| Literature DB >> 29073125 |
Alya Dabbagh, Minal K Patel, Laure Dumolard, Marta Gacic-Dobo, Mick N Mulders, Jean-Marie Okwo-Bele, Katrina Kretsinger, Mark J Papania, Paul A Rota, James L Goodson.
Abstract
The fourth United Nations Millennium Development Goal, adopted in 2000, set a target to reduce child mortality by two thirds by 2015. One indicator of progress toward this target was measles vaccination coverage (1). In 2010, the World Health Assembly (WHA) set three milestones for measles control by 2015: 1) increase routine coverage with the first dose of a measles-containing vaccine (MCV1) among children aged 1 year to ≥90% at the national level and to ≥80% in every district; 2) reduce global annual measles incidence to <5 cases per million population; and 3) reduce global measles mortality by 95% from the 2000 estimate (2).* In 2012, WHA endorsed the Global Vaccine Action Plan,† with the objective of eliminating measles in four World Health Organization (WHO) regions by 2015 and in five regions by 2020. Countries in all six WHO regions have adopted goals for measles elimination by or before 2020. Measles elimination is defined as the absence of endemic measles virus transmission in a region or other defined geographic area for ≥12 months, in the presence of a high quality surveillance system that meets targets of key performance indicators. This report updates a previous report (3) and describes progress toward global measles control milestones and regional measles elimination goals during 2000-2016. During this period, annual reported measles incidence decreased 87%, from 145 to 19 cases per million persons, and annual estimated measles deaths decreased 84%, from 550,100 to 89,780; measles vaccination prevented an estimated 20.4 million deaths. However, the 2015 milestones have not yet been met; only one WHO region has been verified as having eliminated measles. Improved implementation of elimination strategies by countries and their partners is needed, with focus on increasing vaccination coverage through substantial and sustained additional investments in health systems, strengthening surveillance systems, using surveillance data to drive programmatic actions, securing political commitment, and raising the visibility of measles elimination goals.Entities:
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Year: 2017 PMID: 29073125 PMCID: PMC5689104 DOI: 10.15585/mmwr.mm6642a6
Source DB: PubMed Journal: MMWR Morb Mortal Wkly Rep ISSN: 0149-2195 Impact factor: 17.586
Estimates of coverage with the first and second doses of measles-containing vaccine administered through routine immunization services, reported measles cases and incidence, and estimated measles deaths,* by World Health Organization (WHO) region — worldwide, 2000 and 2016
| WHO region (no. countries in region)/Year | % Coverage with MCV1† | % Countries with ≥90% MCV1 coverage | % Coverage with MCV2† | % Countries with incidence <5/million | No. reported measles cases§ | Measles incidence§,¶ | Estimated no. of measles deaths (95% CI) | % Estimated mortality reduction, 2000–2016 |
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| 2000 | 53 | 9 | 5 | 8 | 520,102 | 835 | 340,800 (232,000–554,000) | 89 |
| 2016 | 72 | 36 | 24 | 51 | 36,269 | 36 | 37,500 (11,900–124,200) | |
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| 2000 | 93 | 63 | 43 | 89 | 1,754 | 2.1 | NA |
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| 2016 | 92 | 74 | 54 | 100 | 12 | 0.02 | NA | |
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| 2000 | 72 | 57 | 29 | 17 | 38,592 | 90 | 55,300 (35,000–87,700) | 79 |
| 2016 | 77 | 57 | 69 | 47 | 6,264 | 10 | 11,400 (5,700–28,300) | |
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| 2000 | 91 | 60 | 48 | 45 | 37,421 | 50 | 400 (130–2,000) | 80 |
| 2016 | 93 | 83 | 88 | 85 | 4,175 | 5 | 80 (0–1,400) | |
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| 2000 | 63 | 30 | 3 | 0 | 78,558 | 51 | 143,000 (101,500–199,900) | 73 |
| 2016 | 87 | 64 | 75 | 27 | 27,530 | 14 | 39,000 (27,600–69,700) | |
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| 2000 | 85 | 48 | 2 | 30 | 177,052 | 105 | 10,600 (5,200–52,400) | 83 |
| 2016 | 96 | 63 | 93 | 67 | 57,879 | 31 | 1,800 (500–46,000) |
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| 2000 | 72 | 44 | 15 | 38 | 853,479 | 145 | 550,100 (374,000–896,500) | 84 |
| 2016 | 85 | 63 | 64 | 69 | 132,137 | 19 | 89,780 (45,700–269,600) | |
Abbreviations: CI = confidence interval; MCV1 = first dose of measles-containing vaccine; MCV2 = second dose of measles-containing vaccine; NA = not applicable; UNICEF = United Nations Children’s Fund.
* Mortality estimates for 2000 might be different from previous reports. When the model used to generate estimated measles deaths is rerun each year using the new WHO/UNICEF Estimates of National Immunization Coverage data, as well as updated surveillance data, adjusted results for each year, including the baseline year, are also produced and updated.
† Coverage data: WHO/UNICEF Estimates of National Immunization Coverage, July 15, 2017 update. http://www.who.int/immunization/monitoring_surveillance/data/en.
§ Reported case data: measles cases (2016) from World Health Organization, as of July 15, 2017 (http://apps.who.int/immunization_monitoring/globalsummary/timeseries/tsincidencemeasles.html). Reported cases are a sizeable underestimate of the actual number of cases, accounting for the inconsistency between reported cases and estimated deaths.
¶ Cases per 1 million population; population data from United Nations, Department of Economic and Social Affairs, Population Division, 2016. Any country not reporting data on measles cases for that year was removed from both the numerator and denominator.
Measles supplementary immunization activities (SIAs)* and the delivery of other child health interventions, by World Health Organization (WHO) region and country — worldwide, 2016
| WHO region/country | Age group targeted | Extent of SIA | No. children reached in targeted age group (%)† | % coverage based on survey results | Other interventions delivered |
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| Botswana | 9 mos–14 yrs | N | 674,150 (95) | 97 | Rubella vaccine |
| Burundi (2015–2016)§ | 18–23 mos | N | 30,443 (22) | — | — |
| Central African Republic (2015–2016)§ | 6 mos–10 yrs | N | 1,529,441 (84) | — | Vitamin A, deworming |
| Chad | 9–59 mos | N | 2,756,733 (110) | — | — |
| Comoros | 9–59 mos | SN | 83,371 (76) | — | Vitamin A, deworming |
| Democratic Republic of the Congo | 6–59 mos | N | 10,921,820 (100) | — | — |
| Equatorial Guinea | 6–59 mos | N | 127,874 (85) | — | — |
| Ethiopia | 6 mos–15 yrs | SN | 24,986,589 (97) | 94 | — |
| Gambia | 9 mos–14 yrs | N | 779,654 (97) | 97 | Rubella vaccine, vitamin A, deworming |
| Guinea | 9–59 mos | N | 2,412,923 (103) | — | Vitamin A, deworming |
| Kenya | 9 mos–14 yrs | N | 19,154,577 (101) | 95 | Rubella vaccine |
| Madagascar | 9–59 mos | N | 3,547,466 (96) | — | Vitamin A, deworming |
| Namibia | 9 mos–39 yrs | N | 1,908,193 (103) | — | Rubella vaccine |
| Nigeria | 9–59 mos | N | 19,065,787 (131) | 84 | — |
| Sao Tome and Principe | 9 mos–14 yrs | N | 77,285 (107) | — | Rubella vaccine |
| Swaziland | 9 mos–14 yrs | N | 373,508 (90) | 94 | Rubella vaccine, vitamin A, deworming |
| Zambia | 9 mos–14 yrs | N | 7,741,505 (108) | — | Rubella vaccine |
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| Haiti | 9–59 mos | N | 1,420,220 (100) | — | Rubella vaccine, OPV, IPV, vitamin A |
| Honduras | 1–4 yrs | N | 735,066 (96) | — | Mumps and rubella vaccine |
| Mexico | 1–4 yrs | N | 8,229,851 (94) | — | Mumps and rubella vaccine |
| Nicaragua | 1–4 yrs | N | 568,422 (105) | — | Mumps and rubella vaccine |
| Peru | 2–5 yrs | N | 1,662,728 (78) | — | Rubella vaccine |
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| Egypt | 11–20 yrs | SN | 642,178 (94) | — | Rubella vaccine |
| Egypt | 6–7 yrs (1st grade) | SN | 258,464 (102) | — | Rubella vaccine |
| Qatar | 1–13 yrs | N | 166,145 (87) | — | Mumps and rubella vaccine |
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| Bangladesh | 9–59 mos | SN | 100,863 (101) | — | Rubella vaccine |
| Indonesia | 9–59 mos | SN | 3,638,183 (86) | — |
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| Nepal | 9–59 mos | N | 2,528,539 (101) | — | Rubella vaccine |
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| Malaysia | 6 m–17 yrs | SN | 139,382 (85) | — | Rubella vaccine |
| Malaysia | 1–17 yrs | SN | 572 (99) | — | Rubella vaccine |
| Mongolia | 18–30 yrs | N | 549,846 (88) | — | Rubella vaccine |
| Papua New Guinea | 9 mos–15 yrs | SN | 436,854 (63) | — | Rubella vaccine |
| Vietnam | 16–17 yrs | N | 1,787,588 (95) | — | Rubella vaccine |
Abbreviations: IPV = inactivated polio vaccine; N = National; OPV = oral polio vaccine; SIA = supplementary immunization activity; SN = subnational.
* SIAs generally are carried out using two approaches: 1) An initial, nationwide catch-up SIA targets all children aged 9 months to 14 years; it has the goal of eliminating susceptibility to measles in the general population. Periodic follow-up SIAs then target all children born since the last SIA. 2) Follow-up SIAs are generally conducted nationwide every 2–4 years and target children aged 9–59 months; their goal is to eliminate any measles susceptibility that has developed in recent birth cohorts and to protect children who did not respond to the first measles vaccination. The exact age range for follow-up SIAs depends on the age-specific incidence of measles, coverage with 1 dose of measles-containing vaccine, and the time since the last SIA.
† Values >100% indicate that the intervention reached more persons than the estimated target population.
§ Rollover national campaigns started the previous year or will continue into the next year.
FIGUREEstimated annual number of measles deaths with and without vaccination programs — worldwide, 2000–2016*
Abbreviation: CL = confidence limit.
* Deaths prevented by vaccination is indicated by the shaded area between estimated deaths with vaccination and those without vaccination (cumulative total of 20.4 million deaths prevented during 2000–2016).