| 27 Février 2015
Copenhagen, 25 February 2015 - The WHO Regional Office for Europe calls on policy-makers, health  care workers and parents immediately to step up vaccination against  measles across age groups at risk. This will help to put an end to the  outbreaks occurring in countries in the WHO European Region and to  prevent similar outbreaks in the future.
 
 Seven countries in the Region have reported 22 149 cases of measles  in 2014 and thus far in 2015. This threatens the Region’s goal of  eliminating the disease by the end of 2015. Even though measles cases  fell by 50% from 2013 to 2014, large outbreaks continue.
 
 “When we consider that over the past two decades we have seen a  reduction of 96% in the number of measles cases in the European Region,  and that we are just a step away from eliminating the disease, we are  taken aback by these numbers. We must collectively respond, without  further delay, to close immunization gaps,” says Dr Zsuzsanna Jakab, WHO  Regional Director for Europe. “It is unacceptable that, after the last  50 years’ efforts to make safe and effective vaccines available, measles  continues to cost lives, money and time.”
 
 Table 1 shows the number of cases reported; see the Appendix for  details. Measles virus D8 has been the most commonly identified  circulating genotype.
| Country | Number of cases | 
|---|---|
| Kyrgyzstan | 7477 | 
| Bosnia and Herzegovina | 5340 | 
| Russian Federation | 3247 | 
| Georgia | 3291 | 
| Italy | 1674 | 
| Germany | 583 | 
| Kazakhstan | 537 | 
Measles outbreaks continue to occur in Europe because there are  pockets of susceptible people who are un- or underimmunized,  particularly as growing numbers of parents either refuse to vaccinate  their children or face barriers in accessing vaccination. Travel can  increase the risk of exposure to measles virus and its spread into  susceptible populations who are not vaccinated.
 
 “The priority is now to control current outbreaks in all affected  countries through immunization activities targeting people at risk,”  concludes Dr Nedret Emiroglu, Deputy Director of the Division of  Communicable Diseases, Health Security and Environment at the WHO  Regional Office for Europe. “At the same time, all countries, with no  exception, need to keep a very high coverage of regular measles  vaccination, so that similar outbreaks won’t happen again in our Region,  and measles can be eliminated once and for all.”
 
 The measures necessary to control the current outbreaks include:
To support European countries in these efforts, the WHO Regional Office for Europe launched a new European Vaccine Action Plan (EVAP), a regional interpretation of the Global Vaccine Action Plan. Acting as the WHO Regional Committee for Europe, Member States endorsed EVAP in September 2014. The Regional Office offers much more information on measles and rubella in the Region on its website, including reports of epidemiological data, a package of accelerated action for measles and rubella elimination and a framework for verifying the elimination process.