Annie Andrews is a pediatrician in South Carolina. She is running against Senator Lindsey Graham in the November election.
I’ve been a pediatrician for 20 years. When I learned how to take a pediatric patient’s history, I was taught to ask parents: “Are your child’s immunizations up to date?” At the beginning of my career I’d already be writing down the answer “yes,” without hesitation or uncertainty. Now when I ask that question, I brace myself.
Right now, a measles outbreak is surging in my home state of South Carolina, where there are already more than 900 confirmed cases, most of them unvaccinated children, with hundreds in quarantine and more exposures being reported daily.
That’s hundreds of parents missing work. Kids missing weeks of school. Newborns, seniors and the immunocompromised being forced to gamble their health on their neighbors’ choices. Hospitals and health centers bracing for what comes next.
This was all preventable, and we need to be honest about how we got here.

We have an incredibly safe and effective vaccine for measles. One of the reasons scientists worked with urgency to develop the measles vaccine was because of how contagious the virus is, far more contagious than the flu or Covid-19. Every person with measles infects 20 other people, on average. Someone with measles can walk into a room, cough and leave, and the virus can still be alive in that room for hours. This is why measles doesn’t “fade out” on its own. It spreads like wildfire when community immunity drops.
So no, measles doesn’t spread like this just because a virus is good at its job. It spreads when the systems meant to protect families get replaced with noise, doubt, lies and deliberate confusion.
At the highest levels of our federal government, we have watched medical expertise get shoved aside while conspiracy theories get promoted. The message Americans keep getting is that expertise is suspect, that doubt is bravery and that your Facebook feed is just as good as your doctor’s advice. When the people at the top signal that science is subjective, confusion becomes contagious.
That message has consequences. It becomes the air people breathe. It shapes what a parent believes about vaccinations as they scroll their social media feed in the preschool pickup line. It erodes trust in medicine and threatens the fabric of our nation’s public health system.
The outbreak isn’t the fault of Health and Human Services Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. alone, but we’re kidding ourselves if we pretend leadership doesn’t matter.
Kennedy has been a leading voice in the anti-vaccine movement for decades, which has led communities across the country to slip below the herd immunity threshold for the prevention of outbreaks of infections like measles. Even if you replaced the name on the door at HHS tomorrow (which a responsible Congress would do), trust doesn’t snap back like a rubber band. It takes years to build and minutes to burn.
And the burn is not theoretical. Just this month, the United States withdrew from the World Health Organization, stepping away from the very kind of coordination that helps countries spot outbreaks early and stop them before they spread. Meanwhile, the world is looking back at us: a nation on the brink of losing elimination status for measles, a disease we fully eliminated in 2000.
We are flirting with the return of an old killer, not because the science changed, not because the virus itself changed, but because our politics did.
I didn’t set out to become a politician. I’m a pediatrician and mom of three, which means I understand deeply what it feels like to be responsible for a tiny human you’d do anything to protect. I know how heavy it is to make decisions in a world that feels more chaotic and less trustworthy by the day. And I understand that when politics is injected into public health, parents’ jobs get harder and children suffer. That is why I stepped up to fight on behalf of America’s children and the families who love them.
So here’s my plea, doctor to country, mother to community.
Stop letting politicians play games with public health. Put scientific expertise back where it belongs: in government, in policy and in the language we use when the stakes are life and death.
If you want to stop measles, you should get vaccinated.
If you want to stop the next iteration of this, you stop rewarding people who profit from confusion. You stop letting unserious leaders turn public health into a culture war. You put serious, qualified people back in the rooms where decisions are made.
Measles doesn’t care who you voted for. It cares whether we protect each other. And we still can.

Lock up the parents
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Lock up RFK Jr.
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Lock up the parents
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In the wake of the disastrous consequences of the unvaccinated, Dr. Oz must have realized that he is a legitimate doctor that actually studied medicine at one the best medical schools in the country, and urged people to, “Take the vaccine, please. We have a solution for our problem,” Oz said. “Not all illnesses are equally dangerous, and not all people are equally susceptible to those illnesses. But measles is one [where] you should get your vaccine.” Better late than never, Dr. Oz.
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When did so many in the GOP effectively become Christian Scientists? No offense against anyone’s religion, but I like to think that our same God strongly supports healthy growth and development over suffering and premature death from unaddressed, curable illnesses/diseases –especially for children, who must depend on adults to make decisions based on well-informed, responsible leadership.
I think that this is precisely why God gave mature adults the ability to comprehend and overcome destructive micro-organisms. Grownups might want to ignore proven facts at their own peril, but who is left in a world of planned ignorance to protect defenseless kids, when microbes do not discriminate against who their targets are? Americans must wake up! –DO IT FOR THE CHILDREN AND THE REST OF THE WORLD– or risk the increased incidence of more horrific pandemics across the globe…!
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When I was 37 years old, I caught measles. I was so sick that I wanted to die…except that I had a 22-month-old. I was misdiagnosed twice (& by an allergist/immunologist in an upscale suburban office!!). My husband finally took me (he had to carry me to the car–I was severely dehydrated & weak) to our family MD, whose office happened to be in a hospital. Taking one look at me, he immediately had me admitted. (Truly, I was deathly ill.) When I was released, our suburban health dept. called to find out where I could have possibly been exposed (of course, our daughter had been fully immunized). I had been to a Chicago zoo, & the health dept. head figured I’d been exposed by an unvaxxed child. (Since I had, of course, had all vaccinations during & since childhood, the dr. thought I must have been vaxxed from a bad batch.) I was in bed for at least a month (I had been toilet-training our daughter, & we were lucky to get my childhood babysitter to live-in, & she finished that job!)
Oddly enough, my father-in-law (o.b.m.) had contracted chicken pox (same situation, I guess) at, also, age 37 (& he, too, nearly died).
Is this another 2020 Covid nightmare? How many people have to die?
(As retired teacher commented, even Dr. Oz advised vaccination {as well he should}.)
What Duane E. Swacker said.
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What a gruesome experience!
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& one NO ONE should have to go through, especially not when prevention is at hand.
Again, what Duane Swacker said.
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