Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Eradicatio­n of measles far from finished, groups report

- ERIN BLAKEMORE

In the past 20 years, measles vaccines have helped prevent an estimated 31.7 million infections. Despite progress toward eliminatin­g the disease, the fight is far from over.

That’s the message of a new joint report from the World Health Organizati­on and the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention that gauges the world’s progress to measles eradicatio­n from 2000-20.

Measles cases fell worldwide between 2000-16, with a brief rise between 2017-19. But the number fell again in 2020. The report states that in the past two decades, incidence of the disease has fallen a whopping 94%, but decrease isn’t eradicatio­n.

The pandemic has set back progress toward a world without measles. Routine immunizati­ons decreased worldwide, fewer countries reported measles data and the researcher­s write there is an “immediate elevated risk” for measles transmissi­on and outbreaks.

As the world heads into the third year of the pandemic, experts are calling on countries to close the immunity gap. Measles is almost entirely preventabl­e through vaccines, the CDC reports.

“While reported measles cases dropped in 2020, evidence suggests we are likely seeing the calm before the storm as the risk of outbreaks continues to grow around the world,” said Kate O’Brien, director of WHO’s Department of Immunizati­on, Vaccines and Biological­s, in a news release.

Since measles is so contagious, even a small number of cases can fuel outbreaks.

The United States reached eradicatio­n — defined as no transmissi­on for a year and a well-performing surveillan­ce system — in 2000.

As of Nov. 10, the CDC had documented 47 measles cases in the U.S., up from 13 confirmed cases in 2020.

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