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Found out you have measles from the local news? 📺

Measles quietest week so far this year, 700 geese dead in Long Island from bird flu, and a corporate retreat from hell...

April 10, 2026

Measles News:

  • Utah remains the hottest hotspot in the U.S. with 60 new cases last week. (Yale SPH)

  • That said, there was a big drop in cases this week, with only 39 cases reported in 11 states. Most other weeks this year have had 100+. (Brown Pandemic Center)

  • South Carolina hasn’t seen a new measles case since March 17th. If they can make it until April 26th without more, their outbreak will be declared over. (SCPR)

Health News:

  • After 700+ geese died from bird flu in the Hamptons, a Long Island landscaper took it upon himself to clean up. (NY Times)

  • Taiwan reported a human case of avian flu H7N7. It’s the 6th human case of bird flu reported this year worldwide. (Brown Pandemic Center)

  • The acting CDC director delayed a report about COVID vaccine benefits due to concerns with the methodology, but the design has been used for years to test vaccine effectiveness. (Washington Post)

  • A new charter for the federal vaccine advisory committee alters the makeup and purpose of the ACIP, and may sidestep a recent court ruling blocking changes. (NY Times)

  • Most Americans still prefer human providers to AI for health advice. (CIDRAP)

  • U.S. cases of extensively drug-resistant Shigella infections are rising. (MMWR)

  • Even short social media detoxes can help reverse the cognitive decline that phone use causes. (Washington Post)

  • Eating more plants is linked to lower dementia risk, even if you start when you’re older. (CNN)

  • Vampire bats in Mexico may feed on deer with Chronic Wasting Disease, a fatal prion disease in hoofed animals, spreading it and posing a species-jump threat. (CIDRAP)

  • Some good news: It’s Public Health Week and we’ve seen an outpouring of support for public health workers. Cheers to the people that help keep us safe, this week and every week - thank you! 

Best Question:

We found out we had a guest with measles from the news. What do we do?

As shocking as this may seem, we’ve actually seen it happen multiple times to our clients in the past year. Before you shake your head (or fist), consider that understaffed health departments are racing against the clock to notify the public within 72 hours of a measles exposure, because that’s the window in which exposed people who are unvaccinated can get a dose of MMR to slash their chances of getting the disease. 

It can seem unfair and ridiculous. In a perfect world, it would be easy to take two minutes to call a business to give them a heads up before going public. But in reality, we’ve seen our clients get this call as few as 30 minutes before the health department goes public, and, as in this case, even after. It’s not malicious — it’s usually a sign of an overwhelmed team working fast to contain an outbreak and dealing with a disease that is actually new to them. So many health practitioners have not actually seen measles.

Local news often picks these stories up, and it can be scary to see your business in the news without any communication from public health. But there’s a silver lining here, too. 

Across the country, we are seeing very little reaction from the public after a business is named as an exposure site: no revenue loss, no increase in guest complaints or concerned phone calls, and no operational disruption. 

We’re also not seeing health departments making challenging requests. Gone are the days of unvaccinated employees needing to quarantine for 21 days, or managers needing to provide proof of vaccination for everyone on their schedule. Instead, most health departments are simply asking for contact info for people who worked during the exposure window (usually 3-5 hours at most) so that they can call them to inform them of what symptoms to look out for, and tell them when to seek medical attention. 

If it happens to you, the most important step is to not panic. Share high quality info with your team, get all the information you can from the health department once you’re in contact with them, and take a deep breath. The risk is low for your employees and your guests. And don’t forget you can always pull our Measles Exposure Action Plan in the ZHH app, or chat from 6am to midnight Eastern for live support and resources from a clinical pro who can help you navigate this. 

Source: ZHH

Best Read:

We’ll leave you with something a bit lighter heading into the weekend: a corporate retreat from hell, complete with so many employee health issues we lost count, including E. coli, sand fleas, heat exhaustion, and…porcupines? 

Inside a Corporate Retreat That Went Very Badly Wrong - WSJ (Gift Article)