We Are Going to See More Measles Tragedies

“One death is a tragedy; a million is a statistic.” This quote is often misattributed to Joseph Stalin but is likely derived from the German journalist and satirist Kurt Tucholsky. So much of the arguments for vaccines focus on the millions of lives that have been saved. Yet, it is the individual sad stories that are often much more powerful. I was thinking of this quote as I read a NY Times Commentary by Rebecca Archer (4/21/26): Measles Took My Daughter. This Is What I Want Everyone to Know.

An excerpt:

When my daughter Renae, my firstborn, was 5 months old she spiked a fever…At the hospital the doctors noted the red spots on her body and diagnosed her with measles.

This was 2013, and Manchester, England, where we lived, was experiencing a measles outbreak that resulted in more than 1,000 suspected cases. A 1998 study by a British doctor, Andrew Wakefield, linking the measles, mumps and rubella vaccine to autism had caused vaccination rates to plummet. The study was later retracted and Mr. Wakefield stripped of his medical license, but the damage had been done. In 2013, most of the cases were among school-age children whose parents had refused to give them the vaccine, which is not compulsory in Britain, or among babies too young to be vaccinated, like my daughter…

Within a week she seemed back to normal. What I didn’t know was that measles can cause long-term complications. A child can seem fine while the virus slowly replicates in her brain, poised to exact a terrible toll years later…

Toward the end of the summer [2023], … she had also started moving very slowly, almost robotically, and often seemed confused. We took her back to the hospital, where another M.R.I. showed the swelling in her brain had become much worse… Renae had subacute sclerosing panencephalitis, a rare complication of measles. The doctors told me it was fatal, and there was nothing else they could do…

Last year, the United States saw its highest rate of measles cases in more than three decades and the country may soon lose its measles elimination status as well. Despite this, Health Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. said he doesn’t think the government should be mandating vaccines, and that they should be a matter of personal choice.

Parents must realize that refusing vaccinations doesn’t just put your own child at risk. It puts other children at risk. 

Related articles:

  • LA Bacheschi, et al. NEJM 2026; 394: 1662. Measles 2025. Subacute sclerosing panencephalitis “was not rare before vaccination, as shown by an account of 82 cases… in Brazil from 1961 to 1983.”
  • DN Durrheim, JK Andrus. NEJM 2026; 394: 1662-1663. Measles 2025. The “measles still kills more than 100,000 children worldwide each year.”

Related blog posts:

Mount Fitz Roy, Argentina

Leave a comment

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.