Decline in measles vaccination is causing a preventable global resurgence of the disease
Media Advisory Thursday, April 18, 2019
Decline in measles vaccination is causing a preventable global resurgence of the disease

In 2000, measles was declared to be eliminated in the United States, when no sustained transmission of the virus was seen in this country for more than 12 months. Today, however, the United States and many other countries that had eliminated the disease are experiencing concerning outbreaks of measles because of declines in measles vaccine coverage. Without renewed focus on measles vaccination efforts, the disease may rebound in full force, according to a new commentary in the New England Journal of Medicine by infectious diseases experts at the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases (NIAID), part of the National Institutes of Health, and the Penn State University College of Medicine鈥檚 Milton S. Hershey Medical Center.
Measles is an extremely contagious illness transmitted through respiratory droplets and aerosolized particles that can remain in the air for up to two hours. Most often seen in young children, the disease is characterized by fever, malaise, nasal congestion, conjunctivitis, cough and a red, splotchy rash. Most people with measles recover without complications within a week. However, for infants, people with immune deficiencies, and other vulnerable populations, the consequences of a measles infection can be severe. Rare complications can occur, including pneumonia, encephalitis, other secondary infections, blindness and even death. Before the measles vaccine was developed, the disease killed between two and three million people annually worldwide. Today, measles still causes more than 100,000 deaths globally each year.
Measles can be prevented with a vaccine that is both highly effective and safe. Each complication and death related to measles is a 鈥減reventable tragedy that could have been avoided through vaccination,鈥 the authors write. Some people are reluctant to vaccinate their children based on widespread misinformation about the vaccine. For example, they may fear that the vaccine raises their child鈥檚 risk of autism, a falsehood based on a debunked and fraudulent claim. A very small number of people have valid medical contraindications to the measles vaccine, such as certain immunodeficiencies, but almost everyone can be safely vaccinated.
When levels of vaccine coverage fall, the weakened umbrella of protection provided by herd immunity鈥攊ndirect protection that results when a sufficiently high percentage of the community is immune to the disease鈥攑laces unvaccinated young children and immunocompromised people at greater risk. This can have disastrous consequences with measles. The authors describe a case in which a single child with measles infected 23 other children in a pediatric oncology clinic, with a fatality rate of 21 percent.
If vaccination rates continue to decline, measles outbreaks may become even more frequent, a prospect the authors describe as 鈥渁larming.鈥 This is particularly confounding, they note, since measles is one of the most easily prevented contagious illnesses. In fact, it is possible to eliminate and even eradicate the disease. However, they say, achieving this goal will require collective action on the part of parents and healthcare practitioners alike.
Article
CI Paules, HD Marston and AS Fauci. Measles in 2019: Going Backward. New England Journal of Medicine. DOI: 10.1056/NEJMp1905099 (2019)
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NIAID Director Anthony S. Fauci, M.D., is available to discuss the article.
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