| Literature DB >> 29296146 |
Robert Davis1, William Baguma Mbabazi2.
Abstract
The case for global eradication of measles was first made in 1982. Since then, technical aspects of measles eradication have concluded that measles satisfied all criteria required for eradication. To date, only smallpox, among human diseases, has been eradicated, with polio, the next eradication candidate. In all previous eradication programmes, the pattern of slow implementation and missed deadlines is similar. Lessons from these past eradication programs should inform development of a time-limited measles eradication program. Notably, no measles eradication resolution is likely until member states are satisfied that polio eradication is accomplished. However, there is an impetus for measles eradication from the western hemisphere, where governments continue to pay the high costs of keeping their region measles free until global measles eradication is achieved. While previous vaccine preventable diseases eradications have depended on supplemental immunizations (SIAs), measles eradication will have to build both on SIAs and routine immunization systems strengthening. This article reviews non-technical considerations that could facilitate the delivery of a time-limited measles eradication initiative. The issues discussed are categorized as a) specificities of measles disease; b) specifics of measles vaccine/vaccination; c) special considerations for endemic countries and d) organization of international partnerships. The disease and vaccine specific issues are not insurmountable. The introduction of routine measles second dose, in the context of EPI systems strengthening, is paramount to endemic developing countries. In the international partnerships, it should be noted that i) Measles eradication will be easier and cheaper; ii) the return on investment is compelling; iii) leverage is feasible on the experiences of the Measles/Rubella initiative; iv) two disease eradication targets in one initiative are feasible and v) for the first time, an eradication investment case will inform the decisions. However, if previous eradication efforts have been marathons, measles eradication will need to be a sprint.Entities:
Keywords: Global measles eradication; Uganda; timing
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2017 PMID: 29296146 PMCID: PMC5745928 DOI: 10.11604/pamj.supp.2017.27.3.12553
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Pan Afr Med J
Vaccine preventable diseases targeted for global eradication by the WHA
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|
| |
|---|---|---|
| Malaria | 1955 | Not eradicated; WHA resolution of 1969 refers. |
| Smallpox | 1959 | Eradicated; last naturally occurring case, 1977 |
| Polio | 1988 | Three countries remain endemic for wild poliovirus |
Differences between Smallpox, polio and measles eradication programs
| Smallpox | Polio | Measles | |
|---|---|---|---|
|
| |||
| Etiologic agent | Virus | Virus | Virus |
| Nonhuman reservoir | No | No | No |
| Effective intervention tool | Smallpox vaccine | Oral vaccine | Injectable vaccine |
| Simple/practical diagnostic | Clinical diagnosis, confirmed by microscopy (If needed) | Stool culture | IgM |
| Sensitive surveillance | Facility and community based | Facility-based | Facility based |
| Field-proven strategies | Americas, West Africa | Americas | Americas |
|
| |||
| Cases averted per year | >100,000 | 350,000 | >100,000,000 |
| Coincident benefits | Creation of Expanded Programme on Immunization | Improved immunization and bio-surveillance | Improved routine immunization and surveillance |
| Intangible benefits | Culture of prevention and social equity | Culture of prevention and social equity | Culture of prevention and social equity |
| Estimated annual direct global savings | >$100 million per year; averted | US$1.5 billion | >US$2 billion |
| Estimated total external financing | c. $100-125 million | US$2.0-2.5 billion (as of 2000) | $7.8 billion [ |
|
| |||
| Political commitment (endemic/industrial countries) | Variable/strong | Variable/strong | Variable |
| Social support (endemic/industrial countries) | Variable/strong | Variable/strong | Variable |
| Core partnerships and advocates | WHO, CDC | WHO, Rotary, CDC, UNICEF | WHO, CDC, UNICEF, American Red Cross, UN Foundation |
| Technical consensus | WHA resolutions | World Health Assembly | Regional resolutions |
Note: The first and third columns are reproduced from R. B. Aylward et al., “When is a Disease Eradicable? 100 Years of Lessons Learned”. The second and fourth columns have been added for this article.