| 27 Octobre 2017
26 OCTOBER 2017 | GENEVA │ NEW YORK │ ATLANTA – In 2016, an estimated 90  000 people died from measles – an 84% drop from more than 550 000  deaths in 2000 – according to a new report published today by leading  health organizations. This marks the first time global measles deaths  have fallen below 100 000 per year.
 
 “Saving an average of 1.3 million lives per year through measles vaccine  is an incredible achievement and makes a world free of measles seem  possible, even probable, in our lifetime,” says Dr Robert Linkins, of  the Measles and Rubella Initiative (MR&I) and Branch Chief of  Accelerated Disease Control and Vaccine Preventable Diseases at the  Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. M&RI is a partnership  formed in 2001 of the American Red Cross, the US Centers for Disease  Control and Prevention, the United Nations Foundation, UNICEF, and WHO.
 
 Since 2000, an estimated 5.5 billion doses of measles-containing  vaccines have been provided to children through routine immunization  services and mass vaccination campaigns, saving an estimated 20.4  million lives.
 
 “We have seen a substantial drop in measles deaths for more than two  decades, but now we must strive to reach zero measles cases,” says Dr  Jean-Marie Okwo-Bele, Director of WHO’s Department of Immunization,  Vaccines and Biologicals. “Measles elimination will only be reached if  measles vaccines reach every child, everywhere.”
 
 The world is still far from reaching regional measles elimination goals.  Coverage with the first of two required doses of measles vaccine has  stalled at approximately 85% since 2009, far short of the 95% coverage  needed to stop measles infections, and coverage with the second dose,  despite recent increases, was only 64% in 2016.
 
 Far too many children - 20.8 million - are still missing their first  measles vaccine dose. More than half of these unvaccinated children live  in six countries: Nigeria (3.3 million), India (2.9 million), Pakistan  (2.0 million), Indonesia (1.2 million), Ethiopia (0.9 million), and  Democratic Republic of the Congo (0.7 million). Since measles is a  highly contagious viral disease, large outbreaks continue to occur in  these and other countries in Europe and North America, putting children  at risk of severe health complications such as pneumonia, diarrhoea,  encephalitis, blindness, and death.
 
 Agencies noted that progress in reaching measles elimination could be  reversed when polio-funded resources supporting routine immunization  services, measles and rubella vaccination campaigns, and surveillance,  diminish and disappear following polio eradication. Countries with the  greatest number of measles deaths rely most heavily on polio-funded  resources and are at highest risk of reversing progress after polio  eradication is achieved.
 
 “This remarkable drop in measles deaths is the culmination of years of  hard work by health workers, governments and development agencies to  vaccinate millions of children in the world’s poorest countries,” said  Dr Seth Berkley, CEO of Gavi, the Vaccine Alliance, one of the world’s  largest supporters of measles immunization programmes. “However we  cannot afford to be complacent. Too many children are still missing out  on lifesaving vaccines. To reach these children and set ourselves on a  realistic road to measles elimination we need to dramatically improve  routine immunization backed by strong health systems.”