| Literature DB >> 33082133 |
Antso Raherindrasana1,2, C Jessica Metcalf3,4, Jean-Michel Heraud5, Simon Cauchemez6, Amy Winter7, Amy Wesolowski7, Richter Razafindratsimandresy5, Lea Randriamampionona1, S A Rafalimanantsoa1, Yolande Masembe8, Charlotte Ndiaye8, Julio Rakotonirina1,2.
Abstract
Entities:
Keywords: measles
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 33082133 PMCID: PMC7577030 DOI: 10.1136/bmjgh-2020-003153
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMJ Glob Health ISSN: 2059-7908
Figure 1Historical context of measles in Madagascar and the recent outbreak (A) measles first dose vaccination coverage estimates from UNICEF (y-axis, top) and measles incidence from who (y-axis, log scale, bottom) from 1980 to 2018 (x-axis), showing a sharp decline in cases in 2005 with 10 or less cases in each years following 2005 until the start of the focal outbreak in 2018 when more than 21 000 cases reported; (B) time series of suspected cases (y-axis) against time (indicated epidemic week starting in 2018, thin vertical line shows the separation between 2018 and 2019) from the 2018 to 2019 line-list data in each of the 22 regions, coloured by the timing of the peaks (orange is earliest, grey intermediate, and brown latest); dashed vertical lines indicate the approximate timing of the three waves of vaccination (different districts were targeted in each wave, see text); inset shows the regions of Madagascar coloured as for the time series (orange is the earliest peaks, grey intermediate and brown the latest).
Figure 2Outbreak characteristics. (A) Measles vaccination coverage at 5 years in each of the 22 regions estimated from Madagascar’s 2009 Demographic and Health Survey (x-axis) plotted against (A) the median age distribution of cases (y-axis) and (B) the RE of the outbreak in each region (y-axis). On both plots, regions with higher rE are shaded from blue to red; and these are also shown in the MAP, to indicate fastest early growth of the outbreak in central/norther regions. Two regions (Androy and Atsimo Andrefana) have high rE despite low vaccination coverage (red points to the left of B). Regional connectivity might be sufficiently low in these remote locations that even at low vaccination coverage, local extinction occurs, allowing susceptible build-up, or vaccination coverage in 2009 might provide a poor proxy for changes over the intervening decade.