Measles in Middle Tennessee: How schools are preparing for a possible increase in cases
According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), the national measles outbreak has grown to include over 300 cases and two deaths. Texas currently leads the nation in measles cases, with forty patients hospitalized.
'Tennessee is no where close to what Texas is experiencing but it shows you how tenuous it is to maintain health against measles,' said Dr. Buddy Creech, Professor of Infectious Diseases at Vanderbilt University Medical Center. 'We think that you only have to have five or ten percent [people] in your community to be unvaccinated for measles to find a foothold and to run rampant.'
Tennessee reports first 2025 measles case. Here's what you should know
Not much is known about the confirmed case here other than the person is from Middle Tennessee and they're recovering at home.
If another case pops up, the Tennessee Health Department and CDC have a plan for how school districts should respond.
The highly contagious virus has symptoms of a high fever, cough, runny nose and red or watery eyes, followed by a rash on the chest, face or legs.
By the time the rash shows, the virus may have already spread to others.
'Children and adults are contagious from about four days before their rash starts until about four days after their rash starts — that's an entire week.' Creech explained. 'So you can imagine that is very difficult to then track down who might be exposed if they are under vaccinated.'
During the 2023-24 school year, Davidson County reported 91.3% of kindergartners were vaccinated. Meanwhile, Clarksville-Montgomery County had a 92% immunization rate.
If a case is suspected in the classroom, the student or staff member will wear a face mask and be placed in a private room.
Measles prevention: How the two-dose regimen works
Then, they will be escorted out of the school via a less-used hallway and that room will be disinfected after a two-hour holding period, in which the windows should be left open with the door closed for at least two hours.
'We want to make sure that we are cleaning things carefully,' Creech said. 'Measles is one of the most contagious viruses that we have and it can live in the environment for at least a few hours after a case walks into a room. So we are going to be teaching our schools and our nurses how to clean those rooms effectively while also protecting ourselves.'
During a suspected case, the school would also be required to review immunization records of all students and send out letters to parents and guardians.
'It might make sense for [students] to not come to school if they have any respiratory infections or any rash symptoms of course,' Creech told News 2.
If a student already has or received an immunization within 72 hours of exposure, they can remain in school. Otherwise, they must stay home for about 21 days if exposed.
Any patients with measles would be required to stay home for four days after their rash appeared.
⏩
According to Dr. Creech, this virus is unlike any other childhood virus. He said one out of every five kids who get measles will have to be hospitalized.
'So what's the take home message?' Creech asked. 'Get vaccinated if you aren't, get your children vaccinated because that's the most sure fire way to protect against this potentially fatal virus.'
News 2 reached out to Middle Tennessee's largest school districts, many of them saying they will follow the health department's guidance.
Metro Nashville Public Schools said in a statement:
'We work closely with the Metro Nashville Public Health Department on a range of public health efforts, including our nursing program, contact tracing, vaccinations, and responses to public health concerns.
The best response to a potential health issue is a preventative one. Under state law, students enrolled in K–12 schools in Tennessee are required to receive the MMR (measles, mumps, and rubella) vaccine unless they qualify for a medical or religious exemption. Measles is a preventable illness, and vaccination remains the most effective protection. Families can get those vaccinations through their provider or the MPHD vaccine clinics.
If there were a confirmed measles case connected to a school, we would coordinate with the Health Department on an appropriate response. This would include supporting contact tracing efforts to ensure that families and staff are notified and can monitor for symptoms, pursue testing, and receive treatment if needed.'
Metro Nashville Public Schools
The Clarksville-Montgomery County School System said in part:
'A student who contracts measles is required to be excluded from school for at least four days after the beginning of the rash and after receiving a medical release. If a case is confirmed at a school, the school nurse will send a Communicable Disease Notification for measles, or numerous other communicable diseases, to parents/guardians of students who may have been exposed. Additionally, per policy, CMCSS reports any cases of measles to the Montgomery County Health Department.'
Clarksville-Montgomery Schools
Wilson, Williamson, and Rutherford County school districts all told News 2 they would follow the health department's instruction.
Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles

Epoch Times
3 hours ago
- Epoch Times
At Least 85 People Sickened by THC at Wisconsin Pizza Place: CDC Report
Roughly nine months after an incident at a Wisconsin pizza parlor where marijuana-infused oil was used to prepare dough, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) released a report detailing how dozens of customers experienced symptoms consistent with THC intoxication. The report, released on July 24, describes how at least 85 people, from ages 1–91, ate food from the restaurant in Stoughton, Wisconsin, between Oct. 22 and 24, 2024, and experienced THC sickness. The restaurant was in a building with a cooperative, or shared kitchen, that was also used by a 'state-licensed vendor who produced edible THC products.'
Yahoo
10 hours ago
- Yahoo
The Silent Symptom That Could Be a Sign of Blood Clots
The Silent Symptom That Could Be a Sign of Blood Clots originally appeared on Parade. Your blood's ability to clot after a cut or injury is an important defense mechanism to keep you from bleeding too much. But blood clots can cause serious health issues like strokes and heart attacks when they happen outside of that. About 900,000 people in the U.S. develop a blood clot each year, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC). An estimated 60,000 to 100,000 Americans die from blood clot complications annually, making this an important health issue to be aware of. 'Awareness of blood clot symptoms is critically important because early recognition can be life-saving,' says, a pulmonologist at The Ohio State University Wexner Medical Center. 'Recognizing symptoms early allows for prompt medical treatment.' That can help lower the risk of permanent damage to organs or tissues, he points the problem: Not all symptoms of blood clots are obvious, and one in particular can be easily mistaken for other, much less severe health issues. Here's what doctors want you to keep in mind about this symptom, why it can be confused with other things and when to take action. 🩺SIGN UP for tips to stay healthy & fit with the top moves, clean eats, health trends & more delivered right to your inbox twice a week💊 How Do Serious Blood Clots Happen? Before we go over the symptom, it's important to first go over how blood clots can become serious. Blood clots that happen spontaneously usually start in the legs, explains , a vascular surgeon at MemorialCare Orange Coast Medical Center in Fountain Valley, California. 'They aren't life-threatening in themselves, but they occasionally dislodge and go to the lungs,' he says. This is called a pulmonary embolism. Related: With a pulmonary embolism, a blood clot gets stuck in an artery in the lung and blocks blood flow to part of the lung, Dr. Yi explains. There, it can cause permanent damage to the lungs, low oxygen levels in your blood, and damage to other organs in your body (from not getting enough oxygen), he says, adding, 'This can be life-threatening." The Silent Sign of Blood Clots To Know About, According to a Vascular Surgeon Back to that silent symptom: Shortness of breath is common with pulmonary embolisms. 'Shortness of breath is a hallmark symptom of pulmonary embolism because of how the condition affects the lungs and oxygen delivery,' Dr. Parson says. 'The blocked artery prevents blood from reaching parts of the lung, so oxygen can't be absorbed into the bloodstream efficiently, resulting in shortness of breath.' This blockage usually comes on suddenly, so the body doesn't have time to compensate for the lower-than-usual oxygen, he explains. That can lead to sudden and intense shortness of breath. Related: When Shortness of Breath Is a Sign of a Blood Clot Shortness of breath can also be a sign of a slew of other things, including being out of shape, having asthma or just having a cold, making this a tricky thing to pin on a blood clot. But doctors say there are a few key differences between 'regular' shortness of breath and feeling breathless due to a blood clot.'Standard shortness of breath usually comes with exercise or activity,' Dr. Yi says. 'With a blood clot, there is a sudden onset of shortness of breath where you feel like you can't catch your breath.' You may also start breathing faster than usual, he explains. Along with coming on hard and fast, shortness of breath from a blood clot tends to get worse with exertion or taking deep breaths, according to Dr. Other Signs of a Blood Clot and What To Do While sudden shortness of breath alone should raise concerns about a possible pulmonary embolism, there are other blood clot symptoms doctors warn should be on your radar: Fast breathing Chest pain (it usually gets worse when you cough or take a deep breath) A faster-than-usual heart rate Coughing, including coughing up blood Very low blood pressure Feeling lightheaded Fainting It can be tempting to write these signs off if you have one or two that can be explained away as something more minor. But doctors stress the importance of taking these seriously if you or someone around you has them. 'If someone experiences these symptoms, immediate medical attention is critical,' Dr. Parsons says. Up Next:Sources: How Does Blood Clot? National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute Data and Statistics on Venous Thromboembolism, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention Dr. Christopher Yi, MD, a vascular surgeon at MemorialCare Orange Coast Medical Center in Fountain Valley, CA Pulmonary Embolism. US National Library of Medicine Dr. Jonathan Parsons, MD, a pulmonologist at The Ohio State University Wexner Medical Center The Silent Symptom That Could Be a Sign of Blood Clots first appeared on Parade on Jul 27, 2025 This story was originally reported by Parade on Jul 27, 2025, where it first appeared. Solve the daily Crossword
Yahoo
10 hours ago
- Yahoo
Millions of people are suffering from brain fog. A new study will find out why
Millions of people who recover from infections like COVID-19, influenza and glandular fever are affected by long-lasting symptoms. These include chronic fatigue, brain fog, exercise intolerance, dizziness, muscle or joint pain and gut problems. And many of these symptoms worsen after exercise, a phenomenon known as post-exertional malaise. Medically the symptoms are known as myalgic encephalomyelitis or chronic fatigue syndrome (ME/CFS). The World Health Organization classifies this as a post viral fatigue syndrome, and it is recognised by both the WHO and the United States Centers for Disease Control and Prevention as a brain disorder. Experiencing illness long after contracting an infection is not new, as patients have reported these symptoms for decades. But COVID-19 has amplified the problem worldwide. Nearly half of people with ongoing post-COVID symptoms – a condition known as long-COVID – now meet the criteria for ME/CFS. Since the start of the pandemic in 2020, it is estimated that more than 400 million people have developed long-COVID. To date, no widely accepted and testable mechanism has fully explained the biological processes underlying long-COVID and ME/CFS. Our work offers a new perspective that may help close this gap. Our research group studies blood and the cardiovascular system in inflammatory diseases, as well as post-viral conditions. We focus on coagulation, inflammation and endothelial cells. Endothelial cells make up the inner layer of blood vessels and serve many important functions, like regulating blood clotting, blood vessel dilation and constriction, and inflammation. Our latest review aims to explain how ME/CFS and long-COVID start and progress, and how symptoms show up in the body and its systems. By pinpointing and explaining the underlying disease mechanisms, we can pave the way for better clinical tools to diagnose and treat people living with ME/CFS and long-COVID. What is endothelial senescence? In our review, our international team proposes that certain viruses drive endothelial cells into a half-alive, 'zombie-like' state called cellular senescence. Senescent endothelial cells stop dividing, but continue to release molecules that awaken and confuse the immune system. This prompts the blood to form clots and, at the same time, prevent clot breakdown, which could lead to the constriction of blood vessels and limited blood flow. By placing 'zombie' blood-vessel cells at the centre of these post-viral diseases, our hypothesis weaves together microclots, oxygen debt (the extra oxygen your body needs after strenuous exercise to restore balance), brain-fog, dizziness, gut leakiness (a digestive condition where the intestinal lining allows toxins into the bloodstream) and immune dysfunction into a single, testable narrative. From acute viral infection to 'zombie' vessels Viruses like SARS-CoV-2, Epstein–Barr virus, HHV-6, influenza A, and enteroviruses (a group of viruses that cause a number of infectious illnesses which are usually mild) can all infect endothelial cells. They enable a direct attack on the cells that line the inside of blood vessels. Some of these viruses have been shown to trigger endothelial senescence. Multiple studies show that SARS-CoV-2 (the virus which causes COVID-19 disease) has the ability to induce senescence in a variety of cell types, including endothelial cells. Viral proteins from SARS-CoV-2, for example, sabotage DNA-repair pathways and push the host cell towards a senescent state, while senescent cells in turn become even more susceptible to viral entry. This reciprocity helps explain why different pathogens can result in the same chronic illness. Influenza A, too, has shown the ability to drive endothelial cells into a senescent, zombie-like state. What we think is happening We propose that when blood-vessel cells turn into 'zombies', they pump out substances that make blood thicker and prone to forming tiny clots. These clots slow down circulation, so less oxygen reaches muscles and organs. This is one reason people feel drained. During exercise, the problem worsens. Instead of the vessels relaxing to allow adequate bloodflow, they tighten further. This means that muscles are starved of oxygen and patients experience a crash the day after exercise. In the brain, the same faulty cells let blood flow drop and leak, bringing on brain fog and dizziness. In the gut, they weaken the lining, allowing bits of bacteria to slip into the bloodstream and trigger more inflammation. Because blood vessels reach every corner of the body, even scattered patches of these 'zombie' cells found in the blood vessels can create the mix of symptoms seen in long-COVID and ME/CFS. Immune exhaustion locks in the damage Some parts of the immune system kill senescent cells. They are natural-killer cells, macrophages and complement proteins, which are immune molecules capable of tagging and killing pathogens. But long-COVID and ME/CFS frequently have impaired natural-killer cell function, sluggish macrophages and complement dysfunction. Senescent endothelial cells may also send out a chemical signal to repel immune attack. So the 'zombie cells' actively evade the immune system. This creates a self-sustaining loop of vascular and immune dysfunction, where senescent endothelial cells persist. In a healthy person with an optimally functioning immune system, these senescent endothelial cells will normally be cleared. But there is significant immune dysfunction in ME/CFS and long-COVID, and this may enable the 'zombie cells' to survive and the disease to progress. Where the research goes next There is a registered clinical trial in the US that is investigating senescence in long-COVID. Our consortium is testing new ways to spot signs of ageing in the cells that line our blood vessels. First, we expose healthy endothelial cells in the lab to blood from patients to see whether it pushes the cells into a senescent, or 'zombie,' state. At the same time, we are trialling non‑invasive imaging and fluorescent probes that could one day reveal these ageing cells inside the body. In selected cases, tissue biopsies may later confirm what the scans show. Together, these approaches aim to pinpoint how substances circulating in the blood drive cellular ageing and how that, in turn, fuels disease. Our aim is simple: find these ageing endothelial cells in real patients. Pinpointing them will inform the next round of clinical trials and open the door to therapies that target senescent cells directly, offering a route to healthier blood vessels and, ultimately, lighter disease loads. Burtram C. Fielding is Dean Faculty of Sciences and Professor in the Department of Microbiology, Stellenbosch University This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article.