As global mobility rebounds and people cross continents for family visits, education, work or leisure, a handful of measles cases in any US state can have ripple effects worldwide. What happens in a US-state like South Carolina does not stay there; it can reach cities thousands of miles away. For Indian travellers, students, migrant workers and diaspora families staying connected across borders, a measles outbreak in America is not just local news, it is a global alert. Here’s why everyone crossing borders, and the communities waiting for them, should take note. Measles is one of the most contagious viral diseases. Even among countries with advanced healthcare systems, outbreaks continue to happen when vaccination rates slip or when imported cases go undetected. Measles spreads th

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