On March 1, the Chicago Department of Public Health was notified that a baby residing in a temporary shelter for migrants in Chicago had tested positive for measles. Given how fast measles can spread through an unvaccinated population living in close quarters, this was “go time” for the city’s health department. Within 24 hours, the city launched a mass vaccination campaign in the shelter. Three days later, 882 shelter residents had received a measles vaccine and another 784 had their prior measles vaccination confirmed. By March 11, the measles vaccination coverage in the shelter had jumped from 44 percent to 93 percent. The campaign paid off. More than two months after the initi
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