People with measles may have infected others at a gas station, butcher shop, two grocers and a hospital emergency room in Mecklenburg and two surrounding counties, health officials said.
Saturday, Mecklenburg County Public Health issued a measles exposure notice for Vista Auction, 2500 Sardis Road, from 11 a.m. to 9 p.m. Jan. 29-30 and the Lidl grocery store at 9318 Monroe Road from 2 to 4:30 p.m Jan 30.
If you were there during those hours, monitor for symptoms and learn more about what to do after a potential measles exposure, health officials said.
“These locations were not the source of infection and are now safe to visit,” according to a department news release. “They are cooperating with public health on the investigation.”
The exposure “isn’t linked to any cases in Mecklenburg County — it is linked to a case from another jurisdiction,” officials said.
Mecklenburg has had three reported measles cases, according to the department.
“If you see symptoms of measles, call your doctor, clinic or emergency department right away,” officials said. “It’s important to call a healthcare facility before you go to get instructions to prevent further spread of measles.”
Visitors to the QuikTrip at 5650 W. Hwy 74 between 9:30 a.m. and 12:30 p.m. Friday, Jan. 30, may have been exposed to the highly contagious disease, officials said in a news release.
Officials encouraged visitors to the QuikTrip during those hours to call Union County Public Health at 704-296-4420 for guidance.
“At this time, there are no confirmed cases of measles in Union County,” according to the county news release.
Any visitors to those places during those hours should call the Lincoln County Health Department at 980-429-6289 for guidance.
“Laboratory testing is not recommended for people who were exposed unless they develop symptoms of measles, including high fever and rash,” health officials said. “Symptoms of measles can start 7 to 21 days after being exposed.”
The three Lincoln County locations “are considered safe to visit and pose no ongoing risk to the public,” officials said in a news release.
North Carolina has had 17 measles cases since December, including one hospitalization, according to the N.C. Department of Health and Human Services.
A nurse readies a syringe during a vaccination. Matt Stone/The Louisville Courier Journal Matt Stone/The Louisville Courier Journal / USA TODAY NETWORK
How to recognize measles
Measles symptoms to watch for include:
High fevers
Runny nose
Cough
Red, watery eyes
White spots on the inner cheeks, gums and roof of mouth
A red, raised and blotchy rash that starts on the face and progresses down the body
This story was originally published February 7, 2026 at 11:55 AM.
“Wellness Without Walls” is a new street psychiatry program connecting psychiatrists and registered nurses with Mecklenburg County’s unhoused population who may be in need of mental health services. The program is a collaboration between Atrium Health, Alliance Health, Roof Above and Hearts for the Invisible
“Wellness Without Walls” is a new street psychiatry program connecting psychiatrists and registered nurses with those in the county’s homeless population who may be in need of mental health services.
Through a collaboration between Atrium Health, Alliance Health, Roof Above and Hearts for the Invisible, groups of street outreach workers and medical professionals will seek out unhoused adults, 18 years old and older, either with a diagnosed or undiagnosed disorder.
The $303,000 program received its funding from SteelFab, Duke Energy, The Merancas Foundation and Molina Healthcare.
The program stems from the county’s “A Home For All” initiative, which seeks to eliminate homelessness and help people remain in stable housing. The initiative, spearheaded by United Way of Greater Charlotte, began conceptually in 2022 but started rolling out programs last year.
Providing mental health treatment to the county’s homeless residents, especially those on the street, has been a top need in the county, according to Kathryn Firmin-Sellers. She’s president and CEO of United Way of Greater Charlotte.
It’s one of the first conversations Firmin-Sellers said she had when “A Home for All” was in its infant stage.
The issue of homelessness and mental health are also at the forefront of community conversations after the death of Iryna Zarutska, a Ukrainian refugee who was fatally stabbed on the light rail in August. DeCarlos Brown Jr., who is charged with Zarutska’s death, was homeless and experienced mental health struggles, according to his mother. The case has attracted national attention.
The data backs up the need for mental health treatment among the county’s unhoused population.
Of the over 440 people experiencing unsheltered homelessness in the county, about 40% reported having a serious mental illness, according to data collected from January’s Point-in-Time, or PIT, count. The count is an annual nationwide event where volunteers survey and count individuals experiencing sheltered or unsheltered homelessness every January.
“Her hands were freezing,” said team leader Deb Phillips after helping a 32-year-old woman, who spent the night outside, put on a pair of gloves during the point in time count in Charlotte on January 23, 2025. Melissa Melvin-Rodriguez mrodriguez@charlotteobserver.com
“This program is important because it’s bringing the services to the unsheltered population,” said Breanna McGowan, the outreach clinical director with Hearts for the Invisible. “To be able to have a psychiatrist and a nurse … provide those direct services like medication management, psychiatric evaluations and follow-up visits is vital.
“This kind of outreach is exactly the kind of proactive care that helps prevent crises … and opens the door to so many other possibilities.”
January’s PIT count showed 444 people were experiencing unsheltered homelessness. That’s a 16% increase from last year and the highest number of people living outdoors since 2010.
Of that group, six were minors. Again, that’s the highest number of children living outside since 2008.
Housing issues are some of the broader reasons for the county’s increase in homelessness. There’s the rise in housing costs, the lack of affordable housing and the numerous barriers stopping someone from entering housing, such as evictions, low wages and mental health needs.
And that’s where the “A Home for All” initiative is seeking to step in. It focuses on several pillars addressing the problems of increasing homelessness.
Last October, United Way partnered with Housing Collaborative to connect people to housing and recruit property managers to aid in the effort.
In July, the Contractor Assistance Program was launched, which provides funding to train and qualify existing or emerging contractors interested in helping those in need of critical home repair.
Mecklenburg County’s annual homeless count reported an all-time high in people living outside. Almost 40% of that population reported having a mental health illness. Seen here are county workers on the Point-in-Time count from January. Mecklenburg County
The initiative also began a pilot rental assistance program over the summer for households at risk of eviction or instability.
Now, the focus is on mental health.
What is “Wellness Without Walls?”
There are numerous barriers for the unhoused population seeking treatment, according to Malia Suhren, the director of unsheltered housing navigation with Roof Above.
Transportation issues, a lack of communication methods and an overall mistrust or fear of health providers could stop anyone from seeking treatment, Suhren said. To combat those issues, the goal of “Wellness Without Walls” is to meet people where they are.
“(The program) is giving psychiatric care in a way that we’ve never been able to before,” Suhren said. “It’s really important that the doctors are able to come do these walk and talk assessments, do the follow-up appointments, answer questions about psychoeducation and medication management, and really provide that upfront care that makes it so much more accessible.”
Two days a week, a psychiatrist and nurse with Atrium Health will go into the community with street outreach teams from Roof Above and Hearts for the Invisible.
It’s a voluntary process, but the medical professionals will be able to provide on-the-spot assessments and needs. As Suhren said, the needs look like medication management, evaluations and, eventually, follow-up appointments.
Having psychiatrists partner with outreach teams enhances trust, Suhren said. The outreach teams may already know some of the homeless community members or they have the tools to connect with the population.
“Wellness Without Walls” is a new street psychiatry program connecting psychiatrists and registered nurses with Mecklenburg County’s unhoused population who may be in need of mental health services. The program is a collaboration between Atrium Health, Alliance Health, Roof Above and Hearts for the Invisible JEFF SINER jsiner@charlotteobserver.com
The program launched last month and the community has been receptive, Suhren and McGowan agreed.
“We’ve already seen a few folks consent to the program and start that process,” Suhren said. “We have seen a lot of our neighbors ask really great questions. And even if they are not conducting an assessment right away, they’re really open. We try and make sure they know that it’s always something that they can come back to if they wish.”
Gauging success of the homeless program
The immediate goals of “Wellness Without Walls” is to reach 20 patients a month in the first year and decrease emergency room visits.
The long-term goal is to help people transition to clinical care and continue to have access to mental health treatments.
The ultimate goal is for folks to enter into stable housing.
There are steps to ensuring that the stable housing goal is reached, Suhren said. That’s also the point of the different pillars in “A Home for All,” Firmin-Sellers added.
There are different needs when it comes to ensuring a person has stable housing, including mental health treatment.
“One of the biggest misconceptions about this work is that people don’t want help or people don’t care … I’ve never met a group of people more than our unsheltered neighbors who care so deeply,” Suhren said. With better mental health care, it makes it easier for them to follow through all the way to see that permanent housing exit. And keep it.
“If they are coming from a place of stability, then it sets them up for success in that housing retention piece.”
Desiree Mathurin covers growth and development for The Charlotte Observer. The native New Yorker returned to the East Coast after covering neighborhood news in Denver at Denverite and Colorado Public Radio. She’s also reported on high school sports at Newsday and southern-regional news for AP. Desiree is exploring Charlotte and the Carolinas, and is looking forward to taking readers along for the ride. Send tips and coffee shop recommendations.
A federal lawsuit filed Wednesday against Atrium Health alleges that the hospital network allowed Facebook to get patient information to use for targeted ads.
Fred Clasen-Kelly
Kaiser Health News
A class-action lawsuit filed in North Carolina accuses Atrium Health of allowing Facebook and Google to access patient information online to use in targeted ads.
The plaintiffs, identified only as North Carolina-resident J.S. and Michigan-citizen J.R., allege they received spam mail and Facebook ads related to their medical conditions after sharing information with Atrium.
Facebook’s Meta Pixel, a free piece of code that can be installed on websites, intercepted private information on Atrium’s website in violation of federal law, the lawsuit alleges. It was filed Wednesday in the U.S. District Court for the Western District of North Carolina.
Atrium is a Charlotte-based healthcare organization with seven emergency departments, 40 hospitals, and 1,400 other care locations across North Carolina, South Carolina, Georgia and Alabama, according to its website. It sees about 34,000 patients a day, the lawsuit says.It is part of Advocate Health, the third-largest nonprofit health system in the United States.
Screenshots filed with the federal lawsuit show how Pixel collected information by following the plaintiffs’ searches for pulmonology, neurology, radiology and emergency departments, as well as COVID testing locations and alcohol-rehab centers. The plaintiffs allege they first discovered misconduct in June 2022.
U.S. District Court for the Western District of North Carolina
J.R. — an Atrium patient of nearly 20 years — alleges that Facebook and other social media started to push medication and prescription ads into her feed after she submitted “protected health information,” including specific symptoms and treatments, to Atrium.
Pixel followed search activity on Atrium’s website before patients logged in to their portal, the lawsuit alleges.
“The full scope of [Atrium’s] interceptions and disclosures of … communications to Meta can only be determined through formal discovery,” says the new lawsuit.
A screenshot filed in a federal lawsuit shows how Atrium Health allowed Facebook to get patient information to use for targeted ads. U.S. District Court for the Western District of North Carolina
The lawsuit indicates Atrium removed Pixel “following a wave of negative press and litigation against other healthcare companies for the same unlawful activities.”
A 2022 investigation by nonprofit newsroom The Markup namedNorth Carolina’s Atrium Health Carolinas Medical Center, Duke University Hospital, Novant Health and WakeMed. The Markup found that 33 of the top 100 hospitals in America use the Meta Pixel.
Also in 2022, Meta was sued in the Northern District of California after a Facebook user began receiving targeted ads for heart and knee conditions she entered in her private patient portal at the University of California, San Francisco Medical Center.
Atrium’s actions, according to the lawsuit, violated those patients’ expectations of privacy and constituted “criminal conduct.”
Atrium Health did not immediately respond to a request for comment.
Julia Coin covers local and statewide topics — including destructive fires, illegal gambling and the pervasiveness of drugs in schools — as The Charlotte Observer’s breaking news and courts reporter. Michigan-born and Florida-raised, she studied journalism at the University of Florida, where she covered statewide legislation, sexual assault on campus and Hurricane Ian’s destruction. Support my work with a digital subscription
One of North Carolina’s prominent families has filed a lawsuit against Charlotte’s largest hospital over millions of dollars in inheritance.
Cannon textile mill descendants want to stop Atrium Health from receiving distributions from the family trust, according to a petition filed in N.C. business court. The trust was created in 1965 by Ruth Coltrane Cannon, wife of longtime Cannon Mills president Charles Albert Cannon, for her grandson Charles Albert Cannon III, who died Oct. 28.
Textile magnate Charles Cannon founded Cannon Mills in Kannapolis. It was the world’s largest producer of towels and sheets for decades. The mill, bought by Pillowtex 1982, closed abruptly closed in 2003 wiping out 7,650 jobs. It was the largest one-day job loss in the history of North Carolina and the textile industry at that time. The mill was demolished in 2005 and is now the site of the 350-acre North Carolina Research Campus.
Following Charles Cannon III’s death, Ruth Cannon said in her will that she wanted the trust to go to Cabarrus Memorial Hospital, according to the Feb. 7 petition. If the trust could not be paid “expressly” to the Cabarrus County-owned hospital, it would be distributed to “religious, charitable, scientific, literary, or educational purposes,” the petition states.
The filing does not specify the trust’s value.
Cabarrus Memorial has not existed since the 1980s and became part of Atrium through a series of mergers in the 2000s, according to the petition. Atrium is now part of Advocate Health with revenue of more than $27 billion.
Since Cabarrus Memorial does not exist, “the trustees have preliminary concluded that Atrium Health is not the proper remainder income beneficiary,” and trustees should proceed with alternative income distribution, according to the petition.
“Atrium Health does not meet the trust’s express condition that remainder income be paid out for ‘charitable purposes,’” the petition states.
On Jan. 24, Atrium objected to the trust’s interpretation of the will and laid claim to it, threatening legal action if income distributions did not begin on Feb. 15.
The trust is represented by Kearns Davis, James C. Adams II and Agustin M. Martinez of Brooks Pierce McLendon Humphrey & Leonard LLP.
The petition requests a jury trial.
Atrium Health officials and attorneys representing the trust did not respond by Friday afternoon for requests for comment.
Law360 trade publication first reported the case.
Related stories from Charlotte Observer
Catherine Muccigrosso is a business reporter for The Charlotte Observer. An award-winning journalist, she has worked for multiple newspapers and McClatchy for more than a decade.