‘Global measles cases up 300% year-on-year’
Measles cases rose 300% worldwide through the first three months of 2019 compared to the same period last year, the UN said yesterday, as concern grows over the impact of anti-vaccination stigma.
Measles, which is highly contagious, can be entirely prevented through a two-dose vaccine, but the World Health Organisation (WHO) has in recent months sounded the alarm over slipping vaccination rates.
“Preliminary global data shows that reported cases rose by 300% in the first three
months of 2019, compared to the same period in 2018. This follows consecutive increases over the past two years,” it said in a statement.
“While this data is provisional and not yet complete, it indicates a clear trend. Many countries are in the midst of sizeable measles outbreaks, with all regions of the world experiencing sustained rises in cases,” it added.
The agency noted that only about one in 10 actual measles cases are reported, meaning the early trends for 2019 likely underestimate the severity of the outbreaks.
So far this year, 170 countries have reported 112,163 measles cases to the WHO.
At this time last year, 163 countries had reported 28,124 cases.
Measles – an airborne infection causing fever, coughing and rashes that can be deadly in rare cases – had been officially eliminated in many countries with advanced healthcare systems.
But the so-called anti-vax movement – driven by fraudulent claims linking the MMR vaccine against measles, mumps and rubella, and a risk of autism in children – has gained traction.
Repeated studies – the most recent involving more than 650,000 children monitored for more than a decade – have shown that there is no such link.
However, according to the WHO, global coverage for the first vaccine dose has been “stalled” at 85%, while 67% of people have received the second dose.
The provisional 2019 data shows cases have spiked “in countries with high overall vaccination coverage, including the US”, the WHO warned.
“The disease has spread fast among clusters of unvaccinated people,” it added.
New York’s mayor declared a public health emergency in parts of Brooklyn last week, after a measles outbreak emerged in an ultra-Orthodox Jewish community, where some had resisted vaccination on religious grounds.
Calls have mounted in several countries to make measles vaccinations mandatory.
Australia earlier this month launched a major education campaign to encourage residents to get vaccinated.
Turning the tide against measles will require “effective public-facing communication and engagement on the critical importance of vaccination, and the dangers of the diseases they prevent”, the WHO said.
While the WHO has identified the junk science behind anti-vax propaganda as a public health threat, the data highlighted that measles still hits hardest in unstable countries with weak health systems.
The most dramatic increase in the number of cases through the early part of the year was reported in Africa, which has weaker vaccination coverage than other regions.
Africa saw a 700% increase compared to last year.
At least 800 children have died from measles since September in Madagascar, where malnutrition and a historically poor vaccine rate are driving the world’s worse current outbreak.
In conflict-scarred Yemen cases shot up more than 300% in 2018 compared to 2017.
Venezuela, where the disease was once contained, has also seen tens of thousands of cases as the country’s economic and political crises continue to push the healthcare system to the brink of collapse.