How the measles made its way back to Canada
.gi-fb{ width: 100vw; left: calc(50% - 50vw); position: relative; } .gi-meta__bottom{ font-family: 'GMsans-Web-Regular'; display: flex; flex-direction: column; margin: 2rem 0; line-height: 1.5; text-transform: uppercase; font-size: 0.9em; & .gi-meta__byline{ font-size: 1.1em; & a{ font-family: 'GMsans-Web-Label'; text-decoration:none; color: #191919; &:hover{ text-decoration:underline; color: red; } } } } let leadText = [ { text: "Measles, a dangerous illness that for decades has rarely infected Canadians, is back – and spreading."}, { text: "As thousands of people in the country get sick, we ask: How have cities and towns across the world once again become a fertile ground for measles outbreaks? And where was the spark that ignited North America's viral blaze?" }, { text: "This is the story of The Globe and Mail's 40,000-kilometre journey to find out." }, { text: "Tracing the virus" } ]; By Nathan VanderKlippe The Globe and Mail Published September 20, 2025
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No one saw much cause for alarm when the Pattanasat Witaya School in the deep south of Thailand first noticed last summer that children were getting sick, their chests flushing with bumpy red spots.
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