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Measles pre-elimination and resurgence in the African region. Balcha Masresha IVD AFRO. Global Measles Management Meeting Geneva 15 - 17 March 2011. Outline. Regional goal Routine immunization Second opportunity immunization through SIAs Measles case-based surveillance
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Measles pre-elimination and resurgence in the African region Balcha Masresha IVD AFRO Global Measles Management Meeting Geneva 15 - 17 March 2011
Outline • Regional goal • Routine immunization • Second opportunity immunization through SIAs • Measles case-based surveillance • Measles resurgence in AFR • Challenges • Opportunities
Regional measles pre-elimination goal; targets to be met by end 2012. • 98% mortality reduction by 2012 compared to estimates for 2000 • Measles incidence <5 cases/106 per year in all countries; • >90% MCV1 national level coverage in all countries, and >80% in all districts; • >95% SIAs coverage in all districts; • All countries meeting the 2 main surveillance performance indicator targets • 80% districts reporting > 1 suspected measles case with a specimen per year • Non measles febrile rash illness rate of > 2:100,000 per year
MCV1 coverage (WHO UNICEF estimates) and reported measles cases: AFR. 1980 - 2009
Countries in AFR by MCV1 coverage category. (WHO-UNICEF estimates). 2001 - 2009
MCV1 coverage > 80% (WHO UNICEF estimates) for > 3 years including 2009. AFR +/- MCV2 introduction
Measles SIAs. 2010 • Follow up SIAs planned in 14 countries ~ target pop. 60.2 million • SIAs implemented in 9 countries targeting ~ 25 million • 5 countries had to postpone to 2011 for lack of partner and local resources • Outbreak response mass immunization in 5 countries • Target population ~ 22.6 million • 13 countries raised USD 21 million (51%) locally out of the expected USD 41 million for ops costs
Funds raised locally for measles SIAs (in USD per child targeted). AFR. 2010
Proportion of districts with >95% coverage during measles SIAs. 2009 – 2010. Nationwide outbreak response
Measles case based surveillance Performance Indicators. AFR. 2009 - 2010
Measles Resurgence in AFR. 2010 • 28 countries reported measles outbreaks • > 223,000 suspected measles casesand ~ 1,200 deaths reported through the aggregate reporting system • vs 37,010 suspected cases reported thru the JRF in 2008 • Outbreaks started at a median of 17 months after measles follow up SIAs (range: 1 to 44 months)
Incidence of confirmed measles per 100,000 population. AFR. 2010 Regional incidence: 17.4 per 100,000 population 10 countries (with 112.6 million total population) have measles incidence of >10 cases per 100,000
Measles outbreaks in AFR. • Surveillance data and preliminary investigations: • B3 serotypes in isolates • Reasons for outbreaks • gaps in routine immunization coverage • suboptimal coverage during recent SIAs (ZIM, NAM, ANG, BOT) • Pockets of unvaccinated & resistant populations (ZIM) • Critical accumulation of susceptibles in older age groups • too long (> 3 yrs) interval between follow-up SIAs (ZAM, LES, SEN)
Planned Measles SIAs 2011 Target population: 56.7 million Total budget: USD 56.7 million Expected MI contribution thru WHO and UNICEF: USD 29.6 million
Timing of scheduled measles SIAs. AFR. 2010 MI funding not yet in place MI funding OK
Challenges • Slow pace of routine immunizationcoverage improvement • Inadequate partner andlocal fundingfor SIAs • Delayed and inadequate preparations for measles SIAs • Continued measles outbreaks related to program gaps • Limited capacity for high quality outbreak investigation
Opportunities • Updating technical guidelines: to disseminate by end of March 2011 • EPI managers’ meetings • Best practices documentation: Ethiopia • Measles TAG: April 28 – 29, 2011 in Accra • Africa Vaccination Week • RC 61 – resolution on measles elimination for 2020
African Vaccination Week. 2011 • 38 countries have been conducting CHDs, MCH days etc • RC 60 resolution “to institutionalize an annual African Vaccination Week for sustaining advocacy, expanding community participation and improving immunization service delivery" • AVW to comprise of advocacy, education & outreach activities • Expected to • Improve access to high-risk populations and hard to reach areas; • Increase media interest in immunization; • create opportunities for pooling resources and coordinating efforts, • engage partners • build on the existing implementation framework of the maternal and child health initiatives
African Vaccination Week. 2011 (2) • AVW slogan is “Vaccinated communities, Healthy community” • AVW Theme for 2011 is "Put mothers and children first; Vaccinate and stop polio now”. • Last week of April 2011
Proposed recommendations • Resurgence and loss of gains in mortality reduction • Better mobilization of partner resources • Local resource mobilization for measles SIAs • Use the surveillance data and epidemiological information to determine the target age-groups for SIAs • Document and disseminate • lessons learnt from the best practice SIAs • Economic impact of measles outbreaks
Thanks Japanese Government