Hundreds of children are dying from measles in Bangladesh, where hospitals are overwhelmed.

Nearly 750 people, including baby Arafat pictured here, have died from measles in Bangladesh in the past four months "I have never seen an outbreak this huge," says paediatrician Dr Mohammed Golam Mawla, as we look around a measles ward in the Bangladeshi city of Mymensingh. Until March this year, Bangladesh had made "substantial progress" towards eliminating measles, according to the World Health Organisation. Since March, government figures show nearly 750 people, mostly children, have died from the highly contagious disease, which spreads easily through breathing, coughing or sneezing. The death toll includes confirmed and suspected cases of measles. But Unicef says the true numbers are likely to be higher, given the sudden surge, an overwhelmed health system and difficulties in gathering data. Those numbers are made real by the dozens of families around us who have no choice but to lie on blankets on the floor, in the hallway. The ward at Medical College Hospital is at more than double its capacity, with nearly 130 patients in just 32 rooms. Only the most severe cases receive a hospital bed in overcrowded wards like this one in Mymensingh His nose is too small for oxygen tubes to sit comfortably so doctors have bandaged and taped them into place.