DR Congo: Vaccine campaign for world's largest measles outbreak

A nurse prepares a syringe before administering a vaccination against measlesImage copyright
AFP

Image caption

The disease has spread to every part of the DRC

More than 800,000 children are to be targeted for vaccination in the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC), after a measles outbreak killed more than 3,500 people this year.

The World Health Organization (WHO) and the Congolese government aim to carry out the emergency programme across the country in slightly more than a week.

The WHO says the epidemic is the world’s largest and fastest-moving.

It has killed more Congolese people this year than Ebola.

Despite previous rounds of immunisations, the disease has spread to every part of the country.

Lack of routine access to vaccinations and healthcare has contributed to the problem.

“The DRC is experiencing a dire situation because too many children were missed by routine immunisation,” said Dr Deo Nshimirimana, WHO representative to the DRC.

“The country now has large clusters of children who need to be vaccinated – WHO and partners are working with the health ministry to move as quickly as possible to reach them.”

Every one of the country’s 26 provinces has reported cases of measles and is battling to control this outbreak, which the ministry of health declared on 10 June.

  • Listen: Deadly measles outbreak in DR Congo

The campaign aims to vaccinate around 825,000 children in 24 regions, over a period of nine days, the agency said.

“As of 17 September, a total of 183,837 suspected measles cases (5,989 confirmed) had been reported in 192 of the 519 health zones nationwide, including 3,667 deaths – which exceed the number of deaths due to Ebola. Nearly all the deaths have been children,” the WHO said in a statement.

In the country’s east, Ebola has claimed more than 2,100 lives since erupting in August last year.

Measles is a highly infectious viral illness that can sometimes lead to serious health complications, including infections of the lungs and brain.

You may also be interested in:

Media playback is unsupported on your device

Media captionThe BBC investigated in 2018 why there’s been a measles outbreak in Europe
source: bbc.com