Progress Toward Measles Elimination - Worldwide, 2000-2022.

Anna A Minta, Matt Ferrari, Sebastien Antoni, Allison Portnoy, Alyssa Sbarra, Brian Lambert, Cynthia Hatcher, Christopher H Hsu, Lee Lee Ho, Claudia Steulet, Marta Gacic-Dobo, Paul A Rota, Mick N Mulders, Anindya Sekhar Bose, William Perea Caro, Patrick O'Connor, Natasha S Crowcroft
Author Information

Abstract

Measles is a highly contagious, vaccine-preventable disease that requires high population immunity for transmission to be interrupted. All six World Health Organization regions have committed to eliminating measles; however, no region has achieved and sustained measles elimination. This report describes measles elimination progress during 2000-2022. During 2000-2019, estimated coverage worldwide with the first dose of measles-containing vaccine (MCV) increased from 72% to 86%, then declined to 81% in 2021 during the COVID-19 pandemic, representing the lowest coverage since 2008. In 2022, first-dose MCV coverage increased to 83%. Only one half (72) of 144 countries reporting measles cases achieved the measles surveillance indicator target of two or more discarded cases per 100,000 population in 2022. During 2021-2022, estimated measles cases increased 18%, from 7,802,000 to 9,232,300, and the number of countries experiencing large or disruptive outbreaks increased from 22 to 37. Estimated measles deaths increased 43% during 2021-2022, from 95,000 to 136,200. Nonetheless, an estimated 57 million measles deaths were averted by vaccination during 2000-2022. In 2022, measles vaccination coverage and global surveillance showed some recovery from the COVID-19 pandemic setbacks; however, coverage declined in low-income countries, and globally, years of suboptimal immunization coverage left millions of children unprotected. Urgent reversal of coverage setbacks experienced during the COVID-19 pandemic can be accomplished by renewing efforts to vaccinate all children with 2 MCV doses and strengthening surveillance, thereby preventing outbreaks and accelerating progress toward measles elimination.

References

  1. Stat Med. 2019 Sep 20;38(21):4146-4158 [PMID: 31290184]
  2. MMWR Morb Mortal Wkly Rep. 2022 Nov 25;71(47):1489-1495 [PMID: 36417303]
  3. Lancet Glob Health. 2023 Apr;11(4):e516-e524 [PMID: 36925172]

MeSH Term

Child
Humans
Infant
Pandemics
Disease Eradication
Immunization Programs
Incidence
Measles
Measles Vaccine
Vaccination
Population Surveillance
COVID-19

Chemicals

Measles Vaccine

Word Cloud

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