
By Mariam Sunny
(Reuters) -Global measles cases fell 71% to 11 million from the year 2000 to 2024, driven by improved vaccination coverage, the World Health Organization said in a report on Friday.
Vaccination has prevented nearly 59 million deaths globally during this period, according to the report.
Deaths dropped even more sharply by 88% to 95,000 in 2024, among the lowest annual tolls since 2000.
However, estimated cases in 2024 rose 8%, while deaths dropped 11%, compared with 2019 pre-pandemic levels, reflecting a shift in disease burden from low-income to middle-income countries, which have lower fatality ratios, the report said.
Measles is often the first disease to see a resurgence when vaccination coverage drops, the agency said, adding that growing measles outbreaks expose weaknesses in immunization programmes and health systems.
Due to its high transmissibility, "even small drops in vaccine coverage can trigger outbreaks, like a fire alarm going off when smoke is detected," said Kate O'Brien, director of the Department of Immunization at WHO.
(Reporting by Mariam Sunny in Bengaluru; Editing by Vijay Kishore)
LATEST POSTS
- 1
Guaranteeing Quality Medical care with Federal medical care Benefit Plans. - 2
Surf Spot Mechanics: Bells Beach - 3
Ice Spice's 'Big Guy' SpongeBob song is stuck in everyone's heads again — and TikTok is fueling it - 4
Doctors seek to understand why quitting antidepressants causes withdrawal for some - 5
Figure out How to Score Huge with Open Record Rewards
NASA counts down for first crewed lunar mission in half a century
Beating Wellbeing Difficulties: Individual Victories in Health
The Best Traditional Music Arrangers in History
Reporter's notebook: Inside the IDF’s ‘Hamas Village,’ and how Israel is rewriting urban warfare
Sudan war ‘being fought on women’s bodies’: Survivors detail sexual assault
High velocity Internet services for Metropolitan Regions
Vaccine exemptions for religious or personal beliefs are rising across the U.S.
Knesset FADC extends emergency draft for 280,000 IDF reservists until January 1
Portugal among EU countries with the most people working close to 50 hours a week













