wrestling by people who would find her name on brackets and in news articles.

"Why are you wrestling?" she remembers hearing.

It got to the point where she started going by Danica so that nobody who knew her could look her up.

But the level of support she gets now from her coaches and teammates — both girls and boys — pushes her to another level.

Nguyen feels the same.

"Although we're still growing and still have room to grow, our successes should not be overlooked," she said. "These are still amazing things that we're achieving."

'We're not to be overlooked'

The energy inside Dignity Health Arena for the final round is palpable. Following an Olympics-style parade of champions, the lights go dark. A lone spotlight illuminates the two mats. There are no divisions at the state level in California; it's one bracket, one tournament in which the boys' and girls' finalists duel it out side by side until there's one champion in each weight class.

"It just adds to the atmosphere," Nguyen said. "It's really great because having not that big of a girls team, it helps when you get to be with your guys team because we're all here supporting each other no matter what."

It's one of the things that Torres especially likes about competing in California.

"Some states want to make it two, three divisions," she said. "I don't think that's that good because it dilutes the competition. … I'd rather just have one division so I could say I was the best."

Boys and girls sharing the floor also sends a message of equity that has resonated with the athletes.

"Before then, it was always just one girl in the whole boy room," Baeza said. "... It just proves that girls can do stuff that boys can do. Even if it's really tough."

"We're not to be overlooked," Nguyen said. "Being able to wrestle on the same stage in the same arena, it just shows that we're here to win the same thing. We're here to achieve the same goals, and so why not do it together?"

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY:How does Title IX work: California sets the standard in wrestling

Title IX impact: How California is setting the standard for equity in wrestling

This is Part 2 ofa two-part series examining girls wrestling, one of the fastest growing sports for high schoolers. In th...
Iranian foreign minister: 'We have a right to defend ourselves'

Iranian Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi told ABC News on Sunday that no country's leader has the right to tell Iran not to respond to the sort ofstrikes carried out against itby the United States when asked about an overnight social media post from President Donald Trump that said that Iran should not retaliate.

ABC News

Trump had written on his social media platform early on Sunday, "Iran just stated that they are going to hit very hard today, harder than they have ever hit before. THEY BETTER NOT DO THAT, HOWEVER, BECAUSE IF THEY DO, WE WILL HIT THEM WITH A FORCE THAT HAS NEVER BEEN SEEN BEFORE!"

"I don't think any leader of a country has the right to say so. No. We are defending ourselves, and we have every right, every legitimate right, to defend ourselves, Araghchi told ABC News' "This Week" anchor George Stephanopoulos. "What we are doing is the act of self-defense. There are huge differences between these two."

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Iran live updates

"So one should tell, you know, the president of the United States, 'Do not attack. Do not make any aggression against another country.' But nobody can tell us that you don't have any right to defend yourselves," Araghchi added. "We are defending ourselves; whatever it takes; and we see no limit for ourselves to defend our people, to protect our people."

ABC News - PHOTO: Iranian Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi appears on ABC News'

Asked by Stephanopoulos how much damage the attacks have done on Iranian military infrastructure, Araghchi said, "Well, we have lost some commanders, that is a fact, and the names are already announced. But another fact is that nothing has changed in our military capability."

This is a developing story. Please check back for updates.

Iranian foreign minister: 'We have a right to defend ourselves'

Iranian Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi told ABC News on Sunday that no country's leader has the right to tell Ira...

 

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