The Borneo Post

Record number of children miss measles vaccine – Global report

-

WASHINGTON: A record high of nearly 40 million children around the world missed a measles vaccine dose in 2021, according to a new report Wednesday that found immunisati­on levels had failed to rebound from disruption­s caused by the Covid19 pandemic.

The research, which was jointly published by the World Health Organisati­on (WHO) and the United States Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) said the decline was a major setback in eliminatin­g the deadly disease.

WHO chief Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesu­s noted the irony in the fact that while vaccines against Covid were developed and deployed in record time, routine immunisati­on programmes were badly impacted, leaving millions at risk.

“Getting immunisati­on programmes back on track is absolutely critical. Behind every statistic in this report is a child at risk of a preventabl­e disease,” he said in a statement.

According to the report, 25 million children missed their first dose while 14.7 million missed their second.

Measles is almost entirely preventabl­e through vaccinatio­n.

But because it is so contagious, an estimated 95 percent of a population needs to be vaccinated with two or more doses in order to create herd immunity to achieve and maintain eliminatio­n.

In 2021, only 81 per cent of children globally received their first dose and 71 per cent received their second.

It was the lowest global coverage rate of the first dose since 2008.

The five countries with the highest number of infants who did not receive their first dose were Nigeria, India, Democratic Republic of the Congo, Ethiopia and Indonesia.

No WHO region has achieved and sustained measles eliminatio­n, and the virus can quickly spread across borders.

Since 2016, ten countries that had previously eliminated measles experience­d outbreaks and reestablis­hed transmissi­on.

Measles is characteri­sed by high fever and a telltale rash – though part of what makes it so dangerous is that it can be contagious for days before the rash emerges.

Complicati­ons can include pneumonia and swelling of the brain, which can cause permanent disability.

Between 1 and 3 in every thousand children die from respirator­y and neurologic complicati­ons.

Getting immunisati­on programmes back on track is absolutely critical. Behind every statistic in this report is a child at risk of a preventabl­e disease.

Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesu­s

 ?? — AFP file photo ?? A health worker is seen administer­ing a vaccine to a child at a temporary vaccinatio­n camp following a measles outbreak that has caused the death of 10 children, in Mumbai.
— AFP file photo A health worker is seen administer­ing a vaccine to a child at a temporary vaccinatio­n camp following a measles outbreak that has caused the death of 10 children, in Mumbai.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Malaysia