Measles Watch in South Carolina: A Tight‑Knit Response

South Carolina, USAFri Mar 13 2026
South Carolina’s health officials keep a close eye on measles even as the number of new cases falls. They are double‑checking every suspected case, especially with spring break on the horizon and the risk of a new spike. The current outbreak is the biggest in the state since 2000, and it rivals the historic flare‑ups seen in New York nearly 35 years ago. In March, only eleven new infections were recorded, but the total linked to the Upstate cluster now reaches 996. The state reports that thirty people are in quarantine and four are isolated. This isn’t the first time the department has seen a lull followed by a surge. In late 2007, there were quiet periods in November and then again between mid‑December and Christmas before the virus spread quickly in Spartanburg. The surge was driven largely by children who had not received their shots. A key issue in early January was that, during the school break, health workers couldn’t contact exposed students as easily. Now with spring break coming, the same problem could reappear.
Dr. Linda Bell, a state epidemiologist, warns that travel increases during spring break could push another wave of cases. “We are worried about a possible rise in infections, ” she says. To stay ahead, the department has asked school districts to name a contact person for any future cases and wants class rosters so it can identify who might have been exposed. Bell notes that spring break activities differ from winter holidays—church services may be less crowded, but other gatherings could still spread the virus. “We must remain alert to prevent another outbreak, ” she adds. The public health team has at times had 90 staff members working on the outbreak, with people rotating in and out. Now, they are tightening scrutiny of any rash or fever that could signal measles. “We’ll run enhanced surveillance on all suspected illnesses to ensure we catch any hidden circulation, ” Bell says. South Carolina cannot declare the outbreak over until 42 days—two full incubation periods—pass without a new case. Until then, the frontline workforce and monitoring systems will stay active. “We don’t want to pull back too soon, ” she stresses.
https://localnews.ai/article/measles-watch-in-south-carolina-a-tightknit-response-67aacc05

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