Play Live Radio
Next Up:
0:00
0:00
0:00 0:00
Available On Air Stations

Measles outbreak update: Texas reports 25 new cases in South Plains region

The Seminole Hospital District in Seminole, Texas, offers measles testing.
Julio Cortez
/
AP
The Seminole Hospital District in Seminole, Texas, offers measles testing.

Sign up for TPR Today, Texas Public Radio's newsletter that brings our top stories to your inbox each morning.

State health officials on Tuesday reported 25 new cases of measles in the South Plains region, raising the number of confirmed cases since January to 223, with 29 patients hospitalized.

At least two people have died — an unvaccinated person in New Mexico and an unvaccinated child in Lubbock. The death in New Mexico was in Lea County. The county borders Gaines County, where the outbreak is centered.

Measles complications can include pneumonia, hearing loss, meningitis, and death.

Dr. Greg Poland, the chief strategy and innovation officer at Atria and president and co-director of the Atria Research Institute, said the severity of the virus is not stressed enough.

"We think of measles as a disease that can kill and cause disability," he said. "About one to three out of every 1,000 who get infected will end up dying. ... [O]nce you get measles, the only thing we can really offer is supportive care. There is no antiviral. There is nothing we can give that's going to reverse it, so ... make a wise decision now, before exposure."

Medical professionals like Poland have stressed the importance of getting the MMR vaccine since the outbreak began. Adults who are unsure of their vaccination status can request records from their primary care providers.

The Vitamin A rumor

A new question swirling around the medical community is how effective is Vitamin A at protecting someone from measles?

Health experts say Vitamin A, despite what vaccine critics say, does not prevent measles.

It supports the human body’s natural defense system when fighting illnesses. But it does not prevent someone from contracting diseases, like measles, in the first place.

UT Health infectious disease expert Dr. Catherine Troisi explained that “moderate doses of Vitamin A can be useful in treatment, but the better choice is to prevent measles from happening in the first place through vaccination.”

She emphasized that two doses of the measles shot is proven be 97% effective in preventing measles.

Taking in more Vitamin A would only help someone avoid long-term symptoms if they contracted the disease.

Bonnie Petrie and Houston Public Media's Colleen Guzman contributed to this report.

Copyright 2025 Texas Public Radio

Gabriella Alcorta-Solorio