The African Region early experience with structures for the verification of measles elimination – a review

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Abstract

Substantial progress has been achieved in the last two decades with the implementation of measles control strategies in the African Region. Elimination of measles is defined as the absence of endemic transmission in a defined geographical region or country for at least 12 months, as documented by a well-performing surveillance system. The framework for documenting elimination outlines five lines of evidence that should be utilized in documenting and assessing progress towards measles elimination. In March 2017, the WHO regional office for Africa developed and disseminated regional guidelines for the verification of measles elimination. As of May 2019, fourteen countries in the African Region have established national verification committees and 8 of these have begun to document progress toward measles elimination. Inadequate awareness, concerns about multiple technical committees for immunization work, inadequate funding and human resources, as well as gaps in data quality and in the implementation of measles elimination strategies have been challenges that hindered the establishment and documentation of progress by national verification committees. We recommend continuous capacity building and advocacy, technical assistance and networking to improve the work around the documentation of country progress towards measles elimination in the African Region.

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APA

Masresha, B., Luce, R., Tanifum, P., Lebo, E., Dosseh, A., & Mihigo, R. (2020). The African Region early experience with structures for the verification of measles elimination – a review. Pan African Medical Journal, 35(supp1). https://doi.org/10.11604/pamj.supp.2020.35.1.19061

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