| Literature DB >> 21942984 |
Rebecca F Grais1, Peter Strebel, Peter Mala, John Watson, Robin Nandy, Michelle Gayer.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The health needs of children and adolescents in humanitarian emergencies are critical to the success of relief efforts and reduction in mortality. Measles has been one of the major causes of child deaths in humanitarian emergencies and further contributes to mortality by exacerbating malnutrition and vitamin A deficiency. Here, we review measles vaccination activities in humanitarian emergencies as documented in published literature. Our main interest was to review the available evidence focusing on the target age range for mass vaccination campaigns either in response to a humanitarian emergency or in response to an outbreak of measles in a humanitarian context to determine whether the current guidance required revision based on recent experience.Entities:
Year: 2011 PMID: 21942984 PMCID: PMC3195113 DOI: 10.1186/1752-1505-5-21
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Confl Health ISSN: 1752-1505 Impact factor: 2.723
Epidemiological Characteristics of Reviewed Outbreaks
| Region/ | Flash/CAP/Years | Dates of Outbreak | Scope of outbreak (size) | Reported | Age of | Incidence per 100,000 | Vaccination Coverage of Population | Vaccination Status of Cases |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Bolivia [ | 2004, 2007, 2008 | 1998-2000 | Nationwide | 2567 | 55% < 5 y | 32 | 1995-1997 < 90% | N/A |
| Haiti [ | 2003, 2005, 2007, 2008, 2010 | 3/00-9/01 | Nationwide | 1149 | N/A | 14.1 | 1995-1999: | N/A |
| Colombia [ | 2003 | 1-7/02 | 10/33 departments | 68 | 65% 1-4 y | 5.5 | 80% < 1 y (2000) | N/A |
| Colombia [ | 2-3/02 | 3 departments (subset of Colombia o/b above) | 9 | 55% < 5 y | N/A | 66-127% in affected municipalities | N/A | |
| Afghanistan [ | 1999-2003 | 2001 | Nationwide | 8762 | 62% 0-4 y | N/A | 62-90% | N/A |
| Afghanistan [ | 2000 | 7 of 30 provinces | thousands | N/A | N/A | N/A | ||
| Afghanistan [ | 2001 | Nationwide (362 sentinel sites, 12.5 million 6 m-12 y) | 8762 | 62% 0-4 y | 70 (for 6 m - 12 y) | 40-47% | N/A | |
| India [ | 2005 (Indian Ocean) | Aug 08 to Mar 09 | Rural | 1811 | N/A | N/A | N/A | N/A |
| India [ | 2005 (Indian Ocean) | Dec 04-Jan 05 | Coastal area (87284 - 8803 < 5 y) | 30 in non-affected villages | (non-affected) | 1.7 in non-affected | Estimated: 95% | 3% |
| Sri Lanka [ | 2002, 2003, 2006-2008 | 10/99 - 6/00 | Nationwide | 15250 suspected | 15% < 5 y | 24 | 90% | 40% |
| Laos [ | 2009 | 3/1999 - 3/2000 | Nationwide (5 million); 4 villages subset (2871) | 2634 nationally, 185 in 4 villages | 57% > 5 y | 53 (nationally) | 68% on avg in previous 4 y | 35% |
| Niger [ | 2005 | 2003 Nationally, 1/1 - 15/4 in Mirriah District | Nationwide (12.5 million); Mirrah district (677,885) | 50138 Nationally, 8817 Mirriah district | 75% < 5 y | 400 Nationwide | 25-91% in past decade | 12.3% |
| Kenya [ | 2001, 2006, 2008 | 7-11/1998 | 2 hospitals | 1000 | 75% > 4 y | N/A | 70-93% | 39% |
| Tanzania [ | 1999-2001 Refugees from Burundi | 3-5/2001 | 4 refugee camps in Kibondo District (170500) | 1062 | 21% < 9 m | 623 | 95% | 82% 9 m-5 y |
| Ethiopia [ | 2000-3, 2006-7 | 1-7/2000 | Gode District, Ethiopia | N/A | N/A | N/A | 57% (in 9-36 m) | 3% (9-36 m) |
| Mozambique | 2000, 2001, 2003, 2007 | Multiple 1998-2001 | Nationwide (16 million) | Not clear, about 35-40,000 | Varied greatly | N/A | 67-100% | N/A |
| Niger [ | 2005 | 2003-2004 | Niamey (surveyed = 26795) | 1024 | 82% < 5 y | N/A | 70.9% | 37.3% |
| Chad [ | 2004-2010 | 2004-2005 | Ndjamena(surveyed = 21812) | 745 | 70% < 5 y | N/A | 33% | 70% |
| South Africa [ | 2003, 2008 | July 03-may 05 | Johannesburg and rural (Oliver Tambo District) | 349 in J'burg | J'burg: | N/A | J'burg: Adm Cov 102% | J'burg: 47.4% |
| Tanzania [ | 1999, 2001 | July 06-Jan 07 | Dar-Es-Salaam (2.5 M - 880000 < 14 y) | 1533 | Before response: | 29.3 | 84% | N/A |
| Sudan [ | 1998-2008 | Mar to Jun 04 | Darfur Region 2607082 | 3 o/b: | 58% < 5 y | N/A | N/A | N/A |
| Albania [ | 1999 | 04/99-06/99 | 442000 refugees from Kosovo | 80 | 43% > = 15 y | N/A | unknown | |
*Abbreviations contained in the body of the table: N/A = not available, o/b = outbreak, w = week, m = month and y = year VE = reported vaccine effectiveness
Mass vaccination response details *
| Region/ | Time to response** | Target Area | Target Age | Doses/ | Author's Reported Impact | Documented Impact (authors' assessment) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Bolivia | MV1: 1998 4 m after 1st case | Nonselective | 6 m -5 y | 85% | Persistent cases | Epidemic ended after multiple immunization activities |
| MV2: 1999 | house-to-house Nationwide | 6 m - 4 y + 6 m - 14 y in 2 dpts | 98% | Persistent cases but decreased over time | ||
| MV3: 2000 | House-to-house | N/A | N/A | N/A | ||
| MV4: 2002 | House to house | 6 m - 4 y | 95% | Transmission stopped | ||
| Haiti | MV1: < 4 w after 1st case | Nonselective | 6 m - 14 y | 95% | No cases in city within 2 w of end of campaign; spread to rest of island | Epidemic ended after multiple immunization activities |
| MV2: N/A | Departments | 6 m - 14 y | 65 - 95% | No cases after early August in department | ||
| MV3: 5-9/00 | Port-au-Prince | 6 m - 14 y | 82% | |||
| MV4: 11/00-1/01 | Port-au-Prince neighborhood | 6 m - 14 y | 80 - 90% | Reduced number of | ||
| MV5: 9-12/01 | Nationwide | N/A | > 85% | Measles transmission interrupted | ||
| Colombia | Various | door to door vaccination in high risk municipalities | 6 m-5 y | N/A | N/A but editorial suggests proactive response averted large outbreak | Compared to outbreak in neighboring Venezuela, prompt, door to door targeted vaccination and surveillance may have prevented a large outbreak in a country where EPI is limited by long term conflict |
| Afghanistan | 12/2001-5/2002 | Nonselective, Central region districts and returning refugees in catchment area. Revaccination in districts with low coverage | 6 m-12 y | 77% (62-90%) by May 2002 | Impact on incidence not assessed. | Unable to assess impact from data provided, but from WHO records measles incidence decreased dramatically for next 2 years. |
| India | Soon after flood began | Flood area, areas of congregation then cut-off villages | 6 m to 14 y | 75% | Qualitative analysis on the vaccination in multiple stages. Initial one prevented large scale measles o/b and death, later stages contained smaller o/b and high mortality was prevented with a joint surveillance system | Insufficient data |
| India | Dec 29, 04 to Jan 9, 05 | Non-selective, 58 villages in Namil-Tadu district, Eastern India | 6 m to 60 m | 117.2% | Qualitative analysis transmission continued despite vaccine coverage and was unrelated to tsunami. Target age was too restrictive, recommendation to vaccinate children up to 14 years during complex emergencies like tsunami. | Insufficient data |
| Sri Lanka | N/A | Nonselective | Children " < 10 y" | N/A | N/A | Not clear |
| Niger | Outreach services in some health centers | N/A | N/A | N/A | Impact not specified but authors discuss the need to include older than 5 y children in vaccination campaigns due to high CFR in this group. | Insufficient information to determine impact |
| Tanzania | Epidemic started in March, ORI were in April, June and August in 3 camps | Nonselective, refugee camps. | ORI: | N/A | 6 m-5 y campaign prevented cases and deaths, but to halt transmission, campaigns targeting a wider age group would have been more effective | May have influenced epidemic. given large proportion of cases in older age groups, vaccinating up to age 15 early in the epidemic would have likely shortened the duration of the outbreaks. |
| Ethiopia | Within 1 month | Nonselective | 9 m -5 y | Despite ORI in February measles cases continued to be reported in the district including among vaccinated. Recommend extending vaccinated age group to 12-15 y in acute emergencies. Epidemic was not halted until August when a vaccination campaign with grater coverage and efficacy implemented | The authors calculate low coverage and poor efficacy of vaccine in February campaign. These alone could have allowed outbreak to continue, but including a wider age range for vaccination may have been useful in containing the outbreak. No age breakdown of cases available. | |
| Mozambique | Varied reactive SIAs | Nonselective, targeted urban | 9 m-4 y | Measles campaigns had limited impact. Recommend increasing target age group and including rural areas linked to cities via transport routes. | Campaigns may have had some impact, as noted by reduced caseload in subsequent years. Targeting a wider age group in catch up and outbreak campaigns could have had greater impact. | |
| Niger | Wk 24 after o/b | LQAS selection, 46 lots of 65 children | 6 m - 5 y | Other SIAs after the survey: 99% | SIA are a first response to reinforcement of routine immunization activities (children under 5) | CFR = 3.3% (global o/b) |
| Nigeria | Wk 18 after o/b | Non-selective | 6 m - 5 y | Other SIAs after the survey: 80% | same | |
| Chad | Wk 22 after o/b | Non-selective | 6 m - 5 y | Other SIAs after the survey: 96% | same | |
| South Africa | Jan 04 | Non-selective | 6 m to 14 y | Catch-up: 86% | Importance of maintaining high immunity by means of routine immunization to prevent transmission following importation of the virus | N/A |
| Tanzania | 11 wks after o/b | Non-selective | 6 m to 14 y | 882789 doses given | Measles incidence declined in the targeted age group | Incidence would have been high in the target group without intervention |
| Sudan | 06/05/04 | North Darfur only | 9 m - 15 y | 93% of the accessible pop | The restricted access to population and the low coverage explains that measles cases still occurred after the vaccination campaign. | North Darfur: CFR = 17% |
| Albania | 2 wks after o/b | Only two districts (Kukes and Has) | 6 m - 5 y | 90% | Surveillance system allowed for early epidemic detection | N/A |
* Abbreviations contained in the body of the table: N/A = not available, d = day, w = week, m = month, y = year, o/b = outbreak, popn = population. For references of reports, see Table 1.
** In some cases, multiple rounds of vaccination were conducted. In this table, each round is designated by a number (ex, MV1).
†Selective indicates that only children without evidence of vaccination were targeted; nonselective indicates that all children regardless of vaccination status were targeted
Figure 1Proportion of measles cases by age group in reports including these data from 15 countries, 1998-2010.