Measles Cases in Europe
Quadrupled in 2017
Measles
cases soared in Europe last year, and at least 35 children died of the highly
infectious disease, according to the World Health Organization.
The
virus found its way into pockets of unvaccinated children all over the
continent, from Romania to Britain. The number of recorded cases quadrupled, to
21,315 in 2017 from 5,273 in 2016, a record low.
The
biggest outbreak last year was in Romania, where there were 5,562 cases and
which accounted for most of the deaths. The country’s large rural Roma
population — also known as Gypsies — often do not vaccinate their children and
may not take them to hospitals promptly when they fall ill. The country also
has an underfunded public health system.
The second biggest outbreak was in Italy, with
5,006 cases and three deaths; 88 percent of those cases were in people never
vaccinated, and another 7 percent in people who had not had all the recommended
doses, the European Center for Prevention and Disease Control said.
Ukraine
had 4,767 cases of measles in 2017. Other countries reporting outbreaks of up
to 1,000 cases were Belgium, Britain, France, Germany, Greece, Russia and
Tajikistan.
Vaccination
rates across Europe are lower than in the United States. Various longstanding
anti-vaccine movements persist there, and some conservative
Protestant sects in Europe believe vaccination subverts God’s will.
Twenty
years ago this month, a study of eight children published in The Lancet by Dr.
Andrew J. Wakefield suggested that the measles-mumps-rubella vaccine triggered
intestinal inflammation and autism. The journal later retracted the paper, and
Dr. Wakefield lost his British medical
licenseafter it was revealed that he was a paid consultant for
attorneys suing vaccine companies.
The
controversy nonetheless triggered a wave of anti-vaccine hysteria. A 2016 survey
of 67 countries led by the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine
found that skepticism about vaccine safety was highest in France. Skepticism
was also high in Russia, Ukraine, Greece and Bosnia-Herzegovina.
The
measles outbreaks have led some European countries to crack down. Laws
were passed in France, Germany and Italy requiring that parents vaccinate their
children or at least consult a doctor about doing so. Italyand
Germany imposed fines of $600 to $3,000 for failing to comply.
The
Centers for Disease Control and Prevention currently has Level 1
travel watches in effectfor Americans thinking of visiting Britain,
Greece, Italy, Romania, Serbia and Ukraine. Travelers under age 60 are advised
to have two doses of measles vaccine before going. (Everyone born before 1957
is assumed to have had measles as a child and therefore to be immune.)
The
United States eliminated measles transmission in 2000, but since then there
have been sporadic outbreaks caused by infected travelers. In 2015, the “Disneyland outbreak” ultimately led to over 150
cases in seven states. Investigators believe it began with a single theme park
visitor who infected 39 others.
As a
result, California outlawed “personal belief” exemptions from
vaccination requirements for schoolchildren, and vaccination rates shot up.
In the
United States, measles causes pneumonia in about one of 20 cases. One to two
cases of measles per 1,000 are fatal; some survivors are left blind or deaf. In
countries where children are malnourished and health care is rare, the death rate is as high as 6 percent, the
World Health Organization said.
Despite
setbacks in Europe, measles vaccine has led to a huge drop in global deaths
from the disease. In the 1980s, measles killed 2.6 million a year. In 2016, for
the first time since records were kept, deaths fell below 100,000.
In the
last two decades, philanthropic donors have paid for 5.5 billion doses for poor
countries.
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