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As they get ready to play the Utah Jazz (17-63) on Friday, April 11 at Delta Center, with the opening tip at 9:30 p.m. ET, the Oklahoma City Thunder (66-14) have nine players currently listed on the injury report. The Jazz’s injury report also has nine players on it.
The Thunder won their most recent game against the Suns, 125-112, on Wednesday. Jalen Williams starred with 33 points, and also had seven rebounds and five assists. On Wednesday, in their most recent game, the Jazz beat the Trail Blazers 133-126 in OT. With 30 points, Kyle Filipowski was their top scorer.
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For one final time during the 2024-25 NHL season, Utah Hockey Club’s supporters entered Delta Center Thursday ready to cheer on their team. It may have been the organization’s final home game, but for …
For one final time during the 2024-25 NHL season, Utah Hockey Club’s supporters entered Delta Center Thursday ready to cheer on their team. It may have been the organization’s final home game, but for Utah Hockey Club and its players, this was just the start in Utah.
“It was special for us,” head coach André Tourigny. “It was the team’s first year and there were a lot of emotions. There were a lot of connections with the crowd and the way they supported us, we wanted to play for them and play in front of them. It’s just tough right now to comprehend that there’s no more this year. We’re addicted now. We’re looking forward to the next one, but we’ll have to wait a little bit.”
Since day 1, Utah has shown up strong for their newest professional team. Whether it was welcoming front office personnel, coaches, and players a year ago, or making Delta Center one of the loudest buildings in the league, this community has embraced Utah Hockey Club from the start.
“I grew up playing but it didn’t seem to be as popular here,” Gregory Thibault shared. “The fact that we got a hockey team and in the first year you’re seeing things like this (pregame festival), it’s crazy. The energy that you feel anytime you go into Delta Center, it’s wild how fast Utah adopted hockey.”
“It’s so lively and it has such a sense of camaraderie,” Amanda Plummer explained. “We’ve brought friends who were visiting from other states, and they immediately were like, ‘can I go get a jersey, can I be a Utah Hockey Club fan?’
“It’s just a big party, it’s fun,” Plummer continued. “Seeing families here and a lot of younger people from the community, it’s just great.”
Thursday’s atmosphere was electric. After a packed pre-game festival with face-painting, contests, activations, and street hockey, the crowd at Delta Center cheered for goals, encouraged the team in tight moments, and gave a standing ovation to the Utah’s Most Valuable Player, Karel Vejmelka, when he delivered with huge saves.
Although the team only picked up one point in a shootout loss to the Nashville Predators, the night was perfect. After a lot of work and a big buy-in from the organization, Thursday was an opportunity to celebrate how far the organization has come, and what’s ahead.
“It was awesome. It’s been a whirlwind since the end of last season, from top to bottom,” Captain Clayton Keller explained. “Ryan and Ashley (Smith), Chris Armstrong, all the sacrifices that they made to make this transition easy, (and) giving us every source. The fans as well; since day one, you could tell the excitement. We’re super hungry for next year, and this is just the beginning. There’s lots to look forward to.”
Following the game, with the stands packed, Utah announced its first-ever Utah Hockey Club Honors. These player awards highlighted certain individuals commitment both on and off the ice.
Goaltender Karel Vejmelka was named Most Valuable Player, Captain Clayton Keller received the Leading Scorer Award, forward Alexander Kerfoot was recipient of the Community Obsessed Award, while forward Dylan Guenther was named the Three Stars Award winner.
The fifth award, the All-In Award, was slightly different than the others as Utah Hockey Club asked their supporters and community to pick the winner. Barrett Hayton, by fan vote, was the recipient of the award. Allowing those who support the team night in, and night out to vote was just another way Utah Hockey Club continues to make the supporters a true part of the experience.
Although the home season is over, and Utah Hockey Club has three games left in the Inaugural Campaign, the excitement around the organization continues to build both on and off the ice.
“First season here in NHL history,” Keller said. “Sometimes it’s crazy to think about that, how quickly it happened and how great of a move it’s been. So just super thankful. So many people gave us a great position to be successful and I couldn’t be more excited for next year.”
It was “hugely” important for Utah’s entire delegation to visit Mila to understand best practices when it comes to regulating AI and integrating it into businesses, according to Jonathan Freedman, the …
MONTREAL — Competing at the cutting edge of the world’s most disruptive technology depends, it turns out, on good office space.
Gov. Spencer Cox led a delegation of Utah business leaders and policymakers to one of the premier artificial intelligence research labs in the world on Tuesday to find out why.
The Mila Quebec Artificial Intelligence Institute claims to have the largest concentration of AI machine learning academics globally, with 150 professors in partnered universities teaming up with over 140 companies exploring AI applications.
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Located just north of Montreal’s Mount Royal, between the bustling markets of Little Italy, Mila boasts a catalog of nearly 2,600 scientific articles on AI since 2018, 734 current research projects and more than 40 successful start-ups over the last three years pioneering AI use in medical research, power grid resilience and product design.
The secret they shared with Utah? Mastering AI’s borderless potential requires bringing research and commercialization into close proximity — the tighter the better.
“We’re very impressed with what you’ve accomplished, what you’ve been able to do, bringing experts together,” Cox told Mila executives on Wednesday. “This is a model for some of the innovation that we want to see happening.”
World Trade Center Utah and Utah government and business leader have spent the last few days in Montreal and Toronto. | World Trade Center Utah
Utah’s future AI hub
Utah’s own version of Mila is already in the works.
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During the state’s 2025 legislative session, lawmakers approved $36.5 million in 2025, and recommended $63.5 million in 2026, for the construction of “Convergence Hall,” a new state-owned complex at The Point development in Draper, where the old state prison once stood.
Lawmakers envision a state-funded hub where investors, students, professors and government agencies will be housed together to create the largest “innovation campus” in the western United States, featuring access to state resources, a world class library, conference space and over 200 dorms.
The idea rests on Utah’s institutions of higher education — which will each have a dedicated space in the building — targeting their research and student projects around critical problems in local industry, particularly those being faced by the 200+ startups that will be invited to locate their operations on site.
If successful, proponents say, The Point will spur private sector investment in the surrounding area as businesses take advantage of the collection of expertise on emerging technologies in AI, energy and life sciences.
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The legislator behind much of Utah’s approach to AI governance, state Sen. Kirk Cullimore, R-Sandy, said Convergence Hall will be more decentralized than the Canadian program, with more business buy-in and less public funding.
“Hopefully this can kind of be the nucleus of efforts going on all over the state,” Cullimore told the Deseret News at Mila. ”It can be the epicenter of what’s happening.“
World Trade Center Utah and Utah government and business leader have spent the last few days in Montreal and Toronto. | World Trade Center Utah
Why did Utah’s trade mission go to Mila?
Despite a packed schedule — featuring meetings with provincial officials, tours at nuclear reactor sites and presentations with top Canadian investors — Cox said he made the Mila visit a priority of his trade mission because of how well positioned Utah businesses are to partner with Mila and replicate the institute’s approach in the Beehive State.
Cox’s delegation, made up of a group of around 30 cabinet members, state lawmakers, business leaders and university administrators, spent the week meeting with government agencies and industry experts in Quebec and Ontario to signal Utah’s desire to forge additional economic ties in the areas of critical minerals and artificial intelligence.
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On Tuesday, Cox met with the Quebec minister of economy, innovation and energy to discuss collaboration around energy and AI. Both Quebec and Utah have plans to double their energy production as demands on the grid grow with the development of AI hubs and data centers.
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Quebec minister Christine Fréchette and Ryan Starks, executive director of the Governor’s Office of Economic Opportunity, signed a letter of intent to establish a framework for closer collaboration in economic development, including AI.
It was “hugely” important for Utah’s entire delegation to visit Mila to understand best practices when it comes to regulating AI and integrating it into businesses, according to Jonathan Freedman, the CEO of World Trade Center Utah, which helped to organize the trade mission.
“The Mila Institute has the most cutting edge innovation and technological minds in the world when it comes to artificial intelligence,” Freedman said.
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Freedman believes lasting connections will emerge from the trade mission between Utah companies and Mila, especially where higher education intersects with policy and industry.
If you ask Utah attendees, the return on investment has already begun as they look to follow the example of one groundbreaking Utah-born AI pharmaceutical company.
World Trade Center Utah and Utah government and business leader have spent the last few days in Montreal and Toronto including a visit to Recursion’s Canadian headquarters. | Brigham Tomco, Deseret News
Utah trade mission already paying off?
A few years ago, Recursion, a biotech company based in Salt Lake City scored an office in Mila.
Company leaders realized that its novel approach to conducting millions of experiments on cells in a lab could revolutionize medical drug discovery if it was paired with AI modeling.
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The office next to theirs was occupied by a small AI startup from Montreal called Valence, which had developed a system to predict the effect of medical compounds using digital AI experiments.
It wasn’t long before the occupants of both offices realized it made more sense to set up shop together: Recursion would provide the massive dataset from years of experimentation and Valence would provide the AI deep learning research to shift early experimentation to AI models so that the physical “wet labs” in Salt Lake could focus on the most promising compounds.
“It was obvious that if you were to combine those, the combination would be better than the sum of its parts,” said Sébastien Giguère, co-founder of Valence, in a presentation to the Utah trade mission.
Recursion has now established offices in Montreal, Toronto, New York City and the Bay Area through acquisitions of like-minded AI companies, including Valence, which was acquired in 2023.
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Mila’s model of pairing innovative companies, like Recursion, with top researchers in the field, like Valence, set off multiple lightbulbs for Barclay Burns, the chief AI innovation officer at Utah Valley University, and a member of the trade delegation.
In his role, Burns also serves on the Utah Innovation Fund, a program of the Utah Board of Higher Education that will spearhead efforts to commercialize AI research done at Utah universities.
Burns is also working with some of the largest health care providers in the state to develop an AI program to connect families with autistic children to provide mutual support — which, coincidentally, is nearly identical to a project Mila is working on for the Quebec Autism Association.
Immediately following Tuesday’s presentations, Burns and Stéphane Létourneau, the executive vice president at Mila, began discussing ways to begin collaboration on these projects. Burns said he will stay in communication with Létourneau and that he will continue to work with the state Legislature to create a smaller version of Mila in Utah.
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If the plans materialize, Burns said he believes a group the delegation met with on Monday, CDPQ, one of the largest investment funds in North America, could be interested in providing support.
“There’s opportunities for them to invest from their fund into a secure, stable set of investments that are also strategic,” Burns said. “It would help the Utah-Canadian connection but then it would also create a much more open pipeline to do other joint ventures.”
From left, Derek Cahoon, the rocky mountain regional manager at BMO; state Sen. Chris Wilson, R-Logan; state Sen. Kirk Cullimore, R-Sandy; state Rep. Cory Maloy, R-Lehi; and Scott Larrivee, head of marketing & communications at Nusano; listen to a presentation at the Toronto office of Recursion, a Salt-Lake City-based biotech company Thursday April 10, 2025. World Trade Center Utah and Utah government and business leader have spent the last few days in Montreal and Toronto. | World Trade Center Utah
Canada looking to Utah on AI safety
Burns wasn’t the only one to connect with Canada’s AI experts on future opportunities.
Bill Brady, the CEO of Troomi, a kid-safe smartphone company aimed at healthy digital habits, also made plans to follow up with Mila experts about a potential collaboration. On Thursday, Brady was also able to consult with legal consultants at Gowling WLG about the possibility of introducing his product to the Canadian market.
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Additionally, Paul Campbell, the honorary consul from Utah to Canada, and the owner of several companies, learned how his AI inventory business would fit into Canada’s regulatory environment. And Scott Larrivee, head of marketing & communications at Nusano, a company that creates radio isotopes for drug manufacturers, gained insight into how his company’s partners could better use their product to develop new therapeutics.
But there were some areas where the delegation’s Canadian counterparts were looking to Utah for advice.
The Beehive State has led the nation on AI policy, becoming the first state in 2024 to pass legislation clarifying that companies will be held liable if their use of AI violates consumer protection laws.
The bill was paired with another first-in-the-nation policy creating the Office of Artificial Intelligence whose AI policy lab works with industry stakeholders to explore potential guardrails while also providing certain legal leeway for companies that have a novel AI product they hope to test.
In 2025, the Legislature updated AI consumer protection code to require that companies disclose if they are using an AI-powered chat bot in high stakes situations, like those regarding personal finances, or in regulated industries, like mental health treatments.
The AI policy experts at Mila were already aware of these bills, according to the their sponsor, Sen. Cullimore, and were taking note of Utah’s approach to AI governance.
“It was really interesting to hear that a lot of the same things they’re discussing is what we’ve already discussed, and we’ve found a way to implement it, and they were pretty intrigued,” Cullimore said. “They actually praised Utah for being on the forefront of this.”
A new report from Gardner Policy Institute found Utah leads the nation in household income. Large households and low cost of living helped propel the state to top of the rankings. Utah leads the …
KEY POINTS
A new report from Gardner Policy Institute found Utah leads the nation in household income.
Large households and low cost of living helped propel the state to top of the rankings.
Utah leads the country in GDP growth and just broke the $300 billion mark for the first time.
While not a purely scientific measure, the cost of a date isn’t a bad jumping-off point for a peek at the relative costs in different areas of the U.S.
A breakdown published earlier this year by The Black Tux shows, perhaps not surprisingly, that New York and San Francisco hold down the top two spots as most costly locales for a night out on the town. And, by comparison, Salt Lake City looks like an absolute bargain in its place, sitting in 40th among the top 50.
Turns out this discount date night data equates pretty well when it comes to a bigger, and more rigorous, assessment of Utah’s economy and particularly so for the state’s nation-leading status in household earnings and overall economic growth.
What’s behind the state’s high household income
A new report from the University of Utah’s Kem C. Gardner Policy Institute found Utah households are No. 1 in the nation when measured by median household incomes, adjusted for the state’s cost of living. That figure, $98,336 is not only tops in the U.S. but 27% higher than the average across the country. Even when evaluated at a nominal level, and ignoring cost of living advantages, Utah’s $93,421 comes eighth nationally.
“In recent years, Utah’s median household income ranks high relative to other states, meaning Utah’s middle-income households earn more on average than middle-income households in other states,” according to the report.
Maryland and Massachusetts came in just behind Utah, while West Virginia and Mississippi had the lowest median household incomes in the country.
One of the primary drivers behind the difference between Utah’s nominal ranking and the cost-of-living adjusted figure is that the state remains solidly affordable, even in the face of rising housing-related costs.
Using data from the U.S. Bureau of Economic Analysis, Gardner researchers found that Utah is tracking well below the rest of the country in most, but not all, expense categories. Those include an all items measure, the cost of goods, utilities costs and “other services.” Utah ranks above the national average in only the housing category.
Those higher-than-average housing costs, driven by Utah’s soaring real estate market over the last few years, is blunted somewhat by the high rate of home ownership across the state, according to Gardner analysts.
“While some readily consider home prices when assessing cost of living, most Utahns (about 70%) own their homes, meaning higher home prices in recent years do not heavily weigh on the typical household’s budget and therefore do not result in a regional price parity score indicating higher than national average cost of living,” wrote Natalie Roney, Gardner research economist and author of the new report.
Cost-of-living varies widely across the state
While Utah, overall, remains solidly in the affordable category compared to the rest of the U.S., the cost of living factor, even within the state’s boundaries, varies widely.
“Urban areas like the Wasatch Front generally rank higher on cost-of-living measures than rural areas, although tourist hot spots also tend to be among the most expensive,” the report reads. “Summit County, for example, experiences the highest cost of living in Utah largely due to its tourist-driven economy.”
While Summit County residents are navigating a cost-of-living score of 111, with 100 representing the U.S. average, some rural counties come in well below that mark.
Emery County came in as the most affordable in the state, with an 81.3 on the cost-of-living index with Wayne County not too far behind with an 81.9 score. Counties that make up the state’s Wasatch Front had rates ranging from the low to upper 90s.
Big households are a big deal
Utah’s big household factor is also a big deal when it comes to pushing the state to the top of the income rankings.
Looking at the five-year average that includes the most recent U.S. Census Bureau data up to 2023, Utah had the nation’s largest average household size at 2.99 persons. That helped drive the country’s highest level of income earners, or labor participants, for each household at 1.59.
“Utah’s demographic composition in part explains Utah’s high ranking — Utah has the largest average household size and among the highest labor force participation rate,” according to the report. “Larger households lend toward more workers, increasing income potential for a given household.”
Utah’s overall economy kinda rules, too
Utah’s nation-leading numbers also extend into measures of the state’s overall economy.
For the first time ever, Utah’s GDP, a measure of the total value of goods and services produced in the state, broke the $300 billion mark in 2024, hitting $301 billion last year. Utah’s GDP year-over-year growth rate in 2024 came in at 4.5%, the highest in the U.S. The state is also holding down the No. 1 spot in cumulative GDP growth over the last 10 years with a 64% rate.
Phil Dean, chief economist for the Gardner Policy Institute, along with Roney, co-presented the report findings on Thursday and noted numerous factors have helped drive, and support, Utah’s robust economic performance.
“We often get asked why is Utah experiencing this growth,” Dean said. “I would go back to Utah’s very strong fundamentals. That we have a young and well-educated population, we have very competitive fiscal and regulatory policies that businesses really like. Our location as the Crossroads of the West is definitely a major contributor. If you look at the strong growth over the last several decades in the U.S. it’s in the South and the West but particularly the Intermountain West and we’re right in the middle of that.”
Dean also mentioned Utah’s “secret sauce” as a contributor to the state’s ongoing fiscal successes.
“And what we call social capital, social cohesion, our ability to talk to each other,” Dean said. “Our ability to work together. Sometimes we call that the secret sauce of what we do. It’s a topic that consistently comes up when people are looking to locate here.”
Sarah Palin and the New York Times are headed back to a courtroom where the former Alaska governor and Republican vice presidential candidate will try convincing a second jury the newspaper defamed …
Sarah Palin and the New York Times are headed back to a courtroom where the former Alaska governor and Republican vice presidential candidate will try convincing a second jury the newspaper defamed …
Well Utah fans, there have been a lot of firsts for Utah this inaugural season: the first goal ever by Dylan Guenther, its first win, a 5-2 home win against the Chicago Blackhawks, and even its first …
While many predicted the Wild would win easily against the league’s worst team in San Jose, the Sharks came ready to play, delivering a surprisingly competitive, back-and-forth game that gave Utah hope its playoff chances might stay alive for another day.
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Even after the Wild went up 7–4 early in the third period—with center Joel Eriksson Ek remarkably scoring four of the goals —the scoring didn’t stop. The Sharks responded with three unanswered goals, including a game-tying goal in the final minute to force overtime.
The win moves Minnesota nine points ahead of Utah in the standings, making it statistically impossible for Utah to catch up, as it can earn a maximum of only eight points across its remaining four games.
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Missing the playoffs will certainly sting for Utah, especially after remaining competitive and in the playoff race this late into the season.
Plus, with a full season under its belt at the Delta Center and all six of its defensemen finally playing together consistently toward the end of the year, there’s plenty for Utah fans to look forward to next season.
With key young pieces like Logan Cooley, Dylan Guenther, and Josh Doan likely to take another step forward, fans can feel confident in the team’s direction. The stability of the roster looks intact and poised to improve, making a playoff berth a realistic goal for the 2025–26 season.
After pulling off one of the most improbable wins in NHL history—scoring three empty-net goals in the span of one minute to force overtime before defeating the Dallas Stars 6–5—Vancouver was ironically eliminated from playoff contention due to having fewer regulation wins than the St. Louis Blues.
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Still, becoming the first team in NHL history to mount a three-goal comeback in the final minute and go on to win is an incredible feat by the Canucks, even if it was a lack of regulation wins that ultimately ended their playoff hopes.
Though the offseason and draft await both Utah and Vancouver, each team still has a few games left in the season. Whether they’ll be playing for pride or slightly better draft positioning remains to be seen, but neither team is likely to go down without a fight.
Utah’s last home game of the season is against the Nashville Predators Thursday, April 10.
Robert F. Kennedy Jr. praised the measles response in Texas and the U.S., saying it’s a “model for the rest of the world.” But the comparison to Europe is an unfair one.
On Tuesday at a press conference, Health and Human Services Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. said his department’s handling of measles cases, including the outbreak in Texas should be a “model for the rest of the world.”
Kennedy said this is because cases have exploded more drastically in Europe — though he didn’t offer specifics on what he thinks has worked in the U.S. response.
“I would compare it to what’s happening in Europe,” he said. “They’ve had 127,000 cases and 37 deaths. And so what we’re doing here in the United States is a model for the rest of the world.”
While the numbers Kennedy cited are nearly accurate when looking at the vast European region in 2024, and much higher than the 285 cases in the U.S. last year, many factors make it difficult to compare that entire region to the U.S.
The U.S. currently has more than 600 cases so far this year, most of those linked to an ongoing outbreak in Texas, where two children have died from the virus.
“It’s misleading to compare the U.S. to the entire WHO European region, which spans 53 countries with wide disparities in health care access, vaccination coverage and surveillance systems,” said Dr. John Brownstein, an epidemiologist and chief innovation officer at Boston Children’s Hospital, and an ABC News contributor.
“The outbreaks in places like Romania and Kazakhstan are driving the regional numbers, but when you narrow the view to countries more comparable to the U.S., like those in the EU, the picture is much closer — and in some cases, better — than what we’re seeing in Texas right now,” Brownstein said.
Health Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. speaks during a press conference while visiting the Osher Center for Integrative Health at the University of Utah in Salt Lake City, Utah, April 7, 2025.
Jim Urquhart/Reuters, FILE
How does Europe really compare?
The World Health Organization reports the European region, which includes 53 countries in Europe and central Asia, had 127,350 measles cases and 38 deaths in 2024, based on preliminary data received as of March 6 this year. This is twice the number reported cases in 2023. Romania reported the highest number of cases in the region for 2024, with 30,692 cases, followed by Kazakhstan with 28,147 cases.
This was the highest case count seen in the region since 1997. Romania reported the highest number of cases in the region for 2024, with 30,692 cases, followed by Kazakhstan with 28,147 cases.
From the 30 countries in the European Union and European Economic Area (EU/EAA) that are more comparable to the U.S., there were 3,973 measles cases in 2023 but that number grew steeply to 28,791 cases of measles from March 1, 2024 to Feb. 28, 2025, according to the European Centre for Disease and Control.
During this timeframe, Romania had 24,215 measles cases, followed by 1,064 in Italy, 591 in Germany, 572 in France and 556 in Belgium.
About 86% of measles cases in EU/EAA countries in Europe were among unvaccinated people, 45% of cases were in children under five years old and about 30% of cases were in people aged 15 and older.
“When you compare the U.S. to countries with similar health systems — like Germany or France — the scale of the current outbreak in Texas is not meaningfully better,” Brownstein said.
Experts have also been concerned about the number of measles deaths in the United States and ABC News has reported several have said they believe case counts are significantly higher than what’s being reported, despite RFK Jr. claiming “the growth rates for new cases and hospitalizations have flattened,” in a post on X.
“We think these cases are undercounted,” Dr. Amesh Adalja, an infectious disease doctor and senior scholar at Johns Hopkins Center for Health Security said at a Texas Department of State Health Services press conference on Tuesday. “When you’re hearing people on the ground say this is going to take a year to contain, that tells you that it’s doing the opposite of flattening.”
“We know that there’s really, on average, about one death for every around 1,000 cases,” Dr. Craig Spencer, an associate professor of the practice of health services, policy and practice at the Brown University School of Public Health, told ABC News. “We’ve already seen three deaths, which would make you suspect it’s probably more like 3,000 cases.”
“It feels very, very likely that the count is higher than 500,” he said, adding, “It’s not impossible for there to be three deaths among 500 cases, but statistically, one would expect more cases for that number of deaths.”
Now, more than 600 people in the U.S. have confirmed cases of measles this year and three people have died, which if accurate is about 0.5% of cases, according to data from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.
This would be much higher than what was seen in Romania last year, where 18 people died from measles out of more than 30,000 cases, or about 0.06%. When looking at the entire European region, only about 0.03% of people with measles died.
Boxes and vials of the Measles, Mumps, Rubella Virus Vaccine at a vaccine clinic put on by Lubbock Public Health Department, March 1, 2025, in Lubbock, Texas.
Jan Sonnenmair/Getty Images
Brownstein said this shows “that even smaller outbreaks can be deadlier when vaccination rates are low.”
Drivers of low vaccination rates are going to be variable across different regions and populations. Researchers have studied specific factors in Romania’s high case counts where WHO estimates vaccine coverage with two MMR doses to only be 62% in 2023.
They identified migratory patterns, growing vaccine hesitancy among parents and loss of health care providers as significant drivers of vaccination rates plummeting after 2010 due to lack of interest, access, supply and staff.
WHO data shows in Europe, measles vaccine rates and policies are variable by country and only four countries have a 95% vaccination rate or higher with two doses of the measles, mumps and rubella (MMR) vaccine: Hungary, Malta, Portugal and Slovakia.
On average across many European countries, rates for one dose of the MMR vaccine range from about 85% to 95% and 75% to 90% for two doses, but vary. In the U.S., about 91% of children have had one dose of the MMR vaccine by the time they turn two years old and 92% of teens have had the recommended two doses, according to the CDC.
Some countries in Europe including Germany, France and Italy have mandatory requirements for measles vaccination or immunity for school enrollment, but parents may be able to decline the vaccine in other countries where it is only recommended but not mandated such as Belgium, Romania and the Netherlands.
Jade A. Cobern, MD, MPH, is board-certified in pediatrics and general preventive medicine, and is a medical fellow of the ABC News Medical Unit. Cheyenne Haslett and Mary Kekatos also contributed to this report.
Utah agreed to pay a company up to $1.7 million to digitize and reproduce letters sent to inmates to help cut down on contraband. About a month later, the Corrections Department was aware of “issues …
Utah agreed to pay a company up to $1.7 million to digitize and reproduce letters sent to inmates to help cut down on contraband. About a month later, the Corrections Department was aware of “issues …
The state attorney general’s office announced Monday that Utah will receive millions in settlement funds from Mylan Inc., a pharmaceutical company. Utah and eight other states investigated the …
The Utah Attorney General’s office announced Monday that Utah will receive millions in settlement funds from Mylan Inc., a pharmaceutical company.
Utah and eight other states investigated the pharmaceutical company with the support of six other states for dishonestly marketing its opioid-related products as being not prone to abuse by users.
Some of the products distributed by Mylan Inc. included generic fentanyl patches, oxycodone, hydrocodone, and buprenorphine products. The states argued that the company sold these medications to doctors, aware of their addictive effects, which then led to overprescribing, and ultimately contributing to the opioid epidemic.
“I am pleased to announce a settlement of $335 million with Mylan Inc. for their role in the deadly opioid crisis. Mylan was aware that its opioid products, including fentanyl patches, were especially prone to abuse, and did not inform consumers of that issue,” Utah Attorney General Derek Brown said in a press release.
“I am grateful for the relentless work of the attorneys in the Office of the Utah Attorney General in holding Mylan accountable, and remain committed to saving Utah lives from the opioid crisis.”
Mylan Inc. will pay the involved states for the next nine years.
This settlement was negotiated by the attorneys general of Utah, California, Illinois, Massachusetts, New York, North Carolina, Oregon, Tennessee and Virginia, with coordinating efforts by state attorneys in Colorado, Delaware, Georgia, Idaho, Iowa and Vermont.
For Utah, the settlement will add to the funds already accumulated from opioid-related litigation. According to Brown’s press release, the state has received $81 million and is expected nearly a half-billion dollars more in the next 15 years.
Mikhail Sergachev scored a goal and had two assists to help power the Utah Hockey Club to a 7-1 victory over the Seattle Kraken on Tuesday night. Dylan Guenther led Utah with three assists and Karel …
Mikhail Sergachev scored a goal and had two assists to help power the Utah Hockey Club to a 7-1 victory over the Seattle Kraken on Tuesday night. Dylan Guenther led Utah with three assists and Karel …