United
Nations, Oct 27: The United Nations and other international agencies have
warned that the world was still far from reaching goals on eliminating measles
despite the fact that the annual deaths from the disease had dropped below
100,000 last year. “We have seen a“substantial drop in measles deaths for more
than two decades, but now we must strive to reach zero measles cases,” said
Jean-Marie Okwo-Bele, Director of the World Health Organisation’s (WHO)
Department of Immunisation, Vaccines and Biologicals, in a joint statement on
Thursday for the Measles and Rubella Initiative (MR&I). The study,
published by MR&I – a partnership formed in 2001 between the UN Children’s
Fund (UNICEF), WHO, UN Foundation, American Red Cross, and US Centers for
Disease Control and Prevention – marks the first time that global measles
deaths have fallen below 100,000 per year. “Measles elimination will only be
reached if measles vaccines reach every child, everywhere,” added Dr Okwo-Bele.
Since 2000, an estimated 5.5 billion doses of measles-containing vaccines have
been provided to children through routine immunisation services and mass
vaccination campaigns, saving an estimated 20.4 million lives. However, the
world is still far from reaching regional measles elimination goals. According
to the joint statement, people being treated with the first of two
vaccine-required doses have stalled at approximately 85 per cent since 2009,
far short of the 95 per cent coverage needed to stop the infections, and
coverage with the second dose, despite recent increases, was only 64 per cent
in 2016. Some 20.8 million children are still missing their first measles
vaccine dose – more than half of whom live in six countries. Nigeria has 3.3
million unvaccinated children; India has 2.9 million; Pakistan, two million;
Indonesia, 1.2 million; Ethiopia, 0.9 million; and in the Democratic Republic
of the Congo, 0.7 million are not immunised. Since measles is a highly
contagious viral disease, large outbreaks continue to occur in these and other
countries in Europe and North America, putting children at risk of severe health
complications, such as pneumonia, diarrhoea, encephalitis, blindness and death.
Countries with the greatest number of measles deaths rely most heavily on
polio-funded resources. Once polio eradication is achieved, those resources,
which support routine immunization services, measles and rubella vaccination
campaigns and surveillance will be at high risk of diminishing and
disappearing, reversing the progress made. UNI
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