Opinion
letters
Children
at Risk as Measles Cases Rise
“I would
not wish measles upon my fiercest enemy,” a reader writes of the recent
resurgence.
April 28,
2026
https://www.nytimes.com/2026/04/28/opinion/letters/measles-children.html?searchResultPosition=3
To the
Editor:
Re “My
Daughter Died of Measles,” by Rebecca Archer (Opinion guest essay, April 25):
I had
measles when I was 12. I almost died. I am now 78, and I remember every
horrific moment … well, except when I was hallucinating with a 104-degree fever
and unable to recognize my parents. It is the sickest I have ever been in my
now long life, and being shut in my darkened bedroom, unable to bear even the
slightest light for days, boiling hot with recurring chills, has stayed with me
forever.
Measles
vaccines weren’t an option then, but we now can prove the efficacy of vaccines
in the near eradication of measles, along with a number of other potentially
fatal diseases. And yet we have Health Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. — a
lawyer, not a doctor! — telling people to reconsider and even to forgo
vaccinating their young children, spitting in the face of proven medical
science.
If you or
someone you know has not vaccinated his or her kids because of misinformation,
please, please listen: I would not wish measles upon my fiercest enemy.
Sally
McBee
Stonington,
Conn.
To the
Editor:
My heart
breaks for Rebecca Archer, whose daughter, Renae, died at age 10 as a
consequence of exposure to measles earlier in her life. The family lives in
England, where vaccination for measles is not compulsory.
This
family’s tragedy should be read as a warning to all Americans that mandatory
vaccination requirements for measles are the best remedy for keeping your own
children safe as well as your fellow citizens’ children. We need to start
listening to our doctors again.
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Gerri
Stewart
Montclair,
N.J.
To the
Editor:
My mother
was exposed to measles when she was pregnant with me in 1947. As the current
measles outbreak has spread across the United States, I’ve been puzzled about
why I haven’t seen more coverage of the potential impact of this disease on
pregnant mothers and their unborn children until reading this piece. My heart
goes out to Rebecca Archer for her loss.
I was
born without an optic nerve, essentially making me blind in one eye. This was
diagnosed early, and I was fortunate to have 20/20 vision in my left eye, but
my right sees nothing.
I’ve
learned to live with this limitation, but it has made life challenging. I have
no depth perception and little capacity to judge distances or read small print.
I hope
greater attention can be given to the impact of measles on pregnant mothers and
their unborn children. Perhaps those who oppose vaccines for measles will
reconsider.
To the
Editor:
In the
early 1990s I was persuaded by folks around me to forgo vaccinations for my
children. But during Covid my daughters convinced me that the science behind
vaccines was sound and told me that they wanted me to get the Covid vaccine.
That was the turning point for me, and I now avail myself of all the
appropriate shots and encourage others to do the same.
Thank you
to The Times for your excellent journalism and all it does to combat dangerous
disinformation.
Elizabeth
Rivera
McKinleyville,
Calif.
To the
Editor:
Re
“Measles Is Back. It’s a Sign Worse Things Are Coming” (editorial, April 26):
I’m glad
your editorial board is acknowledging that the resurgence of measles could be
“a harbinger of something even worse.” However, you call for state officials,
members of Congress and doctors to speak out without giving credit to those who
have already been shouting this from the rooftops.
West
Coast and Northeastern states have formed their own health alliances. Multiple
members of Congress, including several Republicans, have spoken out repeatedly.
Most major professional physician groups (pediatricians, family medicine
doctors, internists, obstetrician-gynecologists, infectious diseases
specialists and the American Medical Association) as well as new groups of
doctors such as Defend Public Health have joined together specifically to speak
out for scientifically based public health policies, including recommending
vaccines to save lives.
You
meekly state that “so long as Mr. Kennedy remains health secretary … the
options will be limited.” Why not state it like it is: Robert F. Kennedy Jr. is
a threat to our nation’s health and should be ousted immediately from his
position as secretary of health and human services. Period.
Lisa
Plymate
Seattle
The
writer is a retired internist.


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