In figures described by its director general as "an outrage", the
WHO said most of last year's measles deaths were in children under
five years old who had not been vaccinated.
"The fact that any child dies from a vaccine-preventable disease
like measles is frankly an outrage and a collective failure to
protect the world's most vulnerable children," said the WHO's
director general Tedros Adhanom Ghebreysus.
The picture for 2019 is even worse, the WHO said, with provisional
data up to November showing a three-fold increase in case numbers
compared with the same period in 2018.
The United States has already reported its highest number of measles
cases in 25 years in 2019, while four countries in Europe - Albania,
the Czech Republic, Greece and Britain – lost their WHO
"measles-free" status in 2018 after suffering large outbreaks.
An outbreak in the South Pacific nation of Samoa has infected more
than 4,200 people and killed more than 60, mostly babies and
children, in a battle complicated by a vocal anti-vaccination
movement.
In 2018, measles hit hardest in Liberia, Ukraine, Democratic
Republic of Congo, Madagascar and Somalia, the WHO said, with these
five nations accounting for nearly half of all cases worldwide.
Globally, measles vaccination rates have stagnated for almost a
decade. The WHO and the UNICEF children's fund say that in 2018,
around 86% of children got a first dose of measles vaccine through
routine vaccination plans, and fewer than 70% got the second dose
recommended to fully protect them.
STAGGERING
Heidi Larson, director of the Vaccine Confidence Project at
Britain's London School of Hygiene & Tropical Medicine, said the
numbers were "staggering".
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"Some countries are scrambling to vaccinate in the face of serious
outbreaks - far too late for many," she said.
Measles is one of the most contagious known diseases, more so than
Ebola, tuberculosis or flu. It can linger in the air or on surfaces
for several hours after an infected person has been and gone,
putting anyone not vaccinated at risk.
Among wealthier nations, vaccination rates have been hurt by some
parents shunning them for what they say are religious or
philosophical reasons. Mistrust of authority and debunked myths
about links to autism also weaken vaccine confidence and lead some
parents to delay protecting their children.
Research published in October showed that measles infection not only
carries a risk of death or severe complications including pneumonia,
brain damage, blindness and deafness, but can also damage the
victim's immune memory for months or years - leaving those who
survive measles vulnerable to other dangerous diseases such as flu
or severe diarrhea.
The WHO data showed there were an estimated 9,769,400 cases of
measles and 142,300 related deaths globally in 2018. This compares
to 7,585,900 cases and 124,000 deaths in 2017.
Charlie Weller, head of vaccines at the Wellcome Trust global health
charity, said the numbers were a tragedy. "If we are to protect
lives, we must understand and address the reasons why measles
vaccine uptake is lower," she said.
(Reporting by Kate Kelland, editing by Gareth Jones and Hugh Lawson)
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