By May 2014 the USA had experienced more cases of measles than in any whole year since elimination was achieved, linked to importations and subsequent NVP-BKM120 mw outbreaks [9]. Brazil and Canada have also experienced large outbreaks this year [10]. An independent International Expert Committee (IEC) was established by the Pan American Health Organization in 2010 with the purpose of documenting the elimination of measles, rubella and congenital rubella syndrome in the Region of the Americas, and has not yet reported its conclusions. During the period of the IEC
deliberations, several measles outbreaks occurred that were brought under control. In 2011 Canada experienced the largest outbreak of measles the Region had seen since elimination. This was linked to multiple importations into Quebec from a large outbreak in France but brought under control within 12 months, so that endemic
transmission was not re-established [11]. The experience of this and several other outbreaks have underlined the importance of not only having elimination-level coverage of greater than 95% to ensure population immunity levels reach 95%, but also of ensuring the quality of coverage data at every VX-809 nmr administrative level. Outbreaks in marginalised communities, including Aboriginal peoples, have demonstrated the necessity of reaching every community [12] and [13]. The Caribbean has successfully protected its population from measles and sustained elimination despite receiving large numbers of tourists, many coming from other Regions where measles is not controlled. Haiti, for example,
Carnitine dehydrogenase demonstrates how determination and political will enabled elimination to be achieved in the face of multiple major challenges including recurrent natural disasters [14]. In the Western Pacific region, encouraging progress was made in recent years with coverage of one dose of measles-containing vaccine increasing from 85% in 2000 to 97% within a decade and reported second routine dose coverage reaching 91% [15]. The largest supplementary immunisation activity in history was conducted in China in 2010, with over 103 million children vaccinated. The results of these activities were reflected in a 91% reduction in reported measles cases between 2000 and 2011, and an estimated 84% reduction in deaths between 2000 and 2012 [16]. However, the Western Pacific is experiencing an increase in measles incidence which started in 2013 and has continued through mid-2014 with ongoing outbreaks in China, The Philippines, Vietnam and Papua New Guinea [17]. As the Americas and Western Pacific have achieved and sustained or made progress towards measles elimination, distinctive common epidemiological patterns have emerged across remarkably diverse populations confirming theoretical predictions.