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Nov. 28, 2025, 5:30 AM ESTBy Erika EdwardsThe surging number of measles cases around the world is a stark warning sign that outbreaks of other vaccine-preventable diseases could be next, the World Health Organization warned Friday.“It’s crucial to understand why measles matters,” said Dr. Kate O’Brien, director of the WHO’s Department of Immunization, Vaccines and Biologicals. “Its high transmissibility means that even small drops in vaccine coverage can trigger outbreaks, like a fire alarm going off when smoke is detected first.”That is, measles is often the first disease to pop up when vaccination rates overall drop.”When we see measles cases, it signals that gaps are almost certainly likely for other vaccine-preventable diseases like diphtheria or whooping cough or polio, even though they may not be setting off the fire alarm just yet,” O’Brien said at a media briefing Monday, ahead of the release of the WHO’s Progress Toward Measles Elimination report, published Friday in its Weekly Epidemiological Record. Indeed, whooping cough cases are also rising in the United States and are on track to be the most in a decade. More than 20,000 whooping cough cases have been reported so far in 2025, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. In 2024, there were an estimated 11 million measles infections worldwide, according to the report, nearly 800,000 more than were recorded in 2019. Last year, 59 countries reported large measles outbreaks. In 2025, the United States joined the list of countries.Elimination status threatenedThe ongoing outbreaks threaten the so-called measles elimination statuses of some countries.Elimination means a virus has stopped spreading in a specific country or region. (Only one virus — smallpox — has been eradicated, or wiped out permanently, worldwide.)In total, 81 countries had reached elimination status in 2024, according to the WHO. Canada eliminated measles in 1998. Two years later, the United States did the same.Elimination status means a country has the capacity to stop an outbreak when measles cases arrive from abroad, O’Brien said. If vaccination rates are high enough, the virus won’t have enough unvaccinated people to infect, halting an outbreak in its tracks. But vaccination rates in the United States are falling: An NBC News investigation revealed that since 2019, 77% of counties and jurisdictions have reported declines in the number of kids getting routine childhood vaccinations like the measles-mumps-rubella shots. The key determining factor for a country to lose its measles elimination status is the ongoing spread of the same strain of the virus for a full year.Canada met that threshold this month. The United States could be next if scientists can trace current cases to a Texas outbreak that began in January.window.addEventListener(“message”,function(a){if(void 0!==a.data[“datawrapper-height”]){var e=document.querySelectorAll(“iframe”);for(var t in a.data[“datawrapper-height”])for(var r,i=0;r=e[i];i++)if(r.contentWindow===a.source){var d=a.data[“datawrapper-height”][t]+”px”;r.style.height=d}}});Nearly all of the samples analyzed from those early cases were identified as a genotype of measles called D8, according to a CDC report published in April.The D8 genotype was recently detected in a South Carolina outbreak. Preliminary results from specimens sent from South Carolina to CDC labs “are the same type, D8, that is seen in other settings in the United States,” Dr. Linda Bell, state epidemiologist for the South Carolina Department of Public Health, said at a news briefing Tuesday.Additional genetic sequencing is needed to make a definitive link between the Texas outbreak and the one in South Carolina, as well as outbreaks in Utah and Arizona. A South Carolina Department of Public Health spokesman said the agency “expects those results in the next few weeks.”Bell said that as of Tuesday, 58 cases had been reported in South Carolina, mostly in Spartanburg County in the northwest part of the state. An outbreak along the border of Arizona and Utah continues to grow. The Arizona Department of Health Services reported 153 cases this week, nearly all in Mohave County. Cases in Utah have reached 102, according to the state Department of Health and Human Services. While the bulk of those cases are linked to the cluster at the Utah-Arizona border, case numbers are also rising near Salt Lake City. NBC affiliate KSL reported that eight students at a high school in Wasatch County had been diagnosed. As of Wednesday, the CDC had reported 1,798 confirmed measles cases in 42 states in 2025. Three people, an adult in New Mexico and two little girls in Texas, have died.Erika EdwardsErika Edwards is a health and medical news writer and reporter for NBC News and “TODAY.”

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The surging number of measles cases around the world is a stark warning sign that outbreaks of other vaccine-preventable diseases could be next, the World Health Organization warned Friday.“It’s crucial to understand why measles matters,” said Dr.



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Nov. 28, 2025, 5:00 AM ESTBy Jonathan AllenWARREN, Mich. — James Klotz is eating more chicken and less beef than he would like these days — a tradeoff based on supermarket prices — but he’s confident that President Donald Trump’s policies will soon bring prosperity.”Things are still a little high, but we’re still working on Biden’s bullcrap,” the 84-year-old Vietnam War veteran said as he took a break from raking leaves and seed pods on a crisp, overcast afternoon in this inner suburb of single-family homes and strip malls just north of Detroit. “And next year, when the beautiful bill goes into effect, things are going to get back more to normal, I believe.”It was here, in a community emblematic of fast-changing demographics and the partisan battle for working-class voters, that Trump in late April touted the achievements of the first 100 days of his second term and promised that his signature One Big Beautiful Bill law would brighten the country’s horizon.
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Nov. 28, 2025, 6:10 AM ESTBy Patrick SmithPresident Donald Trump has said he will “permanently pause” all immigration from what he called “third world countries” and demanded a program of “reverse migration” as he intensified his rhetoric after the National Guard shooting in Washington, D.C.Trump offered few details as he disparaged and vowed to remove millions of migrants in the U.S., in a lengthy social media post late on Thanksgiving that came hours after he confirmed the death of National Guard troop Sarah Beckstrom, 20, in the shooting.Officials have said that Wednesday’s attack on two troops was carried out by an Afghan national who worked with a CIA-backed group during the long war in Afghanistan. The incident has served as a catalyst for Trump to escalate his anti-immigrant rhetoric into pledges that would likely face court challenges if enacted and further undermine America’s global standing as a nation welcoming to immigrants.”I will permanently pause migration from all Third World Countries to allow the U.S. system to fully recover, terminate all of the millions of Biden illegal admissions, including those signed by Sleepy Joe Biden’s Autopen, and remove anyone who is not a net asset to the United States,” Trump wrote on Truth Social.It was not clear exactly which countries he was referring to, with the phrasing used in the past to refer to poorer nations.New details after targeted National Guard shooting02:43The president also threatened to “end all federal benefits and subsidies to noncitizens of our country” and to “denaturalize migrants who undermine domestic security.”In remarks that will cause alarm among migrant advocacy and civil liberties groups, Trump said the government would deport any foreign national who was “non-compatible with Western Civilization.”He added: “Only REVERSE MIGRATION can fully cure this situation.”The Trump administration also said Thursday that the government would reexamine the status of Green Card holders from 19 countries “of concern,” including Afghanistan. In a subsequent post, Trump said that “hundreds of thousands” of Somali migrants were “completely taking over the once great state of Minnesota.”Trump has previously threatened action against Somalis and last week said he would end temporary protective status — which prevents deportations to dangerous countries — for Somali migrants in Minnesota, many of whom have fled a brutal civil war in the east African country.It’s unclear how many people this would effect but a report made for Congress in August put the number of people covered by the program nationally at 705. The president also attacked Minnesota Gov. Tim Walk as “retarded” and said Rep. Ilhan Omar, D-Minn, who was born in Somalia, “probably came into the U.S.A. illegally” and is from a “decadent, backward, and crime ridden nation.”Trump’s threats, if enacted by legislation or executive orders, are likely to be challenged in the courts.In his first term, Trump banned people from several majority-Muslim countries in the Middle East and Africa from entering the U.S. This was challenged but eventually the Supreme Court ruled 5-4 in favor of the ban’s legality. Migrant advocacy groups have called for calm and warned against using the D.C. attack to call for a wider crackdown on immigration or to remove the rights of Afghan residents.”Using this horrific attack as an excuse to smear and punish every Afghan, every refugee, or every immigrant rips at something very basic in our Constitution and many faiths: the idea that guilt is personal, not inherited or collective,” the Council on American-Islamic Relations said in a statement early Friday.The term “third world” originated in the Cold War era to describe a country that wasn’t aligned with the western NATO alliance or the USSR and the Warsaw Pact. This later evolved into shorthand for describing economically underdeveloped nations, particularly ones with high levels of poverty.The term has been used to describe several African nations, but until the late 20th century was also attached to descriptions of China.Economists and health experts have for years said the phrase is inaccurate, derogatory and outdated. The World Bank and other global institutions no longer use the phrase and some have suggested also avoiding its successor, “developing countries.”Patrick SmithPatrick Smith is a London-based editor and reporter for NBC News Digital.
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Nov. 18, 2025, 10:34 AM ESTBy Elmira AliievaIt is a case of wolves in fishermen’s clothing as several of them have been spotted pulling crab traps from waters off Canada’s west coast in what scientists say may be the first documented case of the animals using a tool. Members of the Heiltsuk Nation, an Indigenous government in the province of British Columbia, had placed the traps to capture invasive green crabs that destroy eelgrass habitats which support marine life and decimate the clam, herring and salmon populations the tribe depends on for food. But on their return, they found some of them had been shredded to pieces, according to a study published Monday in the journal Ecology and Evolution. The finger of blame was initially pointed at both bears and wolves, although some suspected marine mammals might have been behind the damage because the traps were submerged in deep water near the community of Bella Bella at all times. A team of researchers led by Kyle Artelle, a professor at the SUNY College of Environmental Science and Forestry in Syracuse, New York, and Paul Paquet, an adjunct professor at Canada’s University of Victoria, set out to solve the mystery. Within a day, they caught their culprit after installing remote, movement-triggered cameras overlooking the water. A video showed a female wolf diving into the water to grab a fishing float, carrying it to the beach and repeatedly tugging on the attached rope until the trap surfaced. She then tore it apart to eat the fish inside.“This sequence appears to demonstrate a sophisticated understanding of the multi-step connection between the floating buoy and the bait within the out-of-sight trap,” the study’s authors wrote. While domestic animals, including dogs, have been previously observed using tools to their advantage, this is the first recorded case of such behavior in wild canids which include wolves, coyotes, jackals and foxes. Whether the trap-pulling behavior counts as conscious “tool use” remains a matter of scientific debate.Tool use involves understanding how to connect a tool, like a rope, to a desired outcome, such as a trap, Benjamin Beck, a comparative psychologist specializing in animal cognition and biodiversity conservation, told NBC News in an email Tuesday. While he acknowledged the wolf’s behavior was “a significant demonstration of cognitive complexity,” Beck said “string-pulling is not tool use because the user (in this case the wolf) was not responsible for tying the rope to the trap.” Beck, who has authored many scientific papers and books, including 1980’s “Animal Tool Behavior,” said that establishing that connection between the rope and the trap required more intellectual ability “than simply exploiting a pre-existing connection.”New recorded research shows a wolf pulling a rope to get food.K.A. Partelle and P.C. Paquet, Ecology and Evolution, 2025The authors themselves have also acknowledged that alternative explanations, such as simple trial-and-error learning, could account for the wild wolves’ behavior.However, when animals perform “multi-step behaviors repeatedly and efficiently,” even the simplest explanation for their actions may involve at least some “causal understanding” on their part, they wrote, adding that this “would be assumed for a human in similar circumstances.”Christina Hansen, an assistant professor in animal behavior at Linköping University in Sweden, agreed that she would classify the actions as “string pulling.” Such behavior has been documented before in captive wolf populations, where animals cooperated in a string-pulling task for a reward, she said, adding that it would be interesting to see whether the behavior spread in the wild wolf population “by social learning.” “That is, if other wolves pick up this behavior from the wolf that started pulling in the traps,” Hansen said. Regardless of the extent to which the wolf truly understood the trap’s mechanics, the very act of appropriating human tools to achieve a goal is what the authors said was “noteworthy.”They also stressed that a negative perception of wolves could now be challenged by findings on their intelligence. “I personally do not believe that intelligence, especially as we humans conceive it, should be a criterion for respect and conservation of wildlife,” Beck said. “But cases like this are dramatic reminders of the wonders and connectedness of our natural world.”Elmira AliievaElmira Aliieva is an NBC News intern based in London.
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