Resurgent Measles Crisis: Bangladesh Launches Emergency Vaccination Campaign Amid Rising Child Mortality
Bangladesh has launched an emergency measles-rubella campaign following a sharp surge in transmission resulting in over 100 child deaths and thousands of suspected cases. Driven by immunity gaps and political instability, this crisis reflects a global pattern of resurgent outbreaks documented by the WHO across the DRC, Nepal, Ethiopia, and Morocco, highlighting critical vaccine delivery failures.
Official global surveillance conducted by the WHO over the past decade confirms that the situation in Bangladesh is part of a much wider, alarming pattern of resurgence. In late 2019, the WHO’s Disease Outbreak News reported large-scale outbreaks in Madagascar, Nigeria, and the Democratic Republic of the Congo, with the DRC alone documenting more than 250,000 suspected cases and over 5,000 deaths. This trend of viral persistence continued through 2022-2023, as the WHO documented further outbreaks in Nepal and Ethiopia. By 2025, the WHO reported major measles outbreaks across the Region of the Americas, alongside a nationwide outbreak in Morocco.
The administrative and healthcare response in Bangladesh underscores the gravity of a preventable disease reclaiming territory through systemic lapses. The mobilization of the emergency measles-rubella campaign highlights the urgent need to close immunity gaps to prevent further loss of life. As the virus continues to exploit regional instabilities and logistical failures, the current crisis in Bangladesh stands as a definitive indicator of the ongoing global struggle to maintain immunization coverage against one of the world's most contagious pathogens.

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