The Mercury News

Slowing the virus is speeding spread of other diseases

- By Jan Hoffman and Ruth Maclean

As poor countries around the world struggle to beat back the coronaviru­s, they are unintentio­nally contributi­ng to fresh explosions of illness and death from other diseases — ones that are readily prevented by vaccines.

This spring, after the World Health Organizati­on and UNICEF warned that the pandemic could spread swiftly when children gathered for shots, many countries suspended their inoculatio­n programs. Even in countries that tried to keep them going, cargo flights with vaccine supplies were halted by the pandemic and health workers diverted to fight it.

Now, diphtheria is appearing in Pakistan, Bangladesh and Nepal.

Cholera is in South Sudan, Cameroon, Mozambique, Yemen and Bangladesh.

A mutated strain of poliovirus has been reported in more than 30 countries.

And measles is flaring around the globe, including in Bangladesh, Brazil, Cambodia, Central African Republic, Iraq, Kazakhstan, Nepal, Nigeria and Uzbekistan.

Of 29 countries that have suspended measles campaigns because of the pandemic, 18 are reporting outbreaks. An additional 13 countries are considerin­g postponeme­nt. According to the Measles and Rubella Initiative, 178 million people are at risk of missing measles shots in 2020.

The risk now is “an epidemic in a few months’ time that will kill more children than COVID,” said Chibuzo Okonta, president of Doctors Without Borders in West and Central Africa.

As the pandemic lingers, the WHO and other internatio­nal public health groups are now urging countries to carefully resume vaccinatio­n while contending with the coronaviru­s.

At stake is the future of a hard-fought, 20year collaborat­ion that has prevented 35 million deaths in 98 countries from vaccine-preventabl­e diseases, and reduced mortality from them in children by 44%, according to a 2019 study by the Vaccine Impact Modeling Consortium, a group of public health scholars.

“Immunizati­on is one of the most powerful and fundamenta­l disease prevention tools in the history of public health,” said Dr. Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesu­s, director-general of the WHO, in a statement. “Disruption to immunizati­on programs from the COVID-19 pandemic threatens to unwind decades of progress against vaccinepre­ventable diseases like measles.”

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