
On a Tuesday morning in late March, Terminal 5 at O’Hare International Airport is exactly what you would expect: rolling bags, pricey coffee, and tired families waiting close to the departure gates. A measles carrier passed through the terminal on March 24 between 10:45 a.m. and 2:30 p.m. Central Time, somewhere in that typical crowd. They made contact with objects. Like hundreds of other passengers, they inhaled the same recirculated air. They departed. In the days that followed, Cook County health officials started the well-known, tedious task of determining who else had been present and whether any of them were now carrying something they were unaware of.
Measles spreads in this way. Not in a big way. Not with any obvious warning. A virus that doesn’t require much invitation—just a person in a crowd.
| Category | Detail |
|---|---|
| Disease | Measles (Rubeola) — caused by a highly contagious airborne virus |
| U.S. Elimination Status | Declared eliminated by WHO in 2000; elimination status now under serious threat |
| Confirmed U.S. Cases (as of March 26, 2026) | 1,575 nationwide; 5% resulting in hospitalizations |
| Cases in 2025 (Full Year) | 2,285 — highest since elimination declaration |
| Active Outbreak States | Arizona, South Carolina, Texas, Utah, Illinois, Oregon, and others |
| U.S. Elimination Status Trigger | One year of continuous transmission reached in January 2026 |
| Chicago Exposure Site | O’Hare International Airport, Terminal 5 — March 24, 2026, 10:45 a.m.–2:30 p.m. CT |
| Additional Exposure Sites | Fresh Farms (Niles, IL), Marshalls (Niles, IL), Endeavor Health Clinic (Mount Prospect, IL) |
| Vaccination Status of Cases | 92% unvaccinated or unknown; 4% had one MMR dose |
| CDC Recommendation | Two doses of MMR vaccine for full protection |
| Incubation Period | 7 to 14 days after exposure |
| Reference | Centers for Disease Control and Prevention |
There was more than one O’Hare exposure. For days afterward, it appears that the same person—or someone linked to the same chain of transmission—kept going about their daily lives in the Chicago suburbs. On March 26, two additional exposure sites were visited that Thursday night: a Marshalls in the same retail strip and a Fresh Farms grocery store on West Golf Road in Niles, Illinois.
One of the more concerning details in this specific timeline is that the infected person appeared at an Endeavor Health Immediate Care Center in Mount Prospect the next day, Friday the 27th. This is the kind of clinic people go to specifically when they feel ill. According to health officials, efforts are underway to identify and alert everyone who has passed through particular sections of the facility. The precise number of people involved is still unknown.
The image becomes much less comfortable when you zoom out from the Chicago metro. As of March 26, 1,575 measles cases had been confirmed nationwide by the CDC in just 2026. To put that in perspective, the 2,285 cases reported last year were already the highest since the World Health Organization declared measles eradicated in the US at the beginning of the century. No one in public health is pretending that the nation’s current trajectory is favorable. Separately, Oregon health officials have issued a warning that the number of cases in the Portland metro area may continue to rise. Communities that, ten years ago, would have viewed a local measles warning as a true anomaly rather than a regular news item have received exposure alerts.
A full year of continuous measles transmission occurred in the United States in January 2026, a milestone that epidemiologists had been anxiously observing. This milestone is significant because it fulfills a crucial requirement for the country to lose its measles elimination status, which it has had since 2000 and which has serious ramifications for public health funding, international travel credibility, and the fundamental political narrative surrounding vaccine-preventable disease. The discussion has moved from “if” to “when” unless the trajectory changes, but the status hasn’t been formally revoked. Professionals who monitor these figures have the impression that the nation is witnessing something avoidable happen in slow motion.
A large portion of the story is conveyed by the vaccination image. Ninety-two percent of measles cases this year were either unvaccinated or had an unclear immunization status, according to the CDC. One dose of the MMR vaccine, which provides significant but insufficient protection, was administered to 4%. The math is simple: in order to stop measles from spreading over time, about 95% of the population must be immune. The virus enters a community when vaccination rates fall below that threshold, whether as a result of intentional refusal, practical difficulties, or gaps in access to healthcare. It has consistently done so. The outbreaks in Brooklyn and upstate New York in 2019 nearly cost the United States its elimination status and persisted for almost a full year. That served as a caution. The nation might not have taken it seriously enough.
In this context, airports are especially dangerous because of something that epidemiologists have known for years but that the general public tends to overlook. Measles spreads through the air and is persistent. After an infected person leaves the room, the virus can spread through the air or on surfaces for up to two hours. Every day, thousands of foreign travelers pass through Terminal 5 at O’Hare on their way to destinations in Europe, Asia, and Latin America—regions with significantly different rates of measles transmission.
It is not a contained local issue when a single case passes through an international terminal. This could be a distribution event. Measles exposure was confirmed at five different American airports in the same month during the 2019 Christmas travel season. The scale of the current situation is different. bigger. more widely distributed geographically. And taking place against a backdrop of declining vaccination rates, which used to make outbreaks like this truly uncommon.
Cook County health officials have specific practical advice for anyone who was in Terminal 5 between 10:45 a.m. and 2:30 p.m. on March 24 or who visited Fresh Farms or the Marshalls in Niles on the evening of March 26: review your immunization records, get in touch with your healthcare provider, and—most importantly—don’t just walk into an emergency room or medical office if you start experiencing symptoms. Make the first call. It is worthwhile to sit with the rationale behind that instruction.
Before the distinctive rash appears, fever, cough, runny nose, and red eyes are the first signs of measles, which usually manifest seven to fourteen days after exposure. A single case can turn into a cluster when an unvaccinated person shows up in a waiting room full of children, elderly patients, and immunocompromised people before anyone knows what they’re dealing with.
How many people were exposed at each of these locations and how many of them are unvaccinated is still unknown. The country’s margin for error on measles has been declining for a number of years, and it is evident that there is a limited window for preventing secondary cases. It’s difficult to ignore the fact that this is no longer the tale of isolated outbreaks in particular communities as you watch this develop concurrently in Chicago, Portland, and the Pacific Northwest. This is a more widespread phenomenon that is emerging in grocery stores, airports, and urgent care centers, carried by individuals who are largely unaware of their involvement.
