Is there an association between the use of complementary medicine and vaccine uptake: results of a pilot study

BMC Research Notes
http://www.biomedcentral.com/bmcresnotes/content
(Accessed 7 April 2018)

Research note
Is there an association between the use of complementary medicine and vaccine uptake: results of a pilot study
Despite the incredible success of paediatric immunisation, support is not universal. It has been suggested that complementary medicine practitioners enable vaccine rejection and his study aims to explore the relationship between complementary medicine use and paediatric vaccination. A total of 149 Australian parents were recruited via a parenting website and Facebook groups to complete an online questionnaire… These findings highlight an interface between lower vaccine uptake and visits to complementary medicine practitioners. These results emphasise the need to examine the routine paediatric care practices of complementary medicine practitioners as a crucial piece of the puzzle in understanding vaccine rejection.
Authors: Jane E. Frawley, Erica McIntyre, Jon Wardle and Debra Jackson
Citation: BMC Research Notes 2018 11:217
Published on: 2 April 2018

How can we accelerate progress on civil registration and vital statistics?

Bulletin of the World Health Organization
Volume 96, Number 4, April 2018, 225-296
http://www.who.int/bulletin/volumes/96/4/18-000418/en/

EDITORIALS
How can we accelerate progress on civil registration and vital statistics?
Carla AbouZahr, Martin W Bratschi, Daniel Cobos Muñoz, Romain Santon, Nicola Richards, Ian Riley & Philp Setel
http://dx.doi.org/10.2471/BLT.18.211086

Prevention of mother-to-child transmission of HIV: a cross-sectional study in Malawi

Bulletin of the World Health Organization
Volume 96, Number 4, April 2018, 225-296
http://www.who.int/bulletin/volumes/96/4/18-000418/en/

RESEARCH
Prevention of mother-to-child transmission of HIV: a cross-sectional study in Malawi
M van Lettow, M Landes, JJ van Oosterhout, E Schouten, H Phiri, E Nkhoma, T Kalua, S Gupta, N Wadonda, A Jahn & B Tippett-Barr
http://dx.doi.org/10.2471/BLT.17.203265

Antibiotic stewardship interventions in hospitals in low-and middle-income countries: a systematic review

Bulletin of the World Health Organization
Volume 96, Number 4, April 2018, 225-296
http://www.who.int/bulletin/volumes/96/4/18-000418/en/

SYSTEMATIC REVIEWS
Antibiotic stewardship interventions in hospitals in low-and middle-income countries: a systematic review
Christophe Van Dijck, Erika Vlieghe & Janneke Arnoldine Cox
http://dx.doi.org/10.2471/BLT.17.203448

Post-earthquake health-service support, Nepal

Bulletin of the World Health Organization
Volume 96, Number 4, April 2018, 225-296
http://www.who.int/bulletin/volumes/96/4/18-000418/en/

LESSONS FROM THE FIELD
Post-earthquake health-service support, Nepal
Sophie Goyet, Rajan Rayamajhi, Badry Nath Gyawali, Bhola Ram Shrestha, Guna Raj Lohani, Damodar Adhikari, Edwin Salvador, Roderico Ofrin, Jos Vandelaer & Reuben Samuel
http://dx.doi.org/10.2471/BLT.17.205666

Distributional cost-effectiveness analysis in low- and middle-income countries: illustrative example of rotavirus vaccination in Ethiopia

Health Policy and Planning
Volume 33, Issue 3, 1 April 2018
http://heapol.oxfordjournals.org/content/current

Methodological Musings
Distributional cost-effectiveness analysis in low- and middle-income countries: illustrative example of rotavirus vaccination in Ethiopia
Bryony R Dawkins; Andrew J Mirelman; Miqdad Asaria; Kjell Arne Johansson; Richard A Cookson
Health Policy and Planning, Volume 33, Issue 3, 1 April 2018, Pages 456–463, https://doi.org/10.1093/heapol/czx175

Humanitarian response in urban areas

Humanitarian Exchange Magazine
Number 71  March 2018
https://odihpn.org/magazine/humanitarian-response-urban-areas/

Humanitarian response in urban areas
Humanitarian crises are increasingly affecting urban areas either directly, through civil conflict, hazards such as flooding or earthquakes, urban violence or outbreaks of disease, or indirectly, through hosting people fleeing these threats. The humanitarian sector has been slow to understand how the challenges and opportunities of working in urban spaces necessitate changes in how they operate. For agencies used to working in rural contexts, the dynamism of the city, with its reliance on markets, complex systems and intricate logistics, can be a daunting challenge. Huge, diverse and mobile populations complicate needs assessments, and close coordination with other, often unfamiliar, actors is necessary.

Rise of human devastation syndrome in Syria

International Journal of Community Medicine and Public Health
Vol 5, No 4 (2018)  April 2018
http://www.ijcmph.com/index.php/ijcmph/issue/view/36

Rise of human devastation syndrome in Syria
Syed Roshaan Ahmed, Syed Uzair Mahmood, Haema Waheed
Abstract
The Syria Civil War, which started in 2011, has killed 400,000 people. It has forced more than 11 million people to suffer and has caused not only the people to migrate but also to be displaced within their own country. The war has brought only misery in the lives of Syrians as the damage has only focused on residents of the region in combat. The children have faced the worst, losing their parents, siblings or even friends to violence, suffering physical and psychological trauma. Out of the 11 million and more people who have suffered, 4.9 million Syrians are refugees and 6.1 million have displaced within Syria, out of which half of those affected are children.
The end result of the continued Syria Civil War is that those who have managed to survive have been severely damaged both physically and psychologically, disturbing their interpersonal, psychosocial, physical and mental health. The incidence of post traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) increases in such a situation, which tends to affect the lives of the Syrian people permanently.

Compliance of anti-rabies vaccine among dog bite victims in an urban slum of Chennai: a cross sectional study

International Journal of Community Medicine and Public Health
Vol 5, No 4 (2018)  April 2018
http://www.ijcmph.com/index.php/ijcmph/issue/view/36

Original Research Articles
Compliance of anti-rabies vaccine among dog bite victims in an urban slum of Chennai: a cross sectional study
Shivasakthimani R., Vinoth Gnana Chellaiyan D., Ravivarman G., Murali R.
DOI: 10.18203/2394-6040.ijcmph20181222

Evaluation of dog anti rabies vaccination centres and post exposure prophylaxis against rabies centres in an urban area

International Journal of Community Medicine and Public Health
Vol 5, No 4 (2018)  April 2018
http://www.ijcmph.com/index.php/ijcmph/issue/view/36

Evaluation of dog anti rabies vaccination centres and post exposure prophylaxis against rabies centres in an urban area
Rambadan P. Chauhan
DOI: 10.18203/2394-6040.ijcmph20181231

Institutional Research Misconduct Reports Need More Credibility

JAMA
April 3, 2018, Vol 319, No. 13, Pages 1293-1405
http://jama.jamanetwork.com/issue.aspx

Viewpoint
Institutional Research Misconduct Reports Need More Credibility
K. Gunsalus, JD; Adam R. Marcus, MA; Ivan Oransky, MD
free access
JAMA. 2018;319(13):1315-1316. doi:10.1001/jama.2018.0358
This Viewpoint highlights the inadequacy and lack of transparency of most research institutions’ responses to allegations of research misconduct, and describes development of a proposed checklist to establish definitions and standards for complete research integrity investigations.
Abstract
Institutions have a central role in protecting the integrity of research. They employ researchers, own the facilities where the work is conducted, receive grant funding, and teach many students about the research process. When questions arise about research misconduct associated with published articles, scientists and journal editors usually first ask the researchers’ institution to investigate the allegations and then report the outcomes, under defined circumstances, to federal oversight agencies and other entities, including journals.1

Big Data and Machine Learning in Health Care

JAMA
April 3, 2018, Vol 319, No. 13, Pages 1293-1405
http://jama.jamanetwork.com/issue.aspx

Big Data and Machine Learning in Health Care
Andrew L. Beam, PhD; Isaac S. Kohane, MD, PhD
JAMA. 2018;319(13):1317-1318. doi:10.1001/jama.2017.18391
This Viewpoint discusses how newer technologies such as machine learning and the compilation of “big data” can be used for research and clinical applications.
Abstract
Nearly all aspects of modern life are in some way being changed by big data and machine learning. Netflix knows what movies people like to watch and Google knows what people want to know based on their search histories. Indeed, Google has recently begun to replace much of its existing non–machine learning technology with machine learning algorithms, and there is great optimism that these techniques can provide similar improvements across many sectors.
It is no surprise then that medicine is awash with claims of revolution from the application of machine learning to big health care data. Recent examples have demonstrated that big data and machine learning can create algorithms that perform on par with human physicians.1 Though machine learning and big data may seem mysterious at first, they are in fact deeply related to traditional statistical models that are recognizable to most clinicians. It is our hope that elucidating these connections will demystify these techniques and provide a set of reasonable expectations for the role of machine learning and big data in health care.
 

Serving the Underserved: The Health and Well-Being of Adolescent and Young Adult Males

Journal of Adolescent Health
March 2018 Volume 62, Issue 3, Supplement, S1-S86
http://www.jahonline.org/issue/S1054-139X(17)X0028-1
Adolescent and Young Adult Male Health
Edited by Paritosh Kaul

Editorial
Serving the Underserved: The Health and Well-Being of Adolescent and Young Adult Males
Paritosh Kaul, Charles E. Irwin Jr
S1–S2
[Initial text]
Adolescent and young adult male health has received little attention despite decades of high mortality and morbidity rates [[1], [2]]. Across the lifespan, particularly during the second and third decades of life, males have worse outcomes than females in a number of areas, such as substance use, unintentional injury, and suicide [1. And yet, males have lower health-care utilization and higher levels of unmet needs than females [[3], [4]]. In the United States, life expectancy for males is also consistently lower than for females [5. The adolescent and young adult (AYA) male is underserved in health-care delivery systems, public health and policy, and research arena. In 2012, Saewyc lamented that sexual and reproductive health research aimed at impacting policy and clinical practice did not include boys and young men [6. In 2017, after a gap of 5 years, Fortenberry also noted the lack of progress in addressing AYA male sexual health services [7. In the recent Global Adolescent Study, Blum et al. highlighted many of the gender differences that are accentuated during the onset and completion of puberty, and how these changes place adolescent boys at risk for a number of negative health outcomes [8. In publishing this supplement of the Journal of Adolescent Health, our endeavor is to further increase attention on AYA males, and, in so doing, inspire some possible solutions to clinicians, policy makers, and investigators concerned with improving the health and well-being of AYA males…

 

Age-Specific Global Prevalence of Hepatitis B, Hepatitis C, HIV, and Tuberculosis Among Incarcerated People: A Systematic Review

Journal of Adolescent Health
March 2018 Volume 62, Issue 3, Supplement, S1-S86
http://www.jahonline.org/issue/S1054-139X(17)X0028-1

Review Articles
Age-Specific Global Prevalence of Hepatitis B, Hepatitis C, HIV, and Tuberculosis Among Incarcerated People: A Systematic Review
This study is a systematic review and meta-analysis of studies reporting the age-specific prevalence of each infection in prisoners. We grouped age-specific prevalence estimates into three overlapping age categories: AYA prisoners (<25 years), older prisoners (≥25 years), and mixed category (spanning age 25 years). We used random effects meta-analysis to estimate the relative risk (RR) of each infection in AYAs versus older prisoners.
Stuart A. Kinner, Kathryn Snow, Andrea L. Wirtz, Frederick L. Altice, Chris Beyrer, Kate Dolan
S18–S26
Published in issue: March 2018

Call to Action: Prevention of Mother-to-Child Transmission of Hepatitis B in Africa

Journal of Infectious Diseases
Volume 217, Issue 8  15 April 2018
https://academic.oup.com/jid/issue

PERSPECTIVE
Call to Action: Prevention of Mother-to-Child Transmission of Hepatitis B in Africa
Peyton Wilson; Jonathan B Parr; Ravi Jhaveri; Steve R Meshnick
The Journal of Infectious Diseases, Volume 217, Issue 8, 28 March 2018, Pages 1180–1183, https://doi.org/10.1093/infdis/jiy028
Abstract
Hepatitis B virus (HBV) is a significant public health issue that has not been adequately addressed, especially in the high-prevalence region of Africa. Despite the incorporation of HBV vaccines into the Expanded Program on Immunization, children continue to be infected with HBV through maternal-to-child transmission (MTCT). The addition of a birth dose of HBV vaccine would be a cost-effective method to reduce MTCT. Birth-dose HBV vaccine policies have been adopted in the Western Pacific region but not yet in Africa. Even better protection against HBV MTCT can be achieved by treatment of pregnant women with high HBV viral loads with tenofovir. Tenofovir is already widely used in prevention of HIV MTCT (PMTCT) programs. We suggest that existing HIV PMTCT programs could be expanded to deliver care for HBV-infected pregnant women. With appropriate adoption of birth-dose vaccination policies and expansion of PMTCT programs, elimination of HBV MTCT in Africa is achievable.

Isolation of Vaccine-Like Poliovirus Strains in Sewage Samples From the United Kingdom

Journal of Infectious Diseases
Volume 217, Issue 8  15 April 2018
https://academic.oup.com/jid/issue

MAJOR ARTICLES AND BRIEF REPORTS
Isolation of Vaccine-Like Poliovirus Strains in Sewage Samples From the United Kingdom
Manasi Majumdar; Dimitra Klapsa; Thomas Wilton; Joyce Akello; Catherine Anscombe
The Journal of Infectious Diseases, Volume 217, Issue 8, 28 March 2018, Pages 1222–1230, https://doi.org/10.1093/infdis/jix667
We describe the isolation of vaccine-like poliovirus in sewage samples using concentration methods followed by cell culture infection and next generation sequencing. Using this approach, we rapidly obtained whole-genome sequences of polio and nonpoliovirus enterovirus strains present in mixtures.

Association of Health Insurance Status and Vaccination Coverage among Adolescents 13-17 Years of Age

Journal of Pediatrics
April 2018 Volume 195, p1-312
http://www.jpeds.com/current

Original Articles
Association of Health Insurance Status and Vaccination Coverage among Adolescents 13-17 Years of Age
Peng-jun Lu, David Yankey, Jenny Jeyarajah, Alissa O’Halloran, Benjamin Fredua, Laurie D. Elam-Evans, Sarah Reagan-Steiner
p256–262.e1
Published online: February 2, 2018

The collapse of the Venezuelan health system

The Lancet
Apr 07, 2018 Volume 391 Number 10128 p1331-1454
http://www.thelancet.com/journals/lancet/issue/current

Editorial
The collapse of the Venezuelan health system
The Lancet
When Hugo Chavez became Venezuela’s new president in 1998, he promised to provide free health care to all and enshrined this right within Venezuela’s new constitution, rewritten in 1999. Progress was rapid and initial results were promising: according to the World Bank, life expectancy at birth rose from 71·8 to 74·1 years for both genders and infant mortality fell from 26·7 to 14·6 deaths per 1000 live births between 1998 and 2013, the period of Chavez’s rule. Success was recognised on the international stage and Venezuela achieved most of the UN’s Millennium Development Goals set for 2010. This initial success came on a backdrop of high oil prices providing the necessary government funding for public health-care spending and food imports. At the same time, a strong relationship with Cuba saw an agreement in 2003 that, in exchange for low-cost oil, Cuba would provide doctors, medical training, and medical supplies free of charge to Venezuela.

However, when the oil price began to fall in 2008 and Chavez’s revolutionary politics alienated foreign investors, the tide turned. The largest oil reserves in the world could not stave off economic collapse as lower demand for oil, excessive government spending, US sanctions, and price controls led to rocketing inflation and falling gross domestic product. The impact on the health-care system was exacerbated by exchange rate controls, which led to a shortage of the foreign currency needed to import equipment, food, and medicines.

Official government data are hard to come by. The last official report from the Venezuelan Ministry of Health was published in 2016 (Boletin Epidemiologico) and the then Health Minister, Antonieta Corporale, was rewarded by being sacked immediately thereafter by Nicolas Maduro, who has been leading the country since 2013 (Venezuela has had 17 different ministers of health in the past 20 years). The results of this report were highlighted in a Lancet World Report in August, 2017, which noted the untenable situation in Venezuela. This government report revealed a 65% increase in maternal mortality and a 30% increase in infant mortality, with 11 466 infants dying during 2016. It also revealed that while Venezuela had been the first country in the world to eliminate malaria in populated areas, this and other diseases such as diphtheria, which had previously been controlled, had returned in several outbreaks.

Health-care outcomes have continued to deteriorate rapidly. The Venezuelan Government has steadily reduced the share of its annual expenditure dedicated to public health-care spending from a high of 9·1% in 2010 to 5·8% in 2014. Medical supplies have been reported as going missing or getting embargoed and sitting in ports, with some media alleging corruption hindering distribution. Some of these are for treating heart disease and diabetes—the leading causes of death in Venezuela, according to WHO. As a result, patients have resorted to bringing their own surgical instruments, drugs, and food to hospital. In private practice, medical professionals charge in US dollars, which makes health care unaffordable to most of the population.

A recent national survey—Encuesta Nacional de Hospitales 2018 from the political opposition, the National Assembly, and the Venezuelan non-govermental organisation Médicos por la Salud—revealed that Venezuela’s health crisis is worse than anticipated. The survey, conducted between March 1–10, 2018, assessed the performance of 104 public and 33 private hospitals in Venezuela. According to the figures, most laboratory services and hospital nutrition services are only available intermittently or are completely inoperative. Shortages of items such as basic medicines, catheters, surgical supplies, and infant formula are highlighted in the survey; 14% of intensive care units have been shut down because they are unable to operate and 79% of the facilities analysed have no water at all.

Venezuela’s Government has allowed the country’s infrastructure to crumble, with fatal consequences for ordinary Venezuelans. Without regular reports on basic health indicators, assessment of the impact of the crisis is difficult. However, the Encuesta Nacional de Hospitales 2018 survey shows a shocking decline in health-care performance and a failure of the system. Aware of this humanitarian crisis, as declared by the political opposition in 2017, worldwide humanitarian aid has been offered by multiple countries and the UN. Yet Venezuela’s Government has refused this humanitarian aid, denying the existence of a crisis. It is time to end the abuse of power by the Venezuelan Government, and take immediate steps to address the heavy toll on the wellbeing of Venezuelans.

 

The Key Role of Epigenetics in Human Disease Prevention and Mitigation

New England Journal of Medicine
April 5, 2018   Vol. 378 No. 14
http://www.nejm.org/toc/nejm/medical-journal

Review Article
The Key Role of Epigenetics in Human Disease Prevention and Mitigation
Andrew P. Feinberg, M.D., M.P.H.
Epigenetics is the regulation of gene expression through alterations in DNA or associated factors (other than the DNA sequence). These factors control the diverse manifestations of diseases. Insights into epigenetic modification may lead to new therapies for common diseases.

Influenza Associated Pediatric Deaths in the United States, 2010–2016

Pediatrics
April 2018, VOLUME 141 / ISSUE 4
http://pediatrics.aappublications.org/content/141/4?current-issue=y

Articles
Open Access
Influenza Associated Pediatric Deaths in the United States, 2010–2016
Mei Shang, Lenee Blanton, Lynnette Brammer, Sonja J. Olsen, Alicia M. Fry
Pediatrics Apr 2018, 141 (4) e20172918; DOI: 10.1542/peds.2017-2918
Children <2 years old had the highest influenza-associated pediatric mortality in the United States from 2010 to 2016. Half of the deaths occurred in previously healthy children.

Mobile Phone Incentives for Childhood Immunizations in Rural India

Pediatrics
April 2018, VOLUME 141 / ISSUE 4
http://pediatrics.aappublications.org/content/141/4?current-issue=y

Mobile Phone Incentives for Childhood Immunizations in Rural India
Rajeev Seth, Ibukunoluwa Akinboyo, Ankur Chhabra, Yawar Qaiyum, Anita Shet, Nikhil Gupte, Ajay K. Jain, Sanjay K. Jain
Pediatrics Apr 2018, 141 (4) e20173455; DOI: 10.1542/peds.2017-3455
The delivery of automated compliance-linked mobile phone incentives via a cloud-based, biometric-linked record and reminder software platform improves childhood immunizations in rural India.

Provider Communication, Prompts, and Feedback to Improve HPV Vaccination Rates in Resident Clinics

Pediatrics
April 2018, VOLUME 141 / ISSUE 4
http://pediatrics.aappublications.org/content/141/4?current-issue=y

Quality Reports
Provider Communication, Prompts, and Feedback to Improve HPV Vaccination Rates in Resident Clinics
Cynthia M. Rand, Stanley J. Schaffer, Nui Dhepyasuwan, Aaron Blumkin, Christina Albertin, Janet R. Serwint, Paul M. Darden, Sharon G. Humiston, Keith J. Mann, William Stratbucker, Peter G. Szilagyi
Pediatrics Apr 2018, 141 (4) e20170498; DOI: 10.1542/peds.2017-0498
A bundled intervention of provider prompts and training in communication skills plus performance feedback increased captured opportunities for HPV vaccination in 8 continuity clinics.

Preprints: An underutilized mechanism to accelerate outbreak science

PLoS Medicine
http://www.plosmedicine.org/
(Accessed 7 April 2018)

Essay
Preprints: An underutilized mechanism to accelerate outbreak science
Michael A. Johansson, Nicholas G. Reich, Lauren Ancel Meyers, Marc Lipsitch
| published 03 Apr 2018 PLOS Medicine
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pmed.1002549
Summary points
:: Preprints—manuscripts posted openly online prior to peer review—offer an opportunity to accelerate the dissemination of scientific findings to support responses to infectious disease outbreaks.
:: Preprints posted during the Ebola and Zika outbreaks included novel analyses and new data, and most of those that were matched to peer-reviewed publications were available more than 100 days before publication.
:: Despite the advantages of preprints and the endorsement of journals and funders in the context of outbreaks, less than 5% of Ebola and Zika journal articles were posted as preprints prior to publication in journals.
:: With broader adoption by scientists, journals, and funding agencies, preprints can complement peer-reviewed publication and ensure the early, open, and transparent dissemination of science relevant to the prevention and control of disease outbreaks.

Safeguarding against Ebola: Vaccines and therapeutics to be stockpiled for future outbreaks

PLoS Neglected Tropical Diseases
http://www.plosntds.org/
(Accessed 7 April 2018)

Viewpoints
Safeguarding against Ebola: Vaccines and therapeutics to be stockpiled for future outbreaks
Eric M. Espeland, Chia-Wei Tsai, Joseph Larsen, Gary L. Disbrow
| published 05 Apr 2018 PLOS Neglected Tropical Diseases
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pntd.0006275
[See Milestones/Perspectives – Featured Journal Content above for full text]

Case-based surveillance of measles in Sicily during 2012-2017: The changing molecular epidemiology and implications for vaccine strategies

PLoS One
http://www.plosone.org/
[Accessed 7 April 2018]

Research Article
Case-based surveillance of measles in Sicily during 2012-2017: The changing molecular epidemiology and implications for vaccine strategies
Fabio Tramuto, Carmelo Massimo Maida, Fanny Pojero, Giuseppina Maria Elena Colomba, Alessandra Casuccio, Vincenzo Restivo, Francesco Vitale
| published 04 Apr 2018 PLOS ONE
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0195256

Innovative technologies and social inequalities in health: A scoping review of the literature

PLoS One
http://www.plosone.org/
[Accessed 7 April 2018]

Research Article
Innovative technologies and social inequalities in health: A scoping review of the literature
Daniel Weiss, Håvard T. Rydland, Emil Øversveen, Magnus Rom Jensen, Solvor Solhaug, Steinar Krokstad
| published 03 Apr 2018 PLOS ONE
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0195447
Abstract
The aim of this study was to systematically review the range, nature, and extent of current research activity exploring the influence of innovative health-related technologies on social inequalities in health, with specific focus on a deeper understanding of the variables used to measure this connection and the pathways leading to the (re)production of inequalities. A review process was conducted, based on scoping review techniques, searching literature published from January 1, 1996 to November 25, 2016 using MEDLINE, Scopus, and ISI web of science. Search, sorting, and data extraction processes were conducted by a team of researchers and experts using a dynamic, reflexive examination process. Of 4139 studies collected from the search process, a total of 33 were included in the final analysis. Results of this study include the classification of technologies based on how these technologies are accessed and used by end users. In addition to the factors and mechanisms that influence unequal access to technologies, the results of this study highlight the importance of variations in use that importantly shape social inequalities in health. Additionally, focus on health care services technologies must be accompanied by investigating emerging technologies influencing healthy lifestyle, genomics, and personalized devices in health. Findings also suggest that choosing one measure of social position over another has important implications for the interpretation of research results. Furthermore, understanding the pathways through which various innovative health technologies reduce or (re)produce social inequalities in health is context dependent. In order to better understand social inequalities in health, these contextual variations draw attention to the need for critical distinctions between technologies based on how these various technologies are accessed and used. The results of this study provide a comprehensive starting point for future research to further investigate how innovative technologies may influence the unequal distribution of health as a human right.

Impact of the tree prior on estimating clock rates during epidemic outbreaks

PNAS – Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States
of America

http://www.pnas.org/content/early/
[Accessed 7 April 2018]

Impact of the tree prior on estimating clock rates during epidemic outbreaks
Simon Möller, Louis du Plessis and Tanja Stadler
PNAS April 2, 2018. 201713314; published ahead of print April 2, 2018. https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.1713314115

A survey instrument for measuring vaccine acceptance

Preventive Medicine
Volume 109  Pages 1-124 (April 2018)
https://www.sciencedirect.com/journal/preventive-medicine/vol/109/suppl/C

Regular Articles
A survey instrument for measuring vaccine acceptance
Original research article
Pages 1-7
Dilshani Sarathchandra, Mark C. Navin, Mark A. Largent, Aaron M. McCright
Abstract
Accurately measuring vaccine acceptance is important, especially under current conditions in which misinformation may increase public anxiety about vaccines and politicize vaccination policies. We integrated substantive knowledge, conceptualization and measurement expertise, and survey design principles to develop an instrument for measuring vaccine acceptance across the general public. Given this broad goal, we expect our novel instrument will complement, rather than replace, existing instruments designed specifically to measure parents’ vaccine hesitancy. Our instrument measures five key facets of vaccine acceptance: (1) perceived safety of vaccines; (2) perceived effectiveness and necessity of vaccines; (3) acceptance of the selection and scheduling of vaccines; (4) positive values and affect toward vaccines; and (5) perceived legitimacy of authorities to require vaccinations. We report results of analyses demonstrating the reliability and validity of this instrument. High Cronbach’s alpha values for five sub-scales and for the full scale indicate the instrument’s reliability, and the consistent performance of expected predictors (i.e., trust in biologists, conspiratorial ideation, and political ideology) demonstrates the instrument’s construct validity. Further, scientific reasoning increases vaccine acceptance among liberals but decreases vaccine acceptance among conservatives, which is consistent with motivated cognition. Also, trust in biologists has a stronger positive effect on vaccine acceptance among conservatives than among liberals, signaling a potentially promising means to reduce political polarization on vaccines and increase vaccine acceptance across the general public. We end by identifying key ways that public health researchers, science studies scholars, and health practitioners may employ the full (or short) version of our vaccine acceptance instrument.

Service quality and parents’ willingness to get adolescents HPV vaccine from pharmacists

Preventive Medicine
Volume 109  Pages 1-124 (April 2018)
https://www.sciencedirect.com/journal/preventive-medicine/vol/109/suppl/C

Service quality and parents’ willingness to get adolescents HPV vaccine from pharmacists
Original research article
Pages 106-112
Parth D. Shah, William A. Calo, Macary W. Marciniak, Carol E. Golin, … Noel T. Brewer
Abstract
We sought to examine whether pharmacy service quality was associated with parents’ willingness to have immunizing pharmacists administer human papillomavirus (HPV) vaccine to their adolescent children. Participants were a national sample of 1504 US parents of adolescents ages 11 to 17 who completed an online survey in 2014. Analyses used structural equation modeling. Parents rated service quality and feelings of satisfaction with their pharmacies as moderate to high. Many (44%) were willing to get HPV vaccine from immunizing pharmacists for their adolescent children. Compared with parents who went to chain pharmacies, parents who went to independent pharmacies gave higher ratings of service quality (professionalism, confidentiality, milieu, all p < .001). Parents who went to clinic pharmacies, compared with parents who went to chain pharmacies gave lower ratings for milieu (p < .01). Parents who went to independent pharmacies had lower willingness to get HPV vaccine from pharmacists compared to parents who went to chain pharmacies (p = .001), but there was no difference in willingness for parents who went to clinic versus chain pharmacies. Service quality and satisfaction partially mediated the effect between independent pharmacies compared to chain pharmacies and willingness (p < .05). Parents who knew their pharmacists or expressed more confidence in HPV vaccine also had higher willingness to get their children HPV vaccine from pharmacist. Many parents were willing to go to immunizing pharmacists for their children’s HPV vaccination. Pharmacies that are considering offering HPV vaccine may be able to improve vaccine uptake by increasing perception of service quality.

 

The future control of rotavirus disease: Can live oral vaccines alone solve the rotavirus problem?

Vaccine
Volume 36, Issue 17   Pages 2227-2384 (19 April 2018)
https://www.sciencedirect.com/journal/vaccine/vol/36/issue/17

Short communication
The future control of rotavirus disease: Can live oral vaccines alone solve the rotavirus problem?
Pages 2233-2236
Roger I. Glass, Baoming Jiang, Umesh Parashar
Abstract
Live oral rotavirus (RV) vaccines used worldwide are most effective in reducing diarrheal hospitalizations from RV in high income countries and least effective in low income countries where RV remains a prime cause of death in children. Research has failed to fully explain the reason for this difference of efficacy for RV vaccines, an observation made with other live oral vaccines for polio, cholera and typhoid fever. Use of parenteral vaccines have been successful in overcoming this problem for both polio and typhoid and parenteral RV vaccines are now in development. This approach should be pursued for rotavirus vaccine as well because in low income countries where oral RV vaccines have been introduced and are only partially effective, RV remains the most common cause of diarrhea in children under 5 years. The ultimate control of RV diarrheal will likely require both oral and parenteral vaccines.

 

A review of recommendations for rotavirus vaccination in Europe: Arguments for change

Vaccine
Volume 36, Issue 17   Pages 2227-2384 (19 April 2018)
https://www.sciencedirect.com/journal/vaccine/vol/36/issue/17

Reviews
A review of recommendations for rotavirus vaccination in Europe: Arguments for change
Open access – Review article
Pages 2243-2253
Dirk Poelaert, Priya Pereira, Robert Gardner, Baudouin Standaert, Bernd Benninghoff

A bibliometric analysis of systematic reviews on vaccines and immunisation

Vaccine
Volume 36, Issue 17   Pages 2227-2384 (19 April 2018)
https://www.sciencedirect.com/journal/vaccine/vol/36/issue/17

A bibliometric analysis of systematic reviews on vaccines and immunisation
Open access – Review article
Pages 2254-2261
Silke Fernandes, Mark Jit, Fiammetta Bozzani, Ulla K. Griffiths, … Helen E.D. Burchett
Abstract
Introduction
SYSVAC is an online bibliographic database of systematic reviews and systematic review protocols on vaccines and immunisation compiled by the London School of Hygiene & Tropical Medicine and hosted by the World Health Organization (WHO) through their National Immunization Technical Advisory Groups (NITAG) resource centre (www.nitag-resource.org). Here the development of the database and a bibliometric review of its content is presented, describing trends in the publication of policy-relevant systematic reviews on vaccines and immunisation from 2008 to 2016.
Materials and methods
Searches were conducted in seven scientific databases according to a standardized search protocol, initially in 2014 with the most recent update in January 2017. Abstracts and titles were screened according to specific inclusion criteria. All included publications were coded into relevant categories based on a standardized protocol and subsequently analysed to look at trends in time, topic, area of focus, population and geographic location.
Results
After screening for inclusion criteria, 1285 systematic reviews were included in the database. While in 2008 there were only 34 systematic reviews on a vaccine-related topic, this increased to 322 in 2016. The most frequent pathogens/diseases studied were influenza, human papillomavirus and pneumococcus. There were several areas of duplication and overlap.
Discussion
As more systematic reviews are published it becomes increasingly time-consuming for decision-makers to identify relevant information among the ever-increasing volume available. The risk of duplication also increases, particularly given the current lack of coordination of systematic reviews on vaccine-related questions, both in terms of their commissioning and their execution. The SYSVAC database offers an accessible catalogue of vaccine-relevant systematic reviews with, where possible access or a link to the full-text.
Conclusions
SYSVAC provides a freely searchable platform to identify existing vaccine-policy-relevant systematic reviews. Systematic reviews will need to be assessed adequately for each specific question and quality.

Long-term immunity to hepatitis B following vaccination in infancy: Real-world data analysis

Vaccine
Volume 36, Issue 17   Pages 2227-2384 (19 April 2018)
https://www.sciencedirect.com/journal/vaccine/vol/36/issue/17

Regular papers
Long-term immunity to hepatitis B following vaccination in infancy: Real-world data analysis
Original research article
Pages 2288-2292
Gil Klinger, Gabriel Chodick, Itzhak Levy
Abstract
Background
Hepatitis B virus (HBV) vaccination has decreased the prevalence of chronic HBV infections and their sequelae. However, whether vaccination at birth provides lifelong protection is unclear.
Objective
To assess long-term immunity following neonatal HBV immunization in a large population-based cohort.
Methods
Using the database of a 2 million member sick fund in Israel, we identified all subjects born after introduction of universal HBV vaccination in Israel (January 1992 through December 2014), that were tested for hepatitis B surface antibody (anti-HBs Ab’s). Years since vaccination were categorized into 5-year groups and linear trends in the seroprevalence of HBV immunity were calculated. Anamnestic response and presence of Hepatitis B surface antigen (HBs Ag) were assessed.
Results
Included were 20,634 tested individuals. Mean (±SD) age at testing was 14.8 (±5.4) years. Mean anti-HBs Ab levels declined with time to 16.39 mIU/ml in the 15–20 year group (P < 0.001). The proportion of negative results increased gradually (P < 0.001) to 66.7% after 15 years. Anamnestic response assessment showed that 604 of 644 seronegative subjects (93.8%, 95% CI: 91.6–95.5%) became seropositive after a booster dose. HBs Ag was identified in 91 of the 20,634 (4.4 per 1000 study participants).
Conclusions
Following vaccination, anti-HB’s Ab’s progressively decline, with only a third of the population retaining protective levels after 15 years. In adolescence, anamnestic response shows that nearly all revaccinated adolescents exhibit immunity. A low rate of Hepatitis B infection was demonstrated despite vaccination of nearly all newborns.

Knowledge, attitudes, and practices regarding hepatitis B vaccination among hospital-based doctors and nurses in China: Results of a multi-site survey

Vaccine
Volume 36, Issue 17   Pages 2227-2384 (19 April 2018)
https://www.sciencedirect.com/journal/vaccine/vol/36/issue/17

Knowledge, attitudes, and practices regarding hepatitis B vaccination among hospital-based doctors and nurses in China: Results of a multi-site survey
Original research article
Pages 2307-2313
Yan Liu, Chao Ma, Haimei Jia, Erping Xu, … Lixin Hao

A multi-country study of dengue vaccination strategies with Dengvaxia and a future vaccine candidate in three dengue-endemic countries: Vietnam, Thailand, and Colombia

Vaccine
Volume 36, Issue 17   Pages 2227-2384 (19 April 2018)
https://www.sciencedirect.com/journal/vaccine/vol/36/issue/17

A multi-country study of dengue vaccination strategies with Dengvaxia and a future vaccine candidate in three dengue-endemic countries: Vietnam, Thailand, and Colombia
Original research article
Pages 2346-2355
Jung-Seok Lee, José Lourenço, Sunetra Gupta, Andrew Farlow
Abstract
Background
The dengue vaccination era began when Dengvaxia (CYD-TDV) became available in 2016. In addition, several second-generation vaccine candidates are currently in phase 3 trials, suggesting that a broader availability of dengue vaccines may be possible in the near future. Advancing on the recent WHO-SAGE recommendations for the safe and effective use of CYD-TDV at the regional level on average, this study investigates the vaccination impacts and cost-effectiveness of CYD-TDV and of a hypothetical new vaccine candidate (NVC) in a country-specific manner for three endemic countries: Vietnam, Thailand, and Colombia.
Methods
The vaccination impacts of CYD-TDV and NVC were derived by fitting the empirical seroprevalence rates of 9 year olds into an individual-based meta-population transmission model, previously used for the WHO-SAGE working group. The disability-adjusted life years were estimated by applying country-specific parametric values. The cost-effectiveness analyses of four intervention strategies in combination with routine and catch-up campaigns were compared for both vaccines to inform decision makers regarding the most suitable immunization program in each of the three countries.
Results and conclusion
Both CYD-TDV and NVC could be cost-effective at the DALY threshold cost of $2000 depending upon vaccination costs. With CYD-TDV, targeting 9 year olds in routine vaccination programs and 10–29 year olds as a one-off catch-up campaign was the most cost-effective strategy in all three countries. With NVC, while the most cost-effective strategy was to vaccinate 9–29 and 9–18 year olds in Vietnam and Thailand respectively, vaccinating younger age cohorts between 1 and 5 years old in Colombia was more cost-effective than other strategies. Given that three countries will soon face decisions regarding whether and how to incorporate CYD-TDV or future dengue vaccines into their budget-constrained national immunization programs, the current study outcomes can be used to help decision makers understand the expected impacts and cost-effectiveness of such vaccines.

New Kids on the Block: RNA-Based Influenza Virus Vaccines

Vaccines — Open Access Journal
http://www.mdpi.com/journal/vaccines
(Accessed 7 April 2018)

Open Access
Feature Paper  Review
New Kids on the Block: RNA-Based Influenza Virus Vaccines
by Francesco Berlanda Scorza and Norbert Pardi
Vaccines 2018, 6(2), 20; doi:10.3390/vaccines6020020 – 1 April 2018
Abstract
RNA-based immunization strategies have emerged as promising alternatives to conventional vaccine approaches. A substantial body of published work demonstrates that RNA vaccines can elicit potent, protective immune responses against various pathogens. Consonant with its huge impact on public health, influenza virus is one of the best studied targets of RNA vaccine research. Currently licensed influenza vaccines show variable levels of protection against seasonal influenza virus strains but are inadequate against drifted and pandemic viruses. In recent years, several types of RNA vaccines demonstrated efficacy against influenza virus infections in preclinical models. Additionally, comparative studies demonstrated the superiority of some RNA vaccines over the currently used inactivated influenza virus vaccines in animal models. Based on these promising preclinical results, clinical trials have been initiated and should provide valuable information about the translatability of the impressive preclinical data to humans. This review briefly describes RNA-based vaccination strategies, summarizes published preclinical and clinical data, highlights the roadblocks that need to be overcome for clinical applications, discusses the landscape of industrial development, and shares the authors’ personal perspectives about the future of RNA-based influenza virus vaccines

 

From Google Scholar & other sources: Selected Journal Articles, Newsletters, Dissertations, Theses, Commentary

From Google Scholar & other sources: Selected Journal Articles, Newsletters, Dissertations, Theses, Commentary

Psychological Science in the Public Interest
First Published April 3, 2018
Research Article
Increasing Vaccination: Putting Psychological Science Into Action
Noel T. Brewer, Gretchen B. Chapman, Alexander J. Rothman, …
Abstract
Vaccination is one of the great achievements of the 20th century, yet persistent public-health problems include inadequate, delayed, and unstable vaccination uptake. Psychology offers three general propositions for understanding and intervening to increase uptake where vaccines are available and affordable. The first proposition is that thoughts and feelings can motivate getting vaccinated. Hundreds of studies have shown that risk beliefs and anticipated regret about infectious disease correlate reliably with getting vaccinated; low confidence in vaccine effectiveness and concern about safety correlate reliably with not getting vaccinated. We were surprised to find that few randomized trials have successfully changed what people think and feel about vaccines, and those few that succeeded were minimally effective in increasing uptake. The second proposition is that social processes can motivate getting vaccinated. Substantial research has shown that social norms are associated with vaccination, but few interventions examined whether normative messages increase vaccination uptake. Many experimental studies have relied on hypothetical scenarios to demonstrate that altruism and free riding (i.e., taking advantage of the protection provided by others) can affect intended behavior, but few randomized trials have tested strategies to change social processes to increase vaccination uptake. The third proposition is that interventions can facilitate vaccination directly by leveraging, but not trying to change, what people think and feel. These interventions are by far the most plentiful and effective in the literature. To increase vaccine uptake, these interventions build on existing favorable intentions by facilitating action (through reminders, prompts, and primes) and reducing barriers (through logistics and healthy defaults); these interventions also shape behavior (through incentives, sanctions, and requirements). Although identification of principles for changing thoughts and feelings to motivate vaccination is a work in progress, psychological principles can now inform the design of systems and policies to directly facilitate action.

 

International Journal of Current Microbiology and Applied Sciences
Volume 7 Number 03 (2018)
Original Research Article
Knowledge and Awareness of Cervical Cancer, Human Papillomavirus (HPV), and HPV Vaccine among Screening Women: A Cross-Sectional Study from a Tertiary Care Hospital in South India
P Arumugam, S Habeebullah, SC Parija
Abstract
Even though cervical cancer is quite a common cancer in India, there are limited studies on the knowledge and awareness about the disease. It is important to assess the knowledge among the screening populations have about cervical cancer and Human papillomavirus (HPV) and their attitudes toward HPV vaccination, as it will directly influence their decision-making for the acceptability of healthcare programs. Public education and awareness about HPV infection, HPV vaccination programs are pertinent for a successful cervical cancer screening program available in the country. Our present study was designed to assess the level of knowledge and awareness about cervical cancer, HPV, and the HPV vaccine among screening women in tertiary care hospital, Puducherry. Qualitative data were collected from screening population through in-depth interviews in the Gynecological Outpatient Department at JIPMER, a tertiary care hospital in India during July 2013 – Aug 2014. A total of 152 women were recruited and asked to participate in a questionnaire-based interview that collected qualitative data about their awareness and knowledge about: (1) cervical cancer, (2) Human papillomavirus and (3) HPV vaccine. The study was approved by the institutional ethics committee. Written informed consent was taken from the women who were enrolled in this study.

Health Promotion Practice
First Published March 29, 2018
HPV Knowledge and Vaccine Initiation Among Mexican-Born Farmworkers in North Carolina
KF Furgurson, JC Sandberg, FC Hsu, DC Mora…
Abstract
The human papilloma virus (HPV) vaccine is an effective but underused cancer prevention tool. This study assessed knowledge of HPV and HPV vaccine initiation among Mexican-born farmworkers in North Carolina. Interviewer-administered questionnaires were conducted with 100 Latino farmworkers and 100 nonfarmworker Latino North Carolina residents in 2015 as part of an ongoing community-based participatory research project. Farmworkers had low levels of knowledge about HPV and the HPV vaccine. They had a similar amount of HPV and HPV vaccine knowledge compared to nonfarmworkers. Farmworkers and nonfarmworkers learned about the HPV vaccine from different sources. Adolescent children of farmworkers and nonfarmworkers had low HPV vaccine initiation. However, for children living in the United States with farmworker parents, vaccine initiation was high. To prevent HPV-related cancers and improve health equity, interventions are needed in order to increase HPV education and vaccine initiation among children of Mexican-born farmworkers and nonfarmworkers. Public health programs should look for partners outside the traditional health care setting to reach underserved populations. Other key strategies include promoting catch-up vaccines, improving patient–provider communication, and providing case management services.

Media/Policy Watch

Media/Policy Watch
This watch section is intended to alert readers to substantive news, analysis and opinion from the general media and selected think tanks and similar organizations on vaccines, immunization, global public health and related themes. Media Watch is not intended to be exhaustive, but indicative of themes and issues CVEP is actively tracking. This section will grow from an initial base of newspapers, magazines and blog sources, and is segregated from Journal Watch above which scans the peer-reviewed journal ecology.

We acknowledge the Western/Northern bias in this initial selection of titles and invite suggestions for expanded coverage. We are conservative in our outlook in adding news sources which largely report on primary content we are already covering above. Many electronic media sources have tiered, fee-based subscription models for access. We will provide full-text where content is published without restriction, but most publications require registration and some subscription level.

Washington Post
http://www.washingtonpost.com/
Accessed 7 April 2018

People can’t be educated into vaccinations, but behavioural nudges help, study finds
4 April 2018
Vaccines were one of the great inventions of modern history. They helped stop America’s polio epidemic in the 1950s, when it was paralyzing thousands and killing at least 3,000 a year. They have prevented the deaths of millions worldwide from diseases such as diphtheria, smallpox, measles and tetanus. And yet many people are reluctant to get their shots or vaccinate their children. A study published Wednesday concludes that using education campaigns, and simply trying to persuade people to get the shots, is far less effective than using indirect behavioral nudges.
[See Google Scholar section above for full abstract]

Think Tanks et al

Think Tanks et al
 

Brookings
http://www.brookings.edu/
Accessed 7 April 2018

TechTank
Less than four percent of private investment in health R&D targets the developing world
Liz Sablich
Friday, April 6, 2018
A recent report published by the Brookings Private Sector Global Health R&D Project found that the private sector devotes at least $159.9 billion to investments related to health research and development (R&D) annually. That total includes $156.7 billion from pharmaceutical companies and $3.2 billion from venture capital firms, and encompasses investments focused on both the developed and developing world. But when the researchers further broke out the spending, they found that an exceedingly small share was dedicated to the developing world…

CSIS
https://www.csis.org/
Accessed 7 April 2018

Publication
A Ripe Moment for Reducing Vaccine-Preventable Disease 
In her latest commentary, my colleague Nellie Bristol, Global Health Policy Center Senior Fellow, discusses the threat that decreased U.S. foreign assistance will have on the vast strides made in strengthening immunizations systems globally. Over the next several years, three global health activities could result in sustained increases in global vaccination rates and amplify U.S. investments in vaccine promotion mechanisms: immunization surveillance goals outlined in the Global Health Security Agenda; worldwide delivery of the inactivated polio vaccine; and polio transition, which involves the repurposing of polio infrastructure for other health activities. However, an uncertain budget future for these three activities threatens the expansion of this global public good. Nellie provides policy recommendations for the U.S. government that would ensure that the United States remains a leader in global health and pushes forward proven disease prevention interventions that will protect Americans at home and abroad.

Vaccines and Global Health: The Week in Review 31 March 2018

Vaccines and Global Health: The Week in Review is a weekly digest  summarizing news, events, announcements, peer-reviewed articles and research in the global vaccine ethics and policy space. Content is aggregated from key governmental, NGO, international organization and industry sources, key peer-reviewed journals, and other media channels. This summary proceeds from the broad base of themes and issues monitored by the Center for Vaccine Ethics & Policy in its work: it is not intended to be exhaustive in its coverage. You are viewing the blog version of our weekly digest, typically comprised of between 30 and 40 posts below all dated with the current issue date

.– Request an Email Summary: Vaccines and Global Health : The Week in Review is published as a single email summary, scheduled for release each Saturday evening before midnight (EDT in the U.S.). If you would like to receive the email version, please send your request to david.r.curry@centerforvaccineethicsandpolicy.org.

 pdf version A pdf of the current issue is available here: Vaccines and Global Health_The Week in Review_31 March 2018

– blog edition: comprised of the approx. 35+ entries posted below.

– Twitter:  Readers can also follow developments on twitter: @vaxethicspolicy.
.
– Links:  We endeavor to test each link as we incorporate it into any post, but recognize that some links may become “stale” as publications and websites reorganize content over time. We apologize in advance for any links that may not be operative. We believe the contextual information in a given post should allow retrieval, but please contact us as above for assistance if necessary.

Support this knowledge-sharing service: Your financial support helps us cover our costs and to address a current shortfall in our annual operating budget. Click here to donate and thank you in advance for your contribution.

.
David R. Curry, MS
Executive Director
Center for Vaccine Ethics and Policy

First Progress Report of the Chairperson of the Commission on the Africa Center for Disease Control

Milestones :: Perspectives

First Progress Report of the Chairperson of the Commission on the Africa Center for Disease Control

First Progress Report (En) :: 11 pages
March 29, 2018
Excerpt
OVERVIEW OF THE PUBLIC HEALTH CHALLENGES IN AFRICA
2. Africa is facing a triple burden of disease, namely, communicable diseases such as HIV/AIDS, tuberculosis and malaria; non-communicable diseases; injuries and trauma. Public health events like the West Africa Ebola Virus Disease outbreak, which claimed over 11,000 African lives (2014−2016), cholera outbreaks, which have affected southern, central, and eastern Africa in recent years, and other natural disasters, such as the devastating mudslide in Sierra Leone, in which over 1000 people died (2017), are pressing concerns. In the first three months of 2018, 43 ongoing outbreaks occurring on the African continent have been reported by the World Health Organization. In 2016, over 1 million new HIV infections were diagnosed in Africa. Each of these diseases or events impact significant numbers of Africans, have the potential to reverse fragile economic gains (the Ebola outbreak resulted in USD 2.2 billion in gross domestic product losses for Guinea, Liberia, and Sierra Leone), and may ultimately become global security threats.

3. Globally, the emergence and re-emergence of infectious diseases with pandemic potential is gaining widespread attention. Over the past three and half decades, at least 30 new infectious agents affecting humans have emerged, most of which are zoonotic. The origins of these agents have been shown to correlate significantly with socioeconomic, environmental, and
ecological factors, particularly trends in urbanization and population growth (Africa’s population is expected to increase from 1.2 billion to 2.4 billion people by the year 2050). Additionally, the widespread use of medications has created an enormous threat due to emerging antimicrobial resistance.

4. Agenda 2063 emphasizes the need to view health as a development issue ifthe continent is to prosper and achieve its objective (Aspiration 1, Goal 3) that citizens are healthy, well-nourished and have long lives. The Africa HealthStrategy (AHS 2016−2030), an overarching framework that guides MemberState implementation of health policies. The strategy highlights Africa Centre for Disease Control and Prevention role in disease prevention, surveillance,
emergency preparedness and response…

…24. Africa CDC is pursuing a mechanism for sustainable financing through businesses, the private sector, and African philanthropy. The Africa CDC private sector and philanthropy engagement strategy has been developed and presented to the Africa CDC Governing Board. This strategy has been aligned and coordinated with plans for Africa CDC Foundation. A priority
focus has been on identifying African companies dealing in telecommunications and other sectors. Finally, Africa CDC is engaging African philanthropists who have given historical support to the African health agenda.

V. OBSERVATIONS
25. Africa CDC has recorded notable achievements to mark its first year of existence. It is successfully fulfilling the mandate it received from the Assembly, even while it continually expands and develops new avenues for strengthening public health capacity on the African continent.

26. Member States have demonstrated their continued support and enthusiasm for Africa CDC by robust participation to produce various framework documents that will guide their public health activities at the national level. These framework documents include a strategy to introduce event-based surveillance at the continental, regional, and national levels; a framework to establish a national public health institute in every Member State; a framework
to address the threat of antimicrobial resistance.

27. In its inaugural year, Africa CDC responded to ten public health events in Member States with a limited technical staff (only ten epidemiologists are currently seconded to Africa CDC). These same epidemiologists also provide day-to-day administrative and management support to operations at the Africa CDC secretariat.

28. While three of the Africa CDC RCC [Regionla Coordinating Centers] have had successful political launches, they require substantial human resource support to ensure that the technical
aspects of Africa CDC’s strategic plan is successfully implemented at the regional level. Without each RCC, Africa CDC has limited ability to encourage public health coordination among Member States. It is crucial to ensure that the West Africa and North Africa are launched in 2018. I look forward to nominating a North African technical public health institution motivated and equipped to provide support to the entire region, cognizant of the diverse array of needs represented in North Africa.

29. I encourage Member States to participate actively in the public health platform established by the Regional Collaborating Centres. Laboratory networks, coordination during public health events, and information exchange are critical elements of the RCC mandate.

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Featured Journal Content  :: Politics and public trust shape vaccine risk perceptions

Featured Journal Content 

Nature Human Behaviour
Published online: 26 March 2018
https://www.nature.com/nathumbehav/

World View
Politics and public trust shape vaccine risk perceptions
Heidi J. Larson
Public mistrust of vaccines is heightening, fuelled by new communication environments such as social media. Using the recent case of the Dengvaxia vaccine, Heidi Larson explores public and political reactions to vaccine risks.
 
There is something about vaccines, and getting vaccinated, that touches nerves — personal, political and cultural nerves. It’s not natural; it hurts (“just a little bit”), and sometimes has side effects. Although these are mostly minor issues, they still provoke vaccine anxiety, reluctance and refusal. Vaccines are regulated, and sometimes mandated, by government, and vaccination is resisted by those who feel their personal freedom is being imposed upon. And those who do not trust the government — often for reasons unrelated to vaccines — sometimes extend their distrust of government to distrust of vaccines, as well as towards the people and systems that deliver them. In addition, vaccines are produced by the pharmaceutical industry, which — even in its most generous and humanity-driven moments — aims to generate profit, provoking public concerns about motives. Finally, adding to these other multiple levers of influence on public trust is a mix of cultural, religious and philosophical views on health and disease prevention. Together, this complex mix of human behaviours shapes the Achilles’ heel of vaccination, mediating and disrupting the potential to leverage the full ‘power and strength’ of vaccine technology.

It is, in many ways, a formidable achievement that local and global immunization efforts over the past four decades have managed to navigate these challenging external factors to achieve relatively high vaccine coverage, at least of basic childhood vaccines. But the tide is changing. What were once isolated, local pockets of vaccine resistance or refusal, whether for political, cultural or other reasons, are now becoming more mainstream, more connected and more complicated to address. The radically changed communication environment allows social media and the Internet to fuel the viral spread of vaccine sentiments globally, as well as allowing organizations of like-minded individuals to connect across remote locations.

It is revealing to look at how memes of quickly spreading vaccine questions and concerns find fertile ground in some settings, and gain little traction in others. In other words, politics and distrust in one setting can fuel a vaccine panic, while the same issues raised in another context can wither and die, with little impact on the vaccine programme.

Consider the recent saga around Dengvaxia, the first promising vaccine against dengue fever, a disease that afflicts millions of people globally. In early 2016, the World Health Organization issued a statement supporting this new vaccine for countries with high burdens of dengue. In April 2016, the Philippines was the first country to introduce the vaccine, and in August 2016, Brazil also approved their Dengvaxia vaccine programme. Both countries were facing serious outbreaks of dengue and the new vaccine was a glimmer of hope to mitigate the individual and social distress caused by the disease.

In November 2017, a notice was issued by Dengvaxia’s producer, Sanofi, calling for a relabeling of the vaccine to indicate an additional risk. In short, Sanofi reported that while the vaccine provided protection against future severe dengue fever among those who had already been exposed to dengue, there was new evidence that confirmed that those who had not previously been infected by dengue were at risk of more, rather than less, severe dengue.

Although the announcement did not call for a withdrawal of the vaccine, but recommended a more targeted use of it, countries that had previously approved the vaccine reacted very differently. The Philippines made international headlines with public outrage and a suspension of the vaccine programme, as well as legal action against the manufacturer. The social media tirades and political tensions continue, with news reports that the Dengvaxia panic is spilling over to public hesitation around other vaccines. Brazil, on the other hand, recognized that the vaccine still had benefits and did not suspend the vaccine, but brought special attention to the risks and need to target the use of the vaccine.

There are clearly vaccine risks that need to be addressed, and reasonable questions around whether these risks could have been reported earlier, but the scope and scale of the public and political reaction in the different settings reflects the different underlying political contexts as well as political players. What do these different public and political reactions to vaccine risks — real or perceived — tell us?

These larger-scale dynamics are different from the individual doctor-to-patient influences on vaccine acceptance. These dynamics need different research methods than studies investigating individual decision-making if we are to understand what triggers these varied reactions over time and place. Political science, digital epidemiology, social anthropology and risk science are all needed to genuinely understand and address the new realities around vaccines. These new realities include a far more complex vaccine environment, an era of overall low trust at many levels (with a consequent heightened risk aversion), and a dramatically changed communication environment allowing the rapid spread of emotional contagion and its behavioural consequences.
 
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Wellcome’s approach to equitable access to healthcare interventions

Editor’s Note:
We include the full text of this important commitment to helping assure access to healthcare interventions released by Wellcome Trust. We anticipate that it could – and should – inform commitments and reporting by other funders, development organizations and commercial entities.
 
Wellcome’s approach to equitable access to healthcare interventions
This statement outlines Wellcome’s approach to maximising access to healthcare interventions for people worldwide, with a focus on low- and middle-income countries (LMICs).
27 March 2018
The statement covers our approach within our funding and policy work, and will guide us when considering new ideas and opportunities.

It is intentionally high level – more detail on implementation is provided in complementary policy papers and contractual mechanisms.

Context
The UN Sustainable Development Goals (opens in a new tab), which support the implementation of universal health coverage by 2030, recognise that more equitable and timely access to health interventions such as medicines, vaccines, diagnostics and therapies is an important driver of good health and improved lives.

Currently, access to healthcare is not equitable. According to the World Health Organization, 30 per cent of the world’s population, and over 50 per cent of the population in parts of Africa and Asia, do not have regular access to essential medicines. Around 2 billion people lack access to life-changing medicines and other interventions.

Recent years have seen significant progress, made through collaboration between different actors and using various mechanisms and business models. These include equitable pricing, more flexible approaches to intellectual property (IP), product development partnerships, increased donor funding, more efficient procurement, and effective advocacy by civil society. They have significantly increased the range of interventions available and the number of people who can access them.

However, there is much more to do. The barriers to equitable access are many and varied. They include inadequate healthcare systems, lack of infrastructure, funding gaps, pricing practices, and sub-optimal regulatory and procurement processes. IP is also a barrier if rights are not secured and managed in a manner that enables equitable access. To overcome these barriers, stakeholders must be committed to action and working together.

Wellcome will lead efforts to deliver equitable access. It is our mission and obligation to maximise the public benefit delivered from our funding. This will only be achieved if the interventions we fund reach those who need them.
 
Our role
Wellcome already makes an important contribution to access. We spend around £1 billion each year supporting some 14,000 researchers in over 70 countries to advance ideas, drive reform and support innovation to improve health. We also partner with others to fund new approaches. These include CEPI (opens in a new tab) (the Coalition for Epidemic Preparedness Innovations), which finances and coordinates the development of new vaccines to prevent and contain infectious disease epidemics, and CARB-X (opens in a new tab), which aims to accelerate the development of new antimicrobials.

We will do more through our funding, advocacy and direct activities. Across the public and private sectors, and in civil society, we will work with others where they have greater expertise or impact, for example in healthcare infrastructure and funding. Our approach will be applied globally across Wellcome’s activities, but with a focus on initiatives that will particularly benefit vulnerable populations in LMICs.

We recognise that levels of access, barriers and the rate of change possible will vary significantly between different countries and regions. So, we will adopt approaches tailored to specific diseases, technologies and geographies.

To accelerate equitable access, we will work throughout the product development life cycle – from discovery, development and manufacturing to the scaling up of health interventions and health systems. This will ensure that interventions are fit for purpose for different settings and available for different populations to purchase and use.

Our principles
To broaden vulnerable populations’ access to new and existing high-quality interventions, products whose development we support must be affordable, appropriate, adapted and available, particularly in LMICs.

We will achieve this through four key principles:

  1. Support sustainable access and innovation

:: To improve global health, we must improve existing interventions and find new ones that address unmet needs, and then provide timely access to them. Our policies and processes will support innovation and access, to ensure both can be secured on a long-term, sustainable basis.
:: To enable the development of new interventions for vulnerable populations, we will ensure that our funding conditions incentivise needs-based research and support a vibrant global research environment, including in LMICs.
: We will work with producers, policy makers and procurers to encourage approaches to registration, quality of medicines, pricing and use of IP that incentivise innovation and increase timely access.

  1. Foster collaboration and partnership

:: Sustainable innovation and access requires different mechanisms and cooperation between a range of stakeholders. We will collaborate with others to explore and generate new ideas and funding models.
:: When we collaborate, we will make clear our expectation that the products that we fund will be affordable and quickly accessible. We will expect our partners to share this commitment and help deliver it through different approaches.

  1. Be flexible and pragmatic

:: Our approach to achieving broader global access will be proportionate and tailored. We will take into account the nature of each award and awardee, the stage of development and potential future health benefits.
:: We will work with awardees to agree specific, proportionate and equitable access commitments that are appropriate for them and the stage of development of the intervention. This will ensure that any contractual obligations fairly reward the awardee as well as optimise access.
:: We do not believe that a one-size-fits-all model is the best way to achieve progress. It will be important to adopt different models and approaches for different product areas and geographies.
:: We want to make existing interventions more usable and accessible in LMICs. As well as supporting innovation to do this, we will seek to replicate existing successes and embed good practice, such as generic entry and patent pooling.

  1. Promote transparency to support innovation and access to products

:: We support the appropriate sharing of information to encourage innovation and broaden equitable, timely access. This will create a better shared understanding of the relationship between the costs of research and development, the price of products and appropriate levels of return.
:: We expect our researchers to manage research outputs in a way that will achieve the greatest health benefit. They should make outputs, including software, products and materials, widely available and should publish in open-access journals. This will ensure that other researchers can verify the work and build on it to advance knowledge and make health improvements. Products that emerge directly from research supported by Wellcome should similarly achieve the greatest health benefit.
:: We will share information about the status of product registration, the impact of products (such as the amount of product delivered or number of people benefitting) and other non-sensitive elements of the agreements and access plans agreed between Wellcome and the organisations we fund.
:: We will maintain the confidentiality of information that, if released, could disincentivise potential partners and deter innovation. This could include the cost structure of the interventions we fund and specific access provisions set in award agreements.
: We will report annually on the implementation of this approach and its outputs and impacts.

Our approach
We will use a range of tools to promote equitable and timely access, tailored to the nature of the funding, products and organisations involved.

Contractual mechanisms
Contractual mechanisms will be used on a case-by-case basis for those we fund and may include:
:: Requesting or requiring that awardees have an appropriate and proportionate global access plan that covers registration targets, plans to meet demand, flexible approaches to IP and other strategies that reflect ability to pay and ensure that economic barriers to access are low.
:: Tailored revenue-sharing arrangements to reward organisations that help deliver our access ambitions.
:: Stewardship plans outlining how to achieve the optimal use of an intervention, including, for example, how to avoid the misuse, overuse or abuse of antimicrobials and pain medicines.

Appropriate application of IP
:: To improve health and support the sustainability of projects we fund, the management of IP rights by the awardholder should incentivise innovation and support equitable access to it, being clear that different settings require different approaches.
:: IP management will not preclude the ability to secure commercial rewards. Awardees may receive private benefit from exploiting Wellcome-funded IP, provided that health improvement remains the primary outcome and as long as the benefit is necessary, reasonable and proportionate, in line with UK charity law.
:: We will respect our awardees’ and third parties’ IP rights, which we expect to be applied appropriately to deliver public health benefit. If we believe that IP developed using Wellcome funding is being used in a way that restricts health benefit, then we will work with the rights holder to ensure that the relevant IP is used appropriately. This might include not seeking or enforcing patents in low-income countries, voluntary licensing with broad geographic scope in middle-income countries, and patent pooling. In exceptional circumstances, such as IP being shelved or not taken forward for any reason, we will consider accessing the unexploited IP to deliver benefit in unserved countries.

Advocacy
:: We will be an active advocate for global innovation and access. We will develop policies, convene and participate in meetings and workshops, lead studies and collaborate with others. We will encourage other stakeholders to adopt holistic approaches to deliver access globally and to build global norms and systems that address that goal.

Conclusion
Too many people around the world lack access to essential medical interventions and knowledge. The approach outlined in this statement will allow Wellcome to maximise the impact of our funding, partnerships and policy work to increase timely equitable access and contribute to the goal of universal health coverage.

We will support research that delivers improvements in health and healthcare delivery. We are committed to enabling everyone, particularly vulnerable populations in LMICs, to have access to the life-changing benefits research delivers.

What this means for researchers we fund
We already expect our researchers to manage their research outputs in a way that will achieve the greatest health benefit. This means making outputs widely available and publishing in open access journals.
We set out what access good practice looks like for most of our grantholders in our intellectual property and patenting, Consent and revenue sharing agreement [DOC 165KB], and open access policies.
For Innovator Awards, we negotiate specific access conditions on a case-by-case basis.

Featured Journal Content :: The new WHO decision-making framework on vaccine use in acute humanitarian emergencies: MSF experience in Minkaman, South Sudan

Featured Journal Content

 Conflict and Health
http://www.conflictandhealth.com/
[Accessed 31 March 2018]

Case study
26 March 2018
The new WHO decision-making framework on vaccine use in acute humanitarian emergencies: MSF experience in Minkaman, South Sudan
Authors: Monica Rull, Sophie Masson, Nicolas Peyraud, Marco Simonelli, Alexandre Ventura, Claire Dorion, Francisco J. Luquero, Florent Uzzeni and Iza Cigleneki
Abstract
Introduction
The main causes of death during population movements can be prevented by addressing the population’s basic needs. In 2013, the World Health Organization (WHO) issued a framework for decision making to help prioritize vaccinations in acute humanitarian emergencies. This article describes MSF’s experience of applying this framework in addition to addressing key population needs in a displacement setting in Minkaman, South Sudan.
Case description
Military clashes broke out in South Sudan in December 2013. By May 2014, Minkaman, a village in the Lakes State, hosted some 85,000 displaced people. MSF arrived in Minkaman on 28 December 2013 and immediately provided interventions to address the key humanitarian needs (health care, access to drinking water, measles vaccination). The WHO framework was used to identify priority vaccines: those preventing outbreaks (measles, polio, oral cholera vaccine, and vaccine against meningococcal meningitis A (MenAfrivac®)) and those reducing childhood morbidity and mortality (pentavalent vaccine that combines diphtheria, tetanus, whooping cough, hepatitis B, and Haemophilus influenzae type B; pneumococcal vaccine; and rotavirus vaccine). By mid-March, access to primary and secondary health care was ensured, including community health activities and the provision of safe water. Mass vaccination campaigns against measles, polio, cholera, and meningitis had been organized. Vaccination campaigns against the main deadly childhood diseases, however, were not in place owing to lack of authorization by the Ministry of Health (MoH).
Conclusions
The first field use of the new WHO framework for prioritizing vaccines in acute emergencies is described. Although MSF was unable to implement the full package of priority vaccines because authorization could not be obtained from the MoH, a series of mass vaccination campaigns against key epidemic-prone diseases was successfully implemented within a complex emergency context. Together with covering the population’s basic needs, this might have contributed to reducing mortality levels below the emergency threshold and to the absence of epidemics. For the WHO framework to be used to its full potential it must not only be adapted for field use but, most importantly, national decision makers should be briefed on the framework and its practical implementation.

Emergencies

Emergencies

 
POLIO
Public Health Emergency of International Concern (PHEIC)
Polio this week as of 28 March 2018 [GPEI]
Summary of newly-reported viruses this week:
Afghanistan: One new case of wild poliovirus type 1 (WPV1) has been confirmed this week, occurring in Kandahar province. One new WPV1 positive environmental sample has been reported in Kabul province.
Pakistan: Two new WPV1 positive environmental samples have been reported, one in Sindh province, and one in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa province.
Somalia:  Confirmation of one new cVDPV2 positive environmental sample in Banadir province. This sample was advance notification last week.
 
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Syria cVDPV2 outbreak situation report 38, 27 March 2018
Situation update 27 March 2018
:: No new cases of cVDPV2 have been reported in 2018. The most recent case (by date of onset of paralysis) is 21 September 2017 from Boukamal district, Deir Ez-Zor governorate. The total number of cVDPV2 cases remains 74.
:: An independent outbreak response Review of the cVDPV2 outbreak in Syria is taking place this week. The review will look at the current epidemiological situation, the quality of immunization and surveillance response as well as the overall progress towards stopping the cVDPV2 transmission.
:: On 17 March 2018, representatives from the Lebanon and Syria Ministries of Health held the first joint cross border coordination meeting focused on acute flaccid paralysis (AFP) surveillance. Recommendations were made to ensure close coordination on AFP case detection, with focus on Syrian populations in Lebanon and consistent exchange of information on cross border notified AFP cases.
:: A two day meeting to discuss progress of immunization in Syria in 2017 was held in Amman, Jordan on 21 – 22 March. Representatives from WHO, UNICEF and GAVI discussed all immunization activities and the cVDPV2 outbreak response, including future support opportunities.
:: Four fixed site vaccination centres have been established to ensure internally displaced persons (IDPs) moving from Ghouta receive polio vaccine alongside all other antigens. · A nationwide immunization round aiming to reach more than 2.4 million children aged less than 5 years with bivalent OPV (bOPV) has concluded.
 
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WHO Grade 3 Emergencies  [to 31 March 2018]
The Syrian Arab Republic
:: Syria cVDPV2 outbreak situation report 38, 27 March 2018
[See Polio above]

WHO appeals for international community support; warns of grave health risks to Rohingya refugees in rainy season
SEAR/PR/1684

Dhaka, 29 March 2018: With a grossly underfunded health sector grappling to meet the needs of 1.3 million Rohingyas in Bangladesh’s Cox’s Bazar, the World Health Organization has appealed to the international community to contribute generously to enable appropriate and timely health services to this highly vulnerable population, now facing grave risks to their lives and health in view of the coming rainy season.

“This is one of the biggest humanitarian crisis in recent times. No single agency or the Government of Bangladesh alone can meet the massive health needs of such a large population group. The Rohingya population are settled in an area that is prone to cyclone, and a terrain that would be flooded as soon as rains begin. The risk of outbreak of life threatening water and vector borne diseases under such conditions is huge,” said Dr Poonam Khetrapal Singh, Regional Director, World Health Organization South-East Asia, at a meeting of partners here.

Coordinating the work of over a 100 partners on the ground along with the Ministry of Health, WHO has facilitated the contingency plan for the rainy season and coordinated a simulation around it. The plan aims at continuity of health services during rains and floods to minimize the risk of disease and deaths among the affected population. All 207 health facilities in the area have been assessed for vulnerability during rains, following which nearly 25% of them are being relocated.

Another cholera and measles vaccination campaign is being planned in April as a preventive measure for the vulnerable population. Earlier, 900,000 doses of cholera vaccine were administered to the refugees and their host communities, in addition to two vaccination campaigns for measles and three for diphtheria which concluded earlier this week with WHO support.

WHO is prepositioning medicines, medical supplies and equipment for the rainy season. Since the start of the Rohingya crisis, WHO has provided over 120 tons of supplies and logistics support to partners. WHO continues to provide critical technical support such as surveillance for epidemic prone and other diseases, collecting and sharing of information and data to enable the health sector take timely preventive / response measures and conducting preparedness trainings for the upcoming monsoons.

“However, much of the health sector’s capacity to respond depends on availability of resources,” Dr Khetrapal Singh, who visited the Rohingya camps earlier in the week, said. The rainy season is almost here, the sooner the health sector gets the funds it needs, the better would be its ability to scale up services to quickly and adequately respond to health needs of the refugees.
Besides risks posed by floods and rain, the vulnerable population would need continued services for reproductive, maternal and child health, for communicable and non-communicable diseases, as well as psychosocial support, the Regional Director said.

Earlier in Cox’s Bazar, Dr Khetrapal Singh visited the warehouse where WHO has prepositioned supplies. She observed diphtheria vaccination campaign, inaugurated a fixed immunization site where children were being administered routine immunization, and visited a primary health centre and a diphtheria treatment centre run by Samaritan’s Purse.

WHO has appealed for 16.5 million USD from partners to facilitate its continued support to the Rohingya response in 2018, which is part of the 113.1 million USD being sought by all health partners together under the Joint Response Plan for the Rohingya crisis.

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UN OCHA – L3 Emergencies
The UN and its humanitarian partners are currently responding to three ‘L3’ emergencies. This is the global humanitarian system’s classification for the response to the most severe, large-scale humanitarian crises. 
DRC 
:: Humanitarian Conference on the DRC (13 April 2018)
OCHA, the Kingdom of the Netherlands, the United Arab Emirates and the European Union are hosting a Humanitarian Conference on the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC) on Friday 13 April 2018, at the Palais des Nations in Geneva.

Syrian Arab Republic
:: Turkey | Syria: Situation in North-western Syria – Situation Report No.1 (as of 29 March 2018) 27 Mar 2018
:: Syrian Arab Republic: East Ghouta Displacement Situation Report No. 1 (26 March 2018)

Yemen 
:: Yemen: Impact of the closure of seaports and airports on the humanitarian situation – Situation Update 3 | 23 November 2017
 
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UN OCHA – Corporate Emergencies
When the USG/ERC declares a Corporate Emergency Response, all OCHA offices, branches and sections provide their full support to response activities both at HQ and in the field.
Ethiopia 
:: Ethiopia Humanitarian Bulletin Issue 49 | 12 – 25 March 2019

Rohinga Refugee Crisis 
:: ISCG Situation Report: Rohingya Refugee Crisis, Cox’s Bazar | 25 March 2018

Somalia
:: Humanitarian Bulletin Somalia, 30 March 2018
…4.7 million children targeted in nationwide measles vaccination.
A nationwide campaign to protect Somali children against the deadly effects of measles has reached nearly 4.7 million of them. The campaign which was carried out by the Ministry of Health at the national and local levels and humanitarian partners, targeted children aged between six months and 10 years.
…The first round of the Oral Cholera Vaccination campaign in Afmadow and Hudur was completed in March.
 
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Editor’s Note:
We will cluster these recent emergencies as below and continue to monitor the WHO webpages for updates and key developments.
 
Yellow Fever  [to 31 March 2018]
http://www.who.int/csr/disease/yellowfev/en/
[See CDC [U.S.] briefing content below]

WHO & Regional Offices [to 31 March 2018]

WHO & Regional Offices [to 31 March 2018]

Latest News
Tajikistan builds towards universal health coverage
28 March 2018 – In 2013 the Tajik Ministry of Health and Social Protection, with the support of WHO, set up a disability and rehabilitation programme to develop national policy and services.
In the spirit of universal health coverage, all services are free of charge to people with disabilities. More than 170 000 men, women and children have benefitted from the Programme since 2017.
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Weekly Epidemiological Record, 30 March 2018, vol. 93, 13 (pp. 153–172)
Typhoid vaccines: WHO position paper – March 2018

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WHO Regional Offices
Selected Press Releases, Announcements
WHO African Region AFRO
Selected Featured News
:: Rwanda conducted Initial self­- evaluation on International Health Regulations(IHR)
29 March 2018
:: Improving TB treatment and control in West and Central Africa  28 March 2018
:: Uganda prioritizes awareness creation and treatment of MDR-TB  28 March 2018
:: Experts accede to impressive progress by Nigeria’s Polio Eradication programme. 28 March 2018
:: WHO partners with Fati Niger, popular Nigerian-based singer, to create awareness on cholera, meningitis and Lassa fever prevention.  28 March 2018
:: Advisory group recommends actions to strengthen WHO’s work in African Region 28 March 2018
:: Polio eradication is a true African success story, made possible by devoted leaders, countries, communities, civil society, and parents  27 March 2018

WHO South-East Asia Region SEARO
:: WHO appeals for international community support; warns of grave health risks to Rohingya refugees in rainy season  SEAR/PR/1684  Dhaka, 29 March 2018
[See Emergencies above for full text]
 
WHO European Region EURO
:: Embracing eHealth in Latvia to move towards universal health coverage 30-03-2018
:: Rehabilitation programme in Tajikistan builds towards universal health coverage 27-03-2018