Abstract

The Global Polio Eradication Initiative has built an extensive infrastructure with capabilities and resources that should be transitioned to measles and rubella elimination efforts. Measles continues to be a major cause of child mortality globally, and rubella continues to be the leading infectious cause of birth defects. Measles and rubella eradication is feasible and cost saving. The obvious similarities in strategies between polio elimination and measles and rubella elimination include the use of an extensive surveillance and laboratory network, outbreak preparedness and response, extensive communications and social mobilization networks, and the need for periodic supplementary immunization activities. Polio staff and resources are already connected with those of measles and rubella, and transitioning existing capabilities to measles and rubella elimination efforts allows for optimized use of resources and the best opportunity to incorporate important lessons learned from polio eradication, and polio resources are concentrated in the countries with the highest burden of measles and rubella. Measles and rubella elimination strategies rely heavily on achieving and maintaining high vaccination coverage through the routine immunization activity infrastructure, thus creating synergies with immunization systems approaches, in what is termed a “diagonal approach.”

Highlights

  • The world is closer than ever before to achieving global polio eradication

  • Since the widespread use of vaccines worldwide began through the global Expanded Program on Immunization (EPI), which started in 1974 following implementation of the Smallpox Eradication Program, vaccines have been widely recognized for their value as the greatest single investment that can be made for improving people’s lives and public health [1, 2]

  • The strategies used by the Global Polio Eradication Initiative (GPEI) and refined through innovations are similar to those needed for measles and rubella elimination, and currently polio resources are concentrated in the countries with the highest measles and rubella burden

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Summary

The Journal of Infectious Diseases SUPPLEMENT ARTICLE

The Global Polio Eradication Initiative has built an extensive infrastructure with capabilities and resources that should be transitioned to measles and rubella elimination efforts. In 2010, the World Health Assembly set 3 targets for measles control by 2015 as milestones toward the global eradication of measles: (1) increase routine coverage with the first dose of measles-containing vaccine (MCV1) for children aged 1 year to ≥90% nationally and ≥80% in every district; (2) reduce the global annual measles incidence to

Number of cases
Fever and rash No
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