The world has two kinds of measles problems.
In
low-income countries
And now there's a rise in measles in other countries, often wealthier ones, because of what's being called
"vaccine hesitancy."
That hesitancy has played a role in outbreaks around the world. Japan is facing the worst measles outbreak
in a
The Philippines
suffers from both problems
"The vaccine hesitancy movement has really reached this level in certain countries — the United States, European countries, even in the Philippines — where we now are having difficult-to-control measles outbreaks occur, because the level of immunity has fallen," says
Amesh Adalja
It's a situation that the World Health Organization views with alarm. In January, WHO declared vaccine hesitancy one of the top ten threats to global health — in the company of such looming problems as the Ebola virus and antibiotic resistant bacteria.
Indeed, after years of progress in immunizing children and eliminating or nearly eliminating measles in some countries, those gains have stalled. According to WHO, reported cases of measles increased
by more than 30 percent
A study in published in
The Lancet
"It's very concerning because I think it represents a waste of resources, because we shouldn't be fighting measles outbreaks in 2019," Adalja tells NPR. "This was something that should have been solved with the vaccine in the 1960s. Yet measles has persisted and now it's not so much a question of access to the vaccine, it's actually trying to convince people that the vaccine is worthwhile."
And since measles has been virtually absent from many countries for decades, a new generation of parents have little knowledge about its nature.
Stephen S. Morse, born in 1951, is one of those who got measles as a kid in New York City. He's now a professor of epidemiology at Columbia University.
When he was growing up, he says, nearly all children got measles. That's not the case now, and that's one cause of people avoiding vaccination in places like the U.S., Italy and France. "We've kind of taken it for granted because we see so few cases," he says. "That's the vaccine essentially being a victim of its own success. People don't see a problem, they think it's not there anymore."
Those old enough to remember measles may well recall manageable
symptoms:
The European region, meanwhile, had
72 measles deaths in 2018
While a number of countries have sprouted communities reluctant to immunize, they come by these beliefs in different ways.
A global survey
About half of the measles cases in the European Union since 2016 have been in Romania, where doctors
told NPR's Joanna Kakissis
In Japan, nearly all of the 49 cases in one prefecture were people connected to a single religious community that avoided medicines and vaccines, The New York Times
reported.
But if there are all kinds of diseases that people aren't getting vaccinated for, why are there all these cases of measles, in particular? Why aren't other contagious childhood diseases spiking?
Because measles are extremely contagious. The virus can live for
up to two hours
"It's almost like the canary in the coal mine," says Adalja, the infectious disease doctor. "When you see measles, that tells you that your vaccine levels are low" for childhood diseases in general.
And because measles is so contagious, the disease travels easily. So someone from a nation that rarely sees measles might travel to a country experiencing an outbreak, catch the disease and then carry it back home to one of the pockets of low immunization — and suddenly the number of cases spikes.
A few of the cases in Japan were linked to children who had returned from the Philippines.
Recent outbreaks in the U.S.
And it's not just measles. Recently there have been outbreaks of
chickenpox in Asheville, N.C.
So how do health officials get the message out that vaccines are a tool to keep the public healthy?
Adjala says outbreaks are a grim reminder of how dangerous the diseases can be — and can spur a newfound desire for vaccination.
The outbreak in Washington state
led to a rush for measles shots
When a measles outbreak occurs, Adalja says, "people actually get some familiarity — that their neighbor or their friends or somebody got sick and that it wasn't a fun experience — and then they do think maybe they should become vaccinated."
And vigilance is important, he says, because ridding the planet of measles is not going to happen overnight.
"We're going to still need to maintain population immunity for some time until we can actually get vaccination levels high all over the world, so that no one is at risk. But it is very hard because it's such a contagious disease. And then the anti-vaccine movement has just set that whole effort back a long way."
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