Health officials in Bangladesh roll out urgent immunisation programme for young children following deadly measles outbreak.

Hospitals across Bangladesh are reporting a devastating surge in measles deaths among children, with at least 38 young lives lost to the highly contagious disease. Health authorities have responded by launching an emergency vaccination programme targeting younger children in a desperate bid to halt the outbreak’s spread.

The grim toll includes six deaths at Bangladesh Shishu Hospital and Institute, the country’s premier children’s hospital in Dhaka, and five fatalities at Mymensingh Medical College Hospital. These figures represent just a fraction of cases being treated across the country’s healthcare system.

View tweet from @bmj_latest

The Scale of the Crisis

Medical facilities are struggling to cope with the influx of measles cases. The Bangladesh Shishu Hospital and Institute, which specialises in paediatric care, has become a focal point for treating the most severe cases. Meanwhile, Mymensingh Medical College Hospital in the country’s northern region has also recorded multiple deaths.

Some reports suggest the death toll may be even higher, with one Bangladeshi newspaper citing 39 fatalities so far this year, including 32 deaths in March alone. The discrepancy in figures highlights the challenges health authorities face in tracking cases across the country’s vast healthcare network.

Racing Against Time

Bangladesh’s health ministry has moved quickly to implement targeted vaccination programmes. The initiative focuses on younger children, who are most vulnerable to severe complications from measles. This demographic typically faces the highest risk of death when infected with the virus.

Measles outbreaks often occur in communities with low vaccination coverage. The disease spreads rapidly through respiratory droplets and can cause serious complications including pneumonia, brain swelling, and death, especially in children under five years old.

Global Health Concerns

The outbreak comes as health experts worldwide continue pushing for improved measles vaccination rates. The World Health Organisation has long advocated for measles elimination through sustained immunisation programmes, but gaps in coverage can lead to devastating outbreaks like the one currently unfolding in Bangladesh.

Public health surveillance systems are working to track the outbreak’s progression and identify areas where vaccination efforts need to be concentrated. The coming weeks will be critical in determining whether the emergency vaccination programme can successfully contain the spread.

Key Takeaways

At least 38 children have died from measles in Bangladesh, with cases concentrated in major hospitals

Health authorities have launched an emergency vaccination programme targeting young children

The outbreak highlights ongoing challenges with vaccination coverage in vulnerable communities

What This Means for Kent Residents

Kent residents planning travel to South Asia should ensure their measles vaccination status is current before departure, with NHS Kent and Medway ICB services providing travel health advice. Local GP practices across Kent offer free MMR vaccinations on the NHS for eligible children and adults who may have missed routine immunisations. While this outbreak poses no direct threat to Kent communities, it serves as a reminder of measles’ deadly potential and the importance of maintaining high vaccination rates locally to prevent similar outbreaks from taking hold.

Published: 3 April 2026

Source: @bmj_latest on X. This article has been researched and rewritten with editorial balance by Kent Local News.