Lubbock Health Director Suggests Letting Measles "Run Through" Unvaccinated Communities, Drawing Expert Rebukes
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Dr. Katherine Wells, director of the Lubbock Public Health Department in West Texas, has sparked backlash after suggesting on a March 2026 podcast that officials may need to "let [measles] run through" certain vaccine‑hesitant populations while focusing quarantines and isolation on the most vulnerable. Wells, who was previously praised for helping curb a regional measles outbreak that infected more than 700 people, hospitalized 99 and killed two children, argued that repeated school quarantines and the grind of persuading resistant parents raise social and educational costs that current guidance doesn’t fully address. Her comments were immediately criticized by fellow physicians, including podcast co‑host Dr. Mark Abdelmalek, who called the idea "almost like surrendering," and former CDC infectious‑disease leader Dr. Demetre Daskalakis, who told MS NOW that "that is what giving up in public health looks like" and warned against "expos[ing] a bunch of kids to measles." The dispute comes as a major measles outbreak grips South Carolina and new cases appear nationwide, reviving hard questions about how aggressively health departments should enforce vaccination and quarantine rules in communities deeply influenced by anti‑vaccine sentiment. Public‑health experts online are treating Wells’ remarks as an early test of whether resource‑strained local agencies will stick to traditional U.S. measles containment standards or begin normalizing de facto herd‑immunity experiments in pockets of refusal.