The Scotsman

Measles still a threat to UK population despite WHO claims

- By ELLA PICKOVER

Measles “remains a threat” to the British public, despite global health leaders declaring that the infectious disease has been eliminated in the UK, according to an article in a medical journal.

An editorial published in the British Journal of General Practice states that recent outbreaks of the disease have highlighte­d that it is an “ongoing threat”.

According to data from Public Health England (PHE), there has been a steep rise in the number of cases across England.

There were 274 cases in the whole of 2017. Comparativ­ely, between 1 January and 18 June this year there were 643 cases.

In September last year, the World Health Organisati­on (WHO) declared that the eliminatio­n of measles had been achieved in the UK. Eliminatio­n of measles can be verified once a country has sustained “interrupti­on of endemic transmissi­on” for at least 36 months, according to the WHO.

The UK has also reached the WHO target for 95 per cent of five-year-olds to receive the first dose of the measles, mumps, and rubella (MMR) vaccine.

The new article, by Dr Maliha Moten, who is part of PHE’S West Midlands Health Protection Team, states: “Despite this progress, measles remains a threat to the UK population.”

It describes the clinical features of measles and the key actions for GPS dealing with a suspected case.

It states there have been several outbreaks across Europe in countries where MMR uptake has been low historical­ly, including Romania, France, Greece, and Italy, with 48 measles deaths reported in the European Union since 2016. The latest British cases are “mainly linked to importatio­ns from Europe”, they wrote.

As a result, PHE has declared a national measles incident, they added.

“Recent outbreaks of measles have highlighte­d its ongoing threat,” the article states.

In June, PHE urged young adults and teenagers planning to go to Europe during the summer to check they are vaccinated against measles.

It called on would-be travellers to check they have had their MMR jabs.

Uptake of the MMR vaccine fell heavily in the late 1990s following the publicatio­n of research by Andrew Wakefield which suggested a possible link between the inoculatio­n and autism.

Experts have widely discredite­d his study and he was struck off the medical register in 2010. 0 There has been a steep rise in the number of measles cases in England this year, mainly linked to ‘importatio­ns from Europe’

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