Immunization, measles (% of children ages 12-23 months) - Country Ranking - Africa

Definition: Child immunization, measles, measures the percentage of children ages 12-23 months who received the measles vaccination before 12 months or at any time before the survey. A child is considered adequately immunized against measles after receiving one dose of vaccine.

Source: WHO and UNICEF (http://www.who.int/immunization/monitoring_surveillance/en/).

See also: Thematic map, Time series comparison

Find indicator:
Rank Country Value Year
1 Morocco 99.00 2019
2 Seychelles 97.00 2020
3 Zambia 96.00 2020
4 São Tomé and Principe 95.00 2019
4 Cabo Verde 95.00 2020
6 Egypt 94.00 2020
6 Rwanda 94.00 2020
8 Tunisia 93.00 2020
8 Eritrea 93.00 2020
10 Burundi 90.00 2020
10 Malawi 90.00 2020
12 Comoros 89.00 2020
12 Mauritius 89.00 2020
14 Senegal 88.00 2020
14 Burkina Faso 88.00 2020
14 Ghana 88.00 2020
14 Kenya 88.00 2020
18 Botswana 87.00 2020
18 Sierra Leone 87.00 2020
18 Uganda 87.00 2020
21 Sudan 86.00 2020
22 Zimbabwe 85.00 2020
22 The Gambia 85.00 2019
24 South Africa 84.00 2020
24 Tanzania 84.00 2020
26 Mozambique 81.00 2020
27 Namibia 80.00 2019
27 Algeria 80.00 2019
29 Niger 79.00 2020
30 Eswatini 76.00 2020
31 Lesotho 75.00 2020
32 Libya 73.00 2020
33 Guinea-Bissau 72.00 2020
33 Mauritania 72.00 2020
35 Côte d'Ivoire 70.00 2020
36 Togo 69.00 2020
37 Congo 68.00 2020
38 Benin 65.00 2020
39 Cameroon 62.00 2020
39 Djibouti 62.00 2020
39 Mali 62.00 2020
42 Liberia 61.00 2020
43 Ethiopia 60.00 2020
44 Madagascar 59.00 2020
45 Dem. Rep. Congo 57.00 2020
46 Nigeria 54.00 2020
47 Equatorial Guinea 53.00 2020
47 Gabon 53.00 2020
49 Guinea 47.00 2020
49 Chad 47.00 2020
51 Somalia 46.00 2020
52 Angola 44.00 2020
53 Central African Republic 41.00 2020

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Limitations and Exceptions: In many developing countries a lack of precise information on the size of the cohort of one-year-old children makes immunization coverage difficult to estimate from program statistics.

Statistical Concept and Methodology: Governments in developing countries usually finance immunization against measles and diphtheria, pertussis (whooping cough), and tetanus (DTP) as part of the basic public health package. The data shown here are based on an assessment of national immunization coverage rates by the WHO and UNICEF. The assessment considered both administrative data from service providers and household survey data on children's immunization histories. Based on the data available, consideration of potential biases, and contributions of local experts, the most likely true level of immunization coverage was determined for each year.

Aggregation method: Weighted average

Periodicity: Annual