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VDH Confirms 2 Measles Cases, Lists Exposure Sites

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Summary

The Virginia Department of Health reported two confirmed measles cases in the Northwest Region on April 21, 2026. The patients are a preschool-age child and a school-age child who recently traveled domestically together. VDH identified exposure sites at KidMed Stafford Urgent Care (April 16) and Grafton Village Elementary School (multiple dates in April). Virginia has reported 19 measles cases in 2026 year-to-date.

“If you notice symptoms of measles, immediately isolate yourself by staying home.”

VDH , verbatim from source
Why this matters

Healthcare providers in Virginia should review measles presentation criteria (fever >101°F, cough, coryza, conjunctivitis, followed by rash) and ask about exposure at the listed sites. Patients who are unvaccinated or immunocompromised and may have been exposed have a narrow window for post-exposure prophylaxis — calling ahead before any in-person visit is essential to prevent nosocomial spread.

AI-drafted from the source document, validated against GovPing's analyst note standards . For the primary regulatory language, read the source document .
Published by VDH on vdh.virginia.gov . Detected, standardized, and enriched by GovPing. Review our methodology and editorial standards .

What changed

VDH reported two confirmed measles cases in Virginia's Northwest Region on April 21, 2026 — a preschool-age child and a school-age child — and published potential exposure sites and dates for public awareness. Exposure locations include KidMed Stafford Urgent Care (April 16) and Grafton Village Elementary School (multiple dates in April). Virginia has recorded 19 measles cases in 2026.

Healthcare providers in Virginia should be alert for measles symptoms in patients presenting with fever, cough, runny nose, watery red eyes, or rash, particularly those with recent travel or potential exposure at listed sites. Exposed individuals without full vaccination should contact their healthcare provider or local health department promptly — post-exposure prophylaxis (MMR vaccine or immune globulin) is time-sensitive. Isolating at home and calling ahead before seeking healthcare protects other patients and staff from potential exposure.

What to do next

  1. Report your exposure to VDH by completing this short survey.
  2. If you notice symptoms of measles, immediately isolate yourself by staying home.
  3. Contact your local health department or email epi_response@vdh.virginia.gov to discuss any additional recommendations.

Archived snapshot

Apr 22, 2026

GovPing captured this document from the original source. If the source has since changed or been removed, this is the text as it existed at that time.

April 21, 2026
Media Contact: Brookie Crawford, brookie.crawford@vdh.virginia.gov

Virginia Health Officials Investigating Two Confirmed Measles Cases in Northwest Region
Virginia Department of Health is Working to Identify People Who Are at Risk

RICHMOND, Va. – The Virginia Department of Health is reporting two confirmed cases of measles in residents of the Northwest Region. The patients are a pre-school age child (0-4 years) and a school-age child (5-12 years) who recently traveled together domestically. To protect the patients’ privacy, VDH will not provide any additional information about the patients. Health officials are coordinating an effort to identify people who might have been exposed.

Listed below are the dates, times, and locations of the potential exposure sites in Virginia:

  • KidMed Stafford Urgent Care, located at 20 Doc Stone Road in Stafford, between 4:30 p.m. and 8 p.m. Thursday, April 16.
  • Grafton Village Elementary School, located at 501 Deacon Road in Fredericksburg
    • Thursday, April 9 through Friday, April 10
    • Monday, April 13 through Thursday, April 16
    • Monday, April 20 To date in 2026, Virginia has 19 reported cases of measles. Any additional exposure sites identified in Virginia will be posted to the VDH Measles website.

What to Do If You Have Been Exposed to Measles

Most people in Virginia have immunity to measles through vaccination, so the risk to the general public is low. However, anyone who was at the potential exposure sites at the times listed should:

  • Report your exposure to VDH by completing this short survey. Public health officials will follow up with respondents if additional actions are needed.
  • Find out if you have been vaccinated for measles or have had measles previously. Make sure you are up to date with the recommended number of measles (MMR) vaccinations.
    • To check your immunization status, call your healthcare provider or request records through the VDH Record Request Portal.
    • If you have received two doses of a measles-containing vaccine, or were born before 1957, you are considered protected and do not need to seek post-exposure treatment at this time.
  • People who are not fully vaccinated or otherwise immune to measles should contact their healthcare provider or call their local health department . People who are not immune to measles may qualify for post-exposure treatments. There is a small timeframe for these protective post-exposure treatments to be effective.
  • Watch for symptoms of measles for 21 days after the potential exposure. Monitoring for symptoms is especially important for people who are not fully vaccinated or otherwise immune to measles.
    • If you notice symptoms of measles, immediately isolate yourself by staying home. Contact your healthcare provider right away. If you need to seek healthcare, call ahead before going to your healthcare provider’s office or the emergency room to notify them that you may have been exposed to measles and ask them to call the local health department. This call will help protect other patients and staff.
    • The most likely time you would become sick would be between April 16 and May 11.
    • Contact your local health department or email epi_response@vdh.virginia.gov to discuss any additional recommendations. General Measles Information

Measles is a highly contagious illness that can spread easily through the air when an infected person breathes, coughs, or sneezes. Measles symptoms usually appear in two stages. In the first stage, most people have a fever of greater than 101 degrees, runny nose, watery red eyes, and a cough. These symptoms usually start seven to 14 days after being exposed. The second stage starts three to five days after symptoms start, when a rash begins to appear on the face and spreads to the rest of the body. People with measles are contagious from four days before the rash appears through four days after the rash appeared.

Measles is preventable through a safe and effective MMR vaccine. Two doses of the vaccine are given to provide lifetime protection. Virginia has high measles vaccination rates, with approximately 95% of kindergarteners fully vaccinated against measles. However, infants who are too young to be vaccinated, and others who are not vaccinated, are at high risk of developing measles if they are exposed. Infants six months through 11 months of age who will be traveling internationally, or to an outbreak setting, should receive one dose of MMR vaccine prior to travel. Talk to your healthcare provider if you have questions about the MMR vaccine.

For more information about measles visit www.vdh.virginia.gov/measles/.

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Last updated

Classification

Agency
VDH
Published
April 21st, 2026
Instrument
Notice
Branch
Executive
Legal weight
Non-binding
Stage
Final
Change scope
Minor

Who this affects

Applies to
Healthcare providers Public health authorities Patients
Industry sector
6211 Healthcare Providers
Activity scope
Public health notification Disease surveillance Exposure tracking
Geographic scope
Virginia US-VA

Taxonomy

Primary area
Public Health
Operational domain
Clinical Operations
Topics
Healthcare Consumer Protection

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