Measles cases jump 79% in 2022 after COVID hit vaccination campaigns
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[April 28, 2022]
By Jennifer Rigby
LONDON (Reuters) - Measles cases jumped by
79% in the first two months of this year compared to 2021, after
COVID-19 and lockdowns disrupted child vaccination campaigns around the
world, according to data from UNICEF and the World Health Organization
(WHO).
In January and February, there were 17,338 measles cases reported
worldwide, up from 9,665 in the same period last year.
Measles is a very contagious disease that can be particularly dangerous
for young children and babies. It spreads more quickly than Ebola, flu
or COVID-19.
UNICEF executive director Catherine Russell described the immunisation
gaps combined with a return to social mixing in the wake of the pandemic
as a "perfect storm".
"Measles is more than a dangerous and potentially deadly disease. It is
also an early indication that there are gaps in our global immunisation
coverage, gaps vulnerable children cannot afford."
The five countries with the largest measles outbreaks in the last 12
months were Somalia, Liberia, Yemen, Afghanistan and Ivory Coast. There
have been 21 major outbreaks during that period.
Child immunisation campaigns were knocked off course around the world
during the coronavirus pandemic, and things have not fully recovered.
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A vial of measles vaccine is checked at a field logistics base run
by Doctors Without Borders (MSF) in the town of Boso-Manzi in
Mongala province in the Democratic Republic of Congo February 27,
2020. Picture taken February 27, 2020. REUTERS/Hereward Holland
At the start of April, 58 campaigns
in 43 countries were still postponed, impacting 212 million people -
mostly children. Nineteen of those campaigns are for measles,
putting 73 million children at risk, UNICEF and WHO said.
Immunisation campaigns for diseases like typhoid and polio were also
disrupted. Last month, Malawi reported its first polio case in
decades while Pakistan, one of only two countries where polio
remains endemic, recorded its first case for more than a year this
month.
The WHO and UNICEF said it was imperative to get the vaccination
drives back on track.
(Reporting by Jennifer Rigby; Editing by Josephine Mason and Mark
Heinrich)
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