Hindustan Times ST (Mumbai)

1-yr-old dies of measles; toll 10

- HT correspond­ent

MUMBAI: The number of deaths from measles in Mumbai this year rose to 10 on Tuesday after a one-year-old boy succumbed to the disease during treatment at Kasturba Hospital.

According to a report issued by the Brihanmumb­ai Municipal Corporatio­n (BMC), the city’s civic body, the boy had a history of fever, cough and cold for a month and developed rashes on November 12.

“He was initially admitted to a private hospital and transferre­d to Kasturba Hospital on November 13. The child was not vaccinated for measles,” said a BMC health official. The boy was put on a ventilator on November 21 after he developed respirator­y failure, the official added. “His condition worsened and he succumbed to the infection on November 22,” said the official.

While 11 deaths this year have been linked to the disease in the city, the BMC has confirmed 10 so far. On Tuesday, the civic body found twelve new cases.

So far this year, Mumbai has reported 3,378 suspected measles cases, of which 220 have been confirmed by laboratori­es. A total of 114 children are admitted in eight hospitals.

“Two children are on a ventilator and five are in the ICU but not on a ventilator. We have 28 children on oxygen beds. All cases of fever with rash are administer­ed 2 doses of Vit-a, 2nd dose after 24 hours,” said the official.

The state’s public health minister, Tanaji Sawant, said on Tuesday that health systems are succeeding in controllin­g measles infections.

Health experts hit out at the administra­tion for the delay in combating infections.

“The cases were rising from September. It is a failure on the part of our public health department that we did not anticipate and strengthen the surveillan­ce then like we did now. With the kind of public health machinery in place in Mumbai right now for measles, cases will get in control. But, for that, we lost a few lives to recognise the magnitude of the problem,” said Dr Subhash Salunkhe, epidemiolo­gist and former director general of health services. “Do we require such outbreaks to learn lessons,” he added.

In 2018, the BMC had carried out a massive measles vaccinatio­n campaign after 31 cases were reported.

Dr Amin Kaba, a paediatric­ian who was part of the campaign, said the idea was to break the chain of transmissi­on and achieve eliminatio­n of measles and rubella through the campaign.

“It got washed out with the pandemic. Many children from these areas were not vaccinated making them vulnerable. We managed to bring down measles cases with the campaign,” he said. Dr Kaba added that the number of deaths also depends on when the child reached the hospital, immunity level, vaccinatio­n status.

Dr Nitin Shah, a paediatric­ian and PD Hinduja Hospital said measles are known to be severe in young babies who are not innoculate­d. “The deaths are not surprising. It was because of the severity that measles vaccine was included in public health in India in 1980s,” he said.

Dr Sanjeev Kumar, additional municipal commission­er, BMC, blamed the pandemic for the large unvaccinat­ed population in the slum pockets. “We did the survey in October and that’s when we found out the number of unvaccinat­ed children. It is because of pandemic that this situation happened.”

 ?? HT PHOTO ?? The BMC has increased the vaccinatio­n drive.
HT PHOTO The BMC has increased the vaccinatio­n drive.

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