WHO Reports 88% Surge in Global Measles Cases


WHO Reports 88% Surge in Global Measles Cases

According to a World Health Organization (WHO) report, global measles cases surged by 88% in 2023 compared to 2022.

From 171,153 measles cases in 2022, it nearly doubled to 3,21,582 in 2023, said Patrick O’Connor of the WHO, who presented the research at the ongoing ESCMID Global Congress in Barcelona. () The report blamed the lack of vaccinations during the Covid-19 pandemic behind the significant increases in measles worldwide.

Progress Towards Measles and Rubella Elimination

“Over the last decade there has been significant progress towards measles and rubella elimination — the Regional Verification Commissions for Measles and Rubella Elimination (RVCs) from all of the WHO Regions will review all national measles and rubella 2023 reports in 2024,” O’Connor said.

“The measles virus is extremely infectious and any gaps in immunization coverage are potential risks for the outbreak. So, coverage needs to be high but also uniform and equitable,” he added.

While 45 percent of these cases have been in the WHO European Region, Yemen, Azerbaijan, and Kyrgyzstan are the countries with the highest reported measles incidence in the world, the report said.

“Worryingly, the number of countries suffering large or disruptive measles outbreaks (defined as 20 cases/million population continuously over a 12-month period) has tripled from 17 to 51,” the report said. Meanwhile, the report showed that vaccination against measles averted an estimated 57 million deaths globally from 2000 to 2022. Of these, 1.5 million are in the European region where there has been a 98 percent reduction in annual measles deaths from 3,584 in 2000 to 70 in 2022.”

“Over the last 20 years, there has been significant progress toward achieving measles and rubella elimination — in order to solidify and maintain those gains, we need to ensure high, uniform and equitable routine immunization coverage; and robust outreach and rapid outbreak response,” O’Connor said.

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Reference:

  1. Global measles cases almost double in a year – (https://www.escmid.org/fileadmin/escmid/media/pdf/press_releases/2024/2024-q2/Press_release_measlesrevisedfinal_20240428.pdf)

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