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			 At the same time, the WHO said, record numbers of children are 
			getting the vaccine - offering hope that the rise in infections may 
			not last. 
 "Progress has been uneven between and within countries, leaving 
			increasing clusters of susceptible individuals unprotected, and 
			resulting in a record number of people affected by the virus in 
			2018," it said in a statement.
 
 Measles is a highly contagious viral disease that can cause hearing 
			loss and brain disorders in children and, in severe cases, can kill.
 
 Vaccination coverage needs to be around 95 percent to prevent the 
			virus circulating in communities - so-called "herd immunity".
 
			
			 
			
 In many countries, anti-vaccine campaigners seek to dissuade parents 
			from getting their children immunized, despite strong scientific 
			evidence that vaccines are safe and effective.
 
 In Italy, the co-ruling anti-establishment Five Star Movement has 
			questioned the safety of some vaccines and loudly denounced efforts 
			to make vaccinations mandatory.
 
 In the WHO's European region, which covers nearly 900 million 
			people, some 82,600 in 47 countries contracted measles last year - 
			the highest number this decade. Of those, 72 cases were fatal. Six 
			of the 53 countries did not report.
 
			
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			In 34 of the countries, estimated coverage with a second dose of 
			measles vaccine was below 95 percent.
 "(Immunization) gaps at local level still offer an open door to the 
			virus," the WHO's European director, Zsuzsanna Jakab, said in a 
			statement.
 
 Professor Arne Akbar, president of the British Society for 
			Immunology, said the figures were "extremely concerning".
 
 Heidi Larson, a specialist in vaccines and public health at the 
			London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine, said the increase in 
			cases was a "wake-up call on the importance of building confidence 
			in vaccination".
 
 A report published by the European Commission last year and compiled 
			by a team led by Larson found that measles immunization coverage has 
			fallen in 12 EU countries since 2010, and that seven out of the 10 
			countries with the lowest vaccine confidence in the world are in 
			Europe.
 
 (Editing by Kevin Liffey)
 
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