Conversations minimize the risk of vaccine-preventable diseases
This week, social media users dismissed measles and whooping cough deaths while falsely linking a group of nurses’ brain tumors to COVID-19 vaccines.

This week, social media users dismissed measles and whooping cough deaths while falsely linking a group of nurses’ brain tumors to COVID-19 vaccines.
This week, reports of three vaccine-preventable deaths in children were met with skepticism and false claims. A second Texas child died from measles, prompting HHS Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. to explicitly recommend the MMR vaccine. Many vaccine opponents expressed outrage at the “betrayal” from Kennedy, who has falsely claimed in the past that the vaccine is linked to autism and other health conditions. Louisiana health officials confirmed that two Louisiana infants died from whooping cough in the last six months, leading some to spread myths about the DTAP vaccine. Meanwhile, vaccine opponents alleged without evidence that COVID-19 vaccines are somehow linked to the brain tumors several nurses who work in the same hospital unit developed. Conspiracy theories about the cases are circulating rapidly across social media and anti-vaccine sites.

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What’s trending in vaccine conversation:
On April 6, Texas health officials announced that a second unvaccinated and otherwise healthy child died from measles. With 675 cases reported, this year has surpassed the 2014 outbreak as the second worst in the U.S. in 25 years and may surpass the 2019 outbreak that infected over 1,200 people. The HHS secretary visited the county and issued his strongest statement yet in support of the MMR vaccine. The statement drew harsh criticism online from vaccine opponents, who accused Kennedy of being “compromised” and of betraying his ideals. Notably, in a later post, Kennedy again promoted budesonide and clarithromycin, neither of which is proven effective against measles. Some argued without evidence that the child’s death was due to medical malpractice or underlying health issues, while others minimized the death and accused the media of fearmongering. Several posts promoted conspiracy theories about vaccines, claiming that the death was linked to MMR or COVID-19 vaccines and that the MMR vaccine is ineffective and unsafe. Vaccine opponents claim that the case of a Pima County, New Mexico, child who developed a rash after receiving the MMR vaccine and is now “on the mend” is evidence that the vaccine is dangerous, claiming that the “risk of permanent disability or death” from vaccination is higher than from measles, mumps, and rubella. One popular anti-vaccine account falsely claimed that measles is “just a rash” that has never killed a child who isn’t already malnourished. Posts also suggested that natural immunity and alternative remedies like vitamin A are superior to vaccination. Other online conversations discussed whether adults should get boosters or titer testing to determine their immunity to measles and the impact of federal funding cuts on measles vaccination efforts in affected states.
In late March, the Louisiana surgeon general announced that two children in the state died of whooping cough (pertussis) in the last six months, and 110 cases have been reported so far this year. The announcement came a month after the state suspended all vaccine events and barred state health officials from promoting vaccinations. Whooping cough cases in 2024 were the highest in over a decade, and this year, nearly four times as many cases have been reported compared to the same time last year. Some social media users speculated that the number of cases is likely higher than reported and criticized parents who don’t vaccinate their children. Other posts advocated for a standalone vaccine for people who want to avoid the diphtheria, tetanus, and pertussis combination vaccine, while others questioned DTAP’s safety and effectiveness. Several commenters expressed concern about getting DTAP during pregnancy.
In late March, reports began circulating that as many as 10 nurses working in the same maternity ward at a Massachusetts hospital were diagnosed with brain tumors. The hospital has since confirmed that five nurses in the unit were diagnosed with benign brain tumors and six others have unspecified health concerns. The hospital’s medical officers said that an internal investigation “found no environmental risks which could be linked to the development of a brain tumor.” Soon after the cases were reported in local media, vaccine opponents began spreading the conspiracy theory that COVID-19 vaccines caused the tumors. The false rumor is now spreading across multiple social media platforms, with some claiming without evidence that the nurses received vaccines from the same batch and that cancer is a side effect of COVID-19 vaccines. Many commenters, including some vaccine skeptics, noted that most hospital staff are likely vaccinated, making it extremely unlikely that a health concern only affecting nurses in one unit was vaccine-related. Some posts speculated that environmental factors such as radiation poisoning are more likely to blame.
Read the fact checks:
- IDSA: Measles Vaccination: Know the Facts
- Public Good News: Vaccines and cancer: The myth that won’t die
- NFID: Whooping Cough (Pertussis)

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Talking points for health care providers to use in response to trending narratives
Each week the Infodemiology.com team will provide talking points and supporting messages in response to some of the trending narratives outlined above. Health care providers can use this messaging when discussing vaccines online, talking to patients, or engaging with communities.
The MMR vaccine is the only way to prevent measles. It has protected children for over 70 years.
- Measles is a serious disease that can cause severe illness and death. Unvaccinated children are at high risk of measles, especially during an outbreak.
- Two doses of the MMR vaccine are 97 percent effective against a measles infection.
- There’s no substitute for the MMR vaccine to prevent measles. Remedies like vitamins, cod liver oil, and budesonide have not been proven effective against measles. Trying to gain “natural immunity” against measles risks long-term complications and death.
- Measles can be deadly in any child, including healthy ones. Two healthy, unvaccinated children have already died from measles this year.
Whooping cough is a serious disease that can be deadly in young children and infants.
- Whooping cough is an extremely contagious disease that causes a severe cough and difficulty breathing.
- Two-thirds of infants with whooping cough develop apnea (pauses in breathing), one in five develop pneumonia, one in 50 develop convulsions, and one in 100 will die.
- People with the infection can spread it for weeks before obvious symptoms appear.
- For infants and young children, the DTAP vaccine is 98 percent effective for at least one year and 70 percent effective for at least five years. Because immunity wanes over time, DTAP boosters are recommended every ten years.
- One TDAP dose is recommended late in pregnancy to protect newborns.
Fact: COVID-19 vaccines don’t cause cancer. That’s an anti-vaccine myth with no basis in reality.
- COVID-19 vaccines are safe. Over 70 percent of the world’s population has been safely vaccinated against COVID-19.
- Over four years of research and safety monitoring worldwide show no link between COVID-19 vaccines and cancer.
- “Turbo cancer” isn’t real. The term was made up by anti-vaccine advocates and is not accepted by medical professionals.
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