Updated
Updated · Buckrail · Jul 11
Wyoming Confirms 3rd Measles Case of 2026 in Teton County, Flags 4 Exposure Sites
Updated
Updated · Buckrail · Jul 11

Wyoming Confirms 3rd Measles Case of 2026 in Teton County, Flags 4 Exposure Sites

3 articles · Updated · Buckrail · Jul 11

Summary

  • A second Teton County measles infection was confirmed in an unvaccinated adult, lifting Wyoming’s 2026 total to three cases after a Fremont County case this spring.
  • Four possible exposure sites were identified in Jackson and Grand Teton National Park—Smith’s, Wendy’s, Colter Bay Convenience Store and the Colter Bay Cabin Office—covering July 5 and July 7.
  • WDH said exposed people should monitor for symptoms for 21 days and consider avoiding crowded places and high-risk settings, while the state and National Park Service conduct contact tracing.
  • Measles can linger in the air for up to two hours and can cause pneumonia or encephalitis; officials said two MMR doses are about 97% effective.
  • The new case follows Teton County’s first measles report in late June, while Wyoming recorded 15 cases in 2025—the state’s first since 2010.

Insights

With cases surging across 42 states, is the U.S. about to lose its measles elimination status?
What systemic failures are fueling the nationwide return of preventable diseases like measles?
What is the true cost, in dollars and lives, of declining trust in routine vaccinations?