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Official figures showed there were 112 new cases in the 24 hours to Monday morning, despite a massive immunization drive last week that saw the entire Pacific nation shut down for two days.
The government said the mobile vaccination teams had succeeded in ensuring 90 percent of the 200,000-strong population was immunized, up from around 30 percent when the epidemic began in mid-October.
However, the vaccine takes 10-14 days to take effect, meaning it is too early to say whether the outbreak has peaked.
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Among the 70 dead, 61 are children aged four or under. Health authorities have blamed anti-vaxxers spreading conspiracy theories for the low immunization rate that left Samoa’s children so vulnerable to a measles outbreak.
Outbreaks elsewhere in the Pacific, including Tonga, Fiji and American Samoa, have been easier to contain because of higher immunization rates, with no deaths reported.