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What Next: TBD | Hot Measles Summer

Slate Daily Feed

Slate Podcasts

News, Business, Society & Culture

41.1K Ratings

🗓️ 11 July 2025

⏱️ 29 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

It’s a record-breaking year for America: we’ve now had the most reported cases of measles since the disease was declared “eradicated” in 2000.  How did public health backslide so hard that it undid decades of progress—and is there any hope we can get back on track?  Guest: Dylan Scott, senior health correspondent at Vox. Want more What Next TBD? Subscribe to Slate Plus to access ad-free listening to the whole What Next family and all your favorite Slate podcasts. Subscribe today on Apple Podcasts by clicking “Try Free” at the top of our show page. Sign up now at slate.com/whatnextplus to get access wherever you listen. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

Transcript

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0:00.0

I had the absolute pleasure of speaking to Pamela Anderson.

0:04.2

All thanks to the Dove Self-Eesteem Project.

0:07.1

We speak about the impact Y2K has had on women's body confidence and how Pamela has regained control.

0:12.9

The Dove Self-Esteen project is an amazing initiative supported by science-backed methodology

0:17.8

to help us improve our relationship with our bodies.

0:20.8

To find more

0:21.4

body confidence-building exercises, go to dove.com forward slash Y2K. That's Y2K-Selt W-H-Y2K.

0:34.7

In the first six months of this year, the measles outbreak that started in a small Mennonite community in Texas has slowly been growing.

0:44.2

Spread to a couple of nearby states, New Mexico, Oklahoma, and we've also seen outbreaks pop up across the country from South Carolina to Montana.

0:54.7

This disease is all over the place.

0:58.4

That's Dylan Scott, a senior correspondent at Fox.

1:02.4

In those first six months, kids were in school, which gave the disease the opportunity to spread.

1:08.3

But Dylan says it also means that children were in a routine. They were

1:13.1

going to school, coming home, and generally staying pretty contained in their community.

1:19.0

And now it's summertime. And suddenly people are going to be moving all over the place.

1:24.6

You know, I sent my kid to his recreation center summer camp this week.

1:31.1

I think a lot of other parents are doing the same. People are taking family vacations,

1:36.9

you know, getting into airplanes, going to crowded beaches or crowded museums and city parks.

1:42.8

Like, everybody is out and about moving around, interacting with other people during the summer.

1:49.5

And for the most part, that's great.

1:51.4

But unfortunately, when you have a highly infectious disease like measles going around,

1:56.5

it does increase the opportunities that the virus is going to have to spread here for the next few months.

...

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