Progress Toward Measles and Rubella Elimination — Indonesia, 2013–2022

In 2019, Indonesia and the other countries in the World Health Organization South-East Asia Region adopted the goal of measles and rubella elimination by 2023. This report describes Indonesia's progress toward measles and rubella elimination during 2013-2022. During this period, coverage with a...

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Veröffentlicht in:MMWR. Morbidity and mortality weekly report 2023-10, Vol.72 (42), p.1134-1139
Hauptverfasser: Chacko, Stephen, Kamal, Mushtofa, Hastuti, Endang Budi, Mildya, Fristika, Kelyombar, Cornelia, Voronika, Vivi, Yosephine, Prima, Tandy, Gertrudis, Anisiska, Devi, Karolina, Sherli, Dewi, Lulu Ariyantheny, Khanal, Sudhir, Bahl, Sunil, Wijayanti, Fetty, Merrill, Rebecca D, Hsu, Christopher H, Morales, Michelle
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:In 2019, Indonesia and the other countries in the World Health Organization South-East Asia Region adopted the goal of measles and rubella elimination by 2023. This report describes Indonesia's progress toward measles and rubella elimination during 2013-2022. During this period, coverage with a first dose of measles-containing vaccine (MCV) decreased from 87% to 84%, and coverage with a second MCV dose decreased from 76% to 67%. After rubella vaccine was introduced in 2017, coverage with the first dose of rubella-containing vaccine increased approximately fivefold, from 15% in 2017 to 84% in 2022. During 2013-2021, annual reported measles incidence decreased by 95%, from 33.2 to 1.4 cases per million population; reported rubella incidence decreased 89%, from 9.3 to 1.0 cases per million population. However, a large surge in measles and rubella cases occurred in 2022, with a reported measles incidence of 29 cases per million and a reported rubella incidence of 3 per million, primarily related to disruption in immunization services caused by the COVID-19 pandemic. In 2022, approximately 26 million children (an estimated 73% of the target population) received a combined measles- and rubella-containing vaccine during supplementary immunization activities completed in 32 provinces. Progress toward measles and rubella elimination in Indonesia has been made; however, continued and urgent efforts are needed to restore routine immunization services that were adversely affected by the COVID-19 pandemic and close immunity gaps to accelerate progress toward measles and rubella elimination.
ISSN:0149-2195
1545-861X
DOI:10.15585/mmwr.mm7242a2