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Progress Toward Global Measles Control and Elimination, 1990-1996
JAMA. 1997;278(17):1396-1397.
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| Since this article does not have an abstract, we have provided the first 150 words of the full text PDF and any section headings. |
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IN 1989, the World Health Assembly resolved to reduce measles morbidity by 90% and measles mortality by 95% by 1995, compared with disease burden during the prevaccine era.1 By 1996, the estimated incidence and death rates for measles worldwide were reduced by 78% and 88%, respectively.2 In 1990, the World Summit for Children adopted a goal of vaccinating 90% of children against measles by 2000. However, routine measles vaccination coverage has remained relatively stable since 1990, and an estimated 1 million children continue to die from this preventable disease each year. During the 1990s, the widespread use of innovative measles-control strategies in the Region of the Americas and countries such as Mongolia, South Africa, and the United Kingdom demonstrated that high-level measles control and even interruption of transmission is feasible over large geographic areas. This report updates the status of measles control and elimination worldwide and includes disease
. . . [Full Text PDF of this Article]
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