Samoa shuts schools and declares emergency as measles kills 6

Samoa shuts down all its schools, bans kids from public events and orders all 200,000 people on the Pacific island to get the measles vaccine as it declares a state of emergency over outbreak that has killed 6 in 3 weeks

  • In the past three weeks, a measles outbreak has sickened over 700 people on the Pacific Island whose population is just 200,000 
  • Nearly 100 have been hospitalized and six have died, with most fatalities occurring in children under two 
  • Samoa declared a state of emergency over the outbreak 
  • It has closed all its schools and banned children from public gatherings in an effort to contain the virus that mostly spreads among unvaccinated kids 
  • The nation has a dismal vaccination rate of under 30% of the population, but officials have not mandated the measles shot 

Samoa has closed all its schools, banned children from public gatherings and mandated that everybody get vaccinated after declaring an emergency due to a measles outbreak that has so far killed six people.

For the past three weeks, the Pacific island nation of 200,000 people has been in the grip of a measles epidemic that has been exacerbated by low immunization rates.

Schools were closed from Monday after the government declared an emergency on Saturday. 

The National University of Samoa also told students to stay home and said exams scheduled for this week had been indefinitely postponed.

Health authorities said most of those who died were under the age of 2. They counted 716 measles cases reported, with nearly 100 people still hospitalized including 15 in intensive care.

Samoa has declared a state of emergency after as its measles outbreak spreadds to over 200 and claims the lives of six. Vaccination rates are low – around 30% – but officials are now mandating vaccines for all 200,000 residents. Pictured: a Samoan child receiving the vaccine  (TVNZ via AP)

Samoa’s Director General of Health Leausa Take Naseri said in a news conference last week that he expects the epidemic will get worse. He said that only about two-thirds of Samoans had been vaccinated, leaving the others vulnerable to the virus.

But figures from the World Health Organization and UNICEF indicate that measles immunization rates among Samoan infants have fallen steeply from over 70% in 2013 to under 30% last year.

Helen Petousis-Harris, a vaccine expert at New Zealand´s University of Auckland, said the Samoan government halted its immunization program for several months last year after two infants died from a medical mishap involving a vaccine.

Children and parents wait in line to get vaccinated outside a health clinic in Apia, Samoa amid the outbreak that has triggered a national school closure  (TVNZ via AP)

Health clinics like this one in Apia, Samoa, are offering vaccines to all residents of the tiny country, including children under two, who are the most at risk of dying of measles (TVNZ via AP)

New Zealand Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern said Monday it was sending 3,000 vaccines to Samoa as well as nurses and medical supplies.

Ardern said Samoan authorities believe the outbreak was started by a traveler from New Zealand.

‘We, of course, have an open flow of people,’ Ardern said. ‘But we see our responsibility as supporting Samoa as they deal with the outbreak, and we are doing that actively.’

Petousis-Harris said it was disappointing that people in New Zealand who were carrying the virus had traveled to Samoa. She said New Zealand has for years known it has immunity gaps.

‘But we didn’t deal with the problem,’ she said.

Tonga, Fiji and New Zealand have also reported outbreaks of measles but on a smaller scale than in Samoa.

A woman prays in front of a portrait of her lost child with measles in Apia, Samoa (TVNZ via AP)

Source: Read Full Article