The parents of a six-year-old girl from Texas who died of measles are standing by their decision to not vaccinate her.
The parents of the unvaccinated 6-year-old girl who died from the measles are speaking out. Credit: Blackjake / Getty
The parents, part of a Mennonite community in west Texas, lost their six-year-old daughter Kaylee following a three-week struggle with measles in late February, The Mirror reported.
Despite the devastating outcome, the couple defended their decision not to vaccinate their child in a filmed interview released on March 17 by Childrenâs Health Defense, an anti-vaccine group.
They stood by their beliefs and downplayed the severity of the illness that took their childâs life, describing measles as ânot that badâ and saying that Kayleeâs death was simply âher timeâ. Her mother also added: âShe was too good for this earth.â
The couple said they would âabsolutely not take the MMR vaccine,â which protects against measles, mumps, and rubella.
Instead, they credited alternative treatments, such as castor oil and inhaled steroids, for helping their four other children recover quickly. âThe measles wasnât that bad. They got over it pretty quickly,â the mother said.
Kayleeâs condition, however, worsened. After several days of illness and fatigue, her breathing became labored, prompting her parents to take her to Covenant Childrenâs Hospital in Lubbock.
She was intubated and died a few days later, reportedly from pneumonia, a known complication of measles.
According to the Associated Press, her death marks the first measles-related fatality in the United States in ten years.
Following the girlâs tragic passing, her siblings also contracted measles.
Credit: DIGICOMPHOTO/SCIENCE PHOTO LIBRARY / Getty
In the interview, the late girlâs father claimed measles âare good for the bodyâ and even suggested they offer protection against cancer, a belief that doctors flatly reject.
âNone of that is true,â Dr. Jay K. Varma, a pediatric infectious disease specialist, told PEOPLE. âMeasles are not good for people in any way. They put children in grave danger as they did for that familyâs daughter. They put children at risk of other infections for a couple of years after measles. And there is no evidence that measles has any effect on risk for cancer or risk for anything else later on.â
Dr. Varma pointed out that the virus can trigger long-term complications such as subacute sclerosing panencephalitis (SSPE), a degenerative and usually fatal neurological condition that may surface years after infection.
He also explained that you can get pneumonia from measles âor kids with measles can develop a superinfection, meaning bacterial pneumonia on top of measles,â adding: âItâs because they have the original viral infection. That sets them up to have a bacterial infection on top of it.â
âThis is a very typical story. Kids with measles can seem like theyâre getting better and then can develop pneumonia later. Pneumonia can be from measles alone or measles plus a bacterial infection. But in either case, this whole course is preventable by vaccination,â he said.
In addition to this, the doctor spoke about how the family questioned why their daughter hadnât received breathing treatments like her siblings, who were given inhaled steroids and seemed to recover more easily.
âThereâs no evidence for either inhaled steroids, which is what budesonide is or inhaled beta agonists like albuterol in measles,â Dr. Varma said. âThereâs simply no evidence that they do anything.â He added that the other children âwere simply not as sick.â
The little girl was intubated and died a few days later, reportedly from pneumonia, a known complication of measles. Credit: BSIP / Getty
As for home remedies like vitamin A or cod liver oil, he noted that thereâs a small place for medically supervised vitamin A use but warned against assuming that it will cure everything.
âChildren who are malnourished are at higher risk of severe courses and death from measles, and we know from studies from decades ago that vitamin A supplementation for people who have measles can decrease â but not eliminate â the risk of death and severe disease,â he said.
However, he cautioned about the dangers of overdosing: âIt accumulates in the body. It can cause liver damage. It can cause central nervous system damage. It can cause issues with skin â it is not a benign treatment.â
He also dismissed cod liver oil as helpful, saying there is âno evidence that that helps in any way and giving a supplement that has an unknown amount of things in it is unlikely to be helpful.â
The mother of the deceased girl said she believes she was vaccinated herself but still showed symptoms of measles. Dr. Varma explained this is possible.
âEspecially for someone who got a single dose of vaccine, there is some chance that, if they are exposed to measles, they can develop measles,â he said. âOften those people have milder disease than people who havenât been vaccinated, and it sounds like her course was pretty mild.â
His overarching message was simple: vaccines work, and lives are on the line. âThe vaccine is safe and it is highly effective, and we have been using it for 60 years at this point,â he said. âThere is a lot of misinformation out there and what happens when you have that level of misinformation, is that vaccine rates drop, you end up with large outbreaks like you have in West Texas now.
âWeâve lost a child already in this outbreak and an adult has died in New Mexico. Both of those deaths were preventable,â Dr. Varma added. âMeasles is not supposed to be causing deaths in people in the U.S. in 2025, and so this is all preventable.â