Marlene Howie still remembers the fear and confusion she felt when her daughters Nicola and Cherie contracted the English measles.
Eldest daughter Nicola caught it at boarding school in the late 80s, and had to return home.
鈥淪he would have had at least two weeks, probably three weeks off school. She was really, really sick.鈥
Her youngest child Cherie, then aged six or seven, caught it from her sister and had to take at least a month off school.
鈥淲hen she went back, she only went back for half days for a while, so she was really crook as well.鈥
The two girls had both had the standard vaccinations at the time.
鈥淭hey both got the measles injections when everyone else did, at the normal time,鈥 Howie, who lives in Motueka, recalls.
鈥淭he doctors at the time were really flummoxed, they couldn鈥檛 understand why these two girls had gotten so sick, because they had the full-blown English measles - the rash all over and the high temperatures and the whole works.鈥

Sisters Cherie, middle, and Nicki Howie, right, pictured with brother Brent in the 1980s. Both sisters caught measles and spent several weeks off school. Photo / Supplied
However, Howie鈥檚 son didn鈥檛 get measles at the time.
Howie, now 74, recalls having the measles herself when her oldest daughter was a toddler. 鈥淏ut I didn鈥檛 get it as bad as the girls did. I mean, I was sick for a few days, but they were seriously ill.鈥
Forty years have passed since she had to watch her children suffer, but Howie says the memory of how dangerous measles can be has stayed with her.
鈥淲e don鈥檛 have any young ones around us [today],鈥 she says.
鈥淚f we did have, I鈥檇 be checking to make sure they鈥檇 had their vaccinations because it鈥檚 so critical. It鈥檚 a very contagious disease and it鈥檚 a killer. And these diseases do kill.鈥
New Zealand is currently in the early stages of a measles outbreak, according to Health NZ, as the number of cases has risen to 17.
With cases recorded in Northland, Auckland, Taranaki, Manawat奴 and Wellington, several cases have been linked to a Bluebridge Cook Strait ferry sailing on October 3, which led to 鈥渟everal hundred鈥 close contacts at Wellington high schools being identified.
According to Ministry of Health director of public health Corina Grey, some of the cases have been hospitalised.
The last measles outbreak in New Zealand took place in 2019, resulting in more than 2000 cases, 35% of whom required hospital care. It spread to Samoa from New Zealand, leading to an outbreak of more than 5000 cases and killing 83.
鈥淲e do always tend to forget until there鈥檚 another outbreak,鈥 says Dr Prabani Wood, a GP at Waikato University Student Health based in Hamilton.

Dr Prabani Wood is a GP at Waikato University Student Health and medical director of the Royal New Zealand College of GPs. Photo / Supplied
鈥淧ublic health messaging is around vaccination rates, and our vaccination rate is about 82%, which is not enough, obviously, to stop the outbreak that is happening.鈥
Wood, who is also the medical director of the Royal New Zealand College of GPs, says she鈥檚 鈥渓ucky鈥 to have come across measles cases just twice in her 16 years as a GP.
鈥淏oth cases were mild ... a couple of real textbook cases. Fortunately, those two children recovered quickly, and obviously we informed the public health unit at the time.鈥
But in some cases, measles can lead to someone becoming seriously sick.
鈥淵ou only need to look at Samoa during the pandemic, when they had that outbreak. There were many, many children who ended up hospitalised there as a result of measles,鈥 Wood says.
鈥淚n the short term, you can get pneumonia as a result of having a recent measles infection. And there鈥檚 a very rare but very serious instance where you get essentially swelling and inflammation around the brain after having measles. It can also cause deafness.
鈥淭he people who are particularly at risk are young children, those who are pregnant and people with already weakened immune systems [like] someone who鈥檚 on treatment for cancer.鈥
What are the symptoms of measles?
鈥淎 high fever, sometimes going up to 40C, a cough and then often - this can be quite specific to measles - sore red eyes, which you might not always get with other viral illnesses. And then there鈥檚 a rash that not everyone gets, but it鈥檚 a specific rash that usually starts on the face behind the ears and then spreads down onto the body,鈥 explains Wood.
鈥淭hey鈥檙e the sort of common symptoms that people get.鈥
Her advice to anyone experiencing symptoms is to isolate at home and if they worsen, call Healthline or your GP.
鈥淭hey can link them to the public health units around the country who are trying to do contact tracing, so they鈥檒l try to confirm whether this is a measles case or not.
鈥淪tay home, try and rest up, but obviously be aware if you鈥檙e starting to get more unwell, to seek out medical care. The other messaging is to check your vaccination history and to get vaccinated. There are different age groups that might need a booster.鈥
The main message, Wood says, is to take measles seriously.
鈥淔or the majority, if it鈥檚 children that get it, it鈥檚 not pleasant, but it鈥檚 an infection that they get over quite quickly,鈥 she says.
鈥淏ut at least 10% of people that get measles end up with serious illness and serious follow-on side effects from it, which [lead to] sometimes long-term hospitalisation and even death. I think people forget that.鈥
Bethany Reitsma is a lifestyle writer who has been with the NZ Herald since 2019. She specialises in all things health and wellbeing and is passionate about telling Kiwis鈥 real-life stories.
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