Measles Mortality Reduction in India: Status and Future Plans
Measles Mortality Reduction in India: Status and Future Plans
Measles Mortality Reduction in India: Status and Future Plans
Presentation structure
Status of routine immunization and polio
eradication Implementation of national measles strategic plan Expansion of AFP surveillance to include measles surveillance Coordinated assistance from partners
Table 1: Demography1 Total Population Population Growth Rate2 Live Births Birth Rate
Number of persons per sq. km
2005
Infant Mortality Rate 2 Children < 1 Year Children < 5 Years Children < 15 Years
1 2 3
1,028,610,328 1.51% 27,552,928 2.7 26.7 / Per 1000 population 68 / Per 1000 live births 25,793,927 2.5 123,974,000 12.1 3 35.3 363,373,000
Source: SEAR Annual EPI Reporting Form, 2005. Core Indicators, 2005 (Health Situation in WHO SEAR and WPR).
NFHS-II(1998-99)
Missing or Excluded 0% to 30% 30% to 50% 50% to 70% 70% to 80% 80% to 90% 90% and above
NFHS-III(2005-06)
All India Measles Coverage NFHS-III : 58.8% NFHS-II : 50.7% NFHS-I : 42.2%
14% of districts coverage below 30% 24% of districts coverage between 30-50% 28% of districts coverage above 80%
70% to 80%
80% to 90% 90% and above
Reported
100% 90%
250,000
200,000
150,000
50%
Surveyed
100,000
50,000
0%
Year
Reported cases
Source: India MOH/UNICEF
Reported coverage
Unicef CES
NFHS
for Immunization Enhanced budget and support through national rural health mission (NRHM) Immunization weeks in 2005 and 2006 in states with low coverage Monitoring of routine immunization clinics in low performing states by government and partners Introduced routine immunization monitoring system (RIMS)
Percentage Coverage (Measles) of Annual Target achieved during last three Immunization Weeks (2006-07)
100.00 90.00 80.00
70.00 60.00 50.00 40.00 30.00 20.00 12.35 10.00 NA 0.00 7.08 NA NA NA NA NA NA NA 25.59 18.62 15.23 15.83 35.70 30.38 59.52
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cases, reduced geographic distribution of disease Outbreak in 2006 a temporary setback GOI mobilizing to finish as soon as possible
Substantial financial commitment Use of mOPV1 Accelerated rounds to rapidly immunize youngest children Capitalize on immunity resulting from recent outbreak
Year
* data as on 16th February 2007
Little useful epidemiological data Measles is included in integrated disease surveillance program (IDSP) Outbreaks Investigations carried out by various national, state, academic institutions No standard guidelines Limited efforts to consolidate information and initiate action
UNICEF, IAP, ICMR, NTAGI Strategic plan for Measles Control was endorsed National measles surveillance and outbreak investigation guidelines were published National polio surveillance project was assigned to assist and integrate measles surveillance with AFP surveillance
State by state approach Integrated reporting from AFP surveillance sites Track and investigation of measles outbreaks
Laboratory network expanded One per each state starting measles surveillance Two laboratories were accredited and other two due in 2007
Clinically confirmed measles cases 2006 through weekly routine reporting: by blocks Variation of incidence even among Southern states
Tamil Nadu Annual incidence 2.8 per 100,000 population Karnataka Annual incidence 10.2 per 100,000 population Andhra Pradesh
Initiated in September 2006
Suspected measles outbreaks investigated, 2006 Possibly Karnataka has not tracked some of the outbreaks
Tamil Nadu Karnataka Andhra Pradesh
Tamil Nadu Measles outbreaks confirmed (Total cases) Measles outbreaks negative Rubella outbreaks confirmed (Total cases) Mixed outbreaks confirmed (Total cases) 15th February, 2007
Karnataka
Andhra Pradesh
29 (1098) 2 0 0
13 (290) 0 0 0
* data as on
Serologically confirmed measles outbreaks Percentage of measles cases by age groups, 2006* 89% of cases in Karnataka are under 10 years
Tamil Nadu
50
50
Karnataka
50
Andhra Pradesh
49
40
40 33
42
40
38
40
31
30 30
30
20
20
20
14
10
15 4
8 5
10
9 2
10
2
1-4 years 5-9 years 10-15 years > 15 years
0 < 1 year 1-4 years 5-9 years 10-15 years > 15 years
0 < 1 year 1-4 years 5-9 years 10-15 years > 15 years
0 < 1 year
Serologically confirmed measles outbreaks Vaccination status of measles cases (1-4 years), 2006
Low incidence, nearly 90% vaccinated cases and very low case fatality indicates Tamilnadu may not be a priority state for a catch-up campaign.
Tamil Nadu
9% 4%
17%
Karnataka
Andhra Pradesh
25%
29%
22% 61%
87%
46%
N=339 Vaccinated
N=89 Unknown
control Terms of reference and composition recently endorsed by the Ministry of Health Director General, Indian Council of Medical Research will be the chairperson of this 22 member group Wide expertise and representation - national, state, medical associations, WHO, UNICEF and international experts, etc. Government would call the first meeting in second quarter of 2007
Key activities for partner assistance: (Advocacy and data for decision making)
Ensure adequate staffing to provide measles
technical and managerial support. Technical support to review available data on measles using the Measles Strategic Planning (MSP) Tool and prepare a situational analysis on measles
Important background document for the first meeting of the India technical advisory group for measles
selected states
Currently available USD 16.7 million from IFFIm for about 29 million children If national wide 9 months to -15Y campaigns planned, would need to target around 350 million children and would need around USD 200 million.
Need to prioritize states according to low routine, reported incidence and age distribution of cases Building consensus in India expert advisory group regarding early implementing states.
Challenges
Governments heavy involvement in finishing
polio at the best opportunity Huge target populations for SIAs necessitating enormous amount of resources Funds for surveillance Anti vaccination lobbies against polio and Hepatitis B
Summary
Government of India has started
implementing measles control strategies So far focus has been for routine immunization strengthening and surveillance Government wants to introduce second opportunity based on surveillance
critical
Thank you
Monthly reported number of clinically confirmed measles cases reported, 2006-2007* Similar seasonality in states in south India
Tamil Nadu
1350 1200 1050 900 750 600 450 300 150 0 55 289 207 130 21 20 41 73 62 72 87 145
150 0
Jan06 Feb06 Mar06 Apr06 May06 Jun- Jul-06 Aug06 06 Sep06 Oct06 Nov06 Dec06 Jan07
Karnataka
507
493
446
299
258
111
Nov- Dec- Jan- Feb- Mar- Apr- May- Jun- Jul- Aug- Sep- Oct- Nov- Dec- Jan05 05 06 06 06 06 06 06 06 06 06 06 06 06 07
Measles cases
Measles cases
150,000
100,000
50,000
Before 1978
1994
1998
2002
2006
68.1
% coverage
2005
1998
1999
2000
2001
2005