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Elimination of Epidemic Meningitis in the African Region: Progress and Challenges: 2010-2016

BACKGROUND: Epidemics of meningococcal disease constitute a major public health challenge in Africa, affecting mostly the 24 countries of the meningitis belt. These epidemics led to a call for a call for a safe, effective and affordable conjugate vaccine against the major serogroup responsible for r...

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Autores principales: Fall, Amadou, Bita, André Fouda, Lingani, Clement, Djingarey, Mamoudou, Tevi-Benissan, Carole, Preziosi, Marie-Pierre, Ronveaux, Olivier, Mihigo, R., Okeibunor, J., Akanmori, Bartholomew Dicky
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: 2018
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6370001/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/30761390
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author Fall, Amadou
Bita, André Fouda
Lingani, Clement
Djingarey, Mamoudou
Tevi-Benissan, Carole
Preziosi, Marie-Pierre
Ronveaux, Olivier
Mihigo, R.
Okeibunor, J.
Akanmori, Bartholomew Dicky
author_facet Fall, Amadou
Bita, André Fouda
Lingani, Clement
Djingarey, Mamoudou
Tevi-Benissan, Carole
Preziosi, Marie-Pierre
Ronveaux, Olivier
Mihigo, R.
Okeibunor, J.
Akanmori, Bartholomew Dicky
author_sort Fall, Amadou
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Epidemics of meningococcal disease constitute a major public health challenge in Africa, affecting mostly the 24 countries of the meningitis belt. These epidemics led to a call for a call for a safe, effective and affordable conjugate vaccine against the major serogroup responsible for recent epidemics by leaders of the region. OBJECTIVE: This paper documents experiences with efforts at eliminating epidemic meningitis in the African Region. METHOD: The meningoccocal serogroup A conjugate vaccine was developed, licensed and offered to more than 235 million people through mass vaccination campaigns in 16 countries since 2010. Future plans include providing the vaccine to the remaining countries in the African Meningitis Belt and, to implement the vaccine into routine national infant immunization programme and to organise catch-up immunization campaigns every 5 years for unvaccinated <5 year-olds who had missed their routine vaccinations. RESULTS: The success of the project is evidenced by the large declines in cases of group A meningococcal disease since 2010, with no cases reported in vaccinated persons across the 16 countries, reflecting the highly effective nature of the vaccine. The successful control of serogroup A meningococcal disease has highlighted the need to tackle other meningococcal serogroups through development of polyvalent conjugate vaccines with the aim of eliminating epidemics of meningococcal meningitis in the African region.
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spelling pubmed-63700012019-02-11 Elimination of Epidemic Meningitis in the African Region: Progress and Challenges: 2010-2016 Fall, Amadou Bita, André Fouda Lingani, Clement Djingarey, Mamoudou Tevi-Benissan, Carole Preziosi, Marie-Pierre Ronveaux, Olivier Mihigo, R. Okeibunor, J. Akanmori, Bartholomew Dicky J Immunol Sci Article BACKGROUND: Epidemics of meningococcal disease constitute a major public health challenge in Africa, affecting mostly the 24 countries of the meningitis belt. These epidemics led to a call for a call for a safe, effective and affordable conjugate vaccine against the major serogroup responsible for recent epidemics by leaders of the region. OBJECTIVE: This paper documents experiences with efforts at eliminating epidemic meningitis in the African Region. METHOD: The meningoccocal serogroup A conjugate vaccine was developed, licensed and offered to more than 235 million people through mass vaccination campaigns in 16 countries since 2010. Future plans include providing the vaccine to the remaining countries in the African Meningitis Belt and, to implement the vaccine into routine national infant immunization programme and to organise catch-up immunization campaigns every 5 years for unvaccinated <5 year-olds who had missed their routine vaccinations. RESULTS: The success of the project is evidenced by the large declines in cases of group A meningococcal disease since 2010, with no cases reported in vaccinated persons across the 16 countries, reflecting the highly effective nature of the vaccine. The successful control of serogroup A meningococcal disease has highlighted the need to tackle other meningococcal serogroups through development of polyvalent conjugate vaccines with the aim of eliminating epidemics of meningococcal meningitis in the African region. 2018-07-02 /pmc/articles/PMC6370001/ /pubmed/30761390 Text en http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This article is distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/.
spellingShingle Article
Fall, Amadou
Bita, André Fouda
Lingani, Clement
Djingarey, Mamoudou
Tevi-Benissan, Carole
Preziosi, Marie-Pierre
Ronveaux, Olivier
Mihigo, R.
Okeibunor, J.
Akanmori, Bartholomew Dicky
Elimination of Epidemic Meningitis in the African Region: Progress and Challenges: 2010-2016
title Elimination of Epidemic Meningitis in the African Region: Progress and Challenges: 2010-2016
title_full Elimination of Epidemic Meningitis in the African Region: Progress and Challenges: 2010-2016
title_fullStr Elimination of Epidemic Meningitis in the African Region: Progress and Challenges: 2010-2016
title_full_unstemmed Elimination of Epidemic Meningitis in the African Region: Progress and Challenges: 2010-2016
title_short Elimination of Epidemic Meningitis in the African Region: Progress and Challenges: 2010-2016
title_sort elimination of epidemic meningitis in the african region: progress and challenges: 2010-2016
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6370001/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/30761390
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