Since February, four people - three of them Venezuelan - have died
of measles in the remote Brazilian border state of Roraima where
health authorities have confirmed 281 cases of the disease, mostly
among children.
The outbreak has prompted the Brazilian government to launch a
nationwide campaign to vaccinate 11 million children, plus adults
who request it. Although many Brazilian children are already
vaccinated against the disease, the vaccination rate has dropped
since Brazil was declared free of measles in 2016.
Brazil's Health Minister Gilberto Occhi said Venezuela had ignored
Brazilian offers of assistance and vaccines and had not replied to
requests for information to assess the extent of the epidemic.
"We need to know what Venezuela's policy is and what it has done to
vaccinate its population, and so do other countries," Occhi said in
a conference call with foreign media.
The Venezuelan Information Ministry did not immediately reply to a
request for comment.
Occhi said Brazil was considering vaccinating all Venezuelans
entering the country - some 2,000 people a day, with around half of
those in transit or on a short-term visit. Currently only those that
ask to stay as refugees or residents are vaccinated.
Brazil, along with Colombia and other neighbors, has been discussing
the need for Venezuela to provide up-to-date information with the
Pan American Health Organization (PAHO), an official said.
[to top of second column] |
"All we have is preliminary data from 2017. They are not updating
the information and we can't see the magnitude of the problem," said
Carla Domingues, head of Brazil's immunization program.
PAHO said last month that nearly 2,500 confirmed cases of measles
had been reported in the Americas in 2018, with over 1,600 of those
occurring in Venezuela and nearly 700 in Brazil.
Since Venezuelans fleeing economic and political turmoil started
entering Roraima at the only land crossing three years ago, Brazil
has vaccinated 45,000 arrivals.
A decree by Roraima state government ordering the compulsory blanket
vaccination of Venezuelans was struck down by the Supreme Court this
week.
Measles vaccination in Brazil fell to around 70 percent coverage in
2017, a ministry official said.
(Reporting by Anthony Boadle, Additional reporting by Brian
Ellsworth in Caracas, Editing by Rosalba O'Brien)
[© 2018 Thomson Reuters. All rights
reserved.] Copyright 2018 Reuters. All rights reserved. This material may not be published,
broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
Thompson Reuters is solely responsible for this content.
|