UK loses measles elimination status
The UK is one of four European countries to have lost its measles elimination status, according to the World Health Organisation.
For the first time since records began in 2012, four countries – Albania, Czech Republic, Greece and the United Kingdom – lost their status as having eliminated measles from the population.
As of the end of 2018, 35 countries had achieved or sustained measles elimination, the European Regional Verification Commission for Measles and Rubella Elimination (RVC) said.
The UK was added to the list in 2017 by the World Health Organisation (WHO)
The independent panel of experts, established by WHO, met in June in Warsaw, Poland, to evaluate reports from 53 countries.
Europe has seen a surge in cases since 2018, with around 90,000 reported for the first half of 2019 – already more than that recorded in the whole of the previous year (84,462).
It comes as WHO said misinformation about vaccines, particularly that shared on social media, is as contagious and dangerous as the diseases it helps to spread.
Dr Gunter Pfaff, chair of the RVC, said: “Re-establishment of measles transmission is concerning.
“If high immunisation coverage is not achieved and sustained in every community, both children and adults will suffer unnecessarily and some will tragically die.”
Professor Martin Marshall, vice-chairman of the Royal College of GPS, said the findings were “disheartening”.