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.

The Atlantic
http://www.theatlantic.com/magazine/
Accessed 27 Apr 2019
Health
Measles and the Limits of Facts
At its core, the resurgence of the once-defeated disease in the U.S. is a failure of communication.
James Hamblin Apr 26, 2019

How to Talk to an Anti-vax Relative
The question of whether vaccinations should be a duty or a choice is dividing families.
Ashley Fetters Apr 22, 2019

 

BBC
http://www.bbc.co.uk/
Accessed 27 Apr 2019
[No new, unique, relevant content]

 

The Economist
http://www.economist.com/
Accessed 27 Apr 2019
[No new, unique, relevant content]

 

Financial Times
http://www.ft.com/home/uk
Accessed 27 Apr 2019
[No new, unique, relevant content]

 

Forbes
http://www.forbes.com/
Accessed 27 Apr 2019
Rare Disease R&D Investments Likely To Grow In Biopharma
Given these advantages, it is hard to believe that rare diseases won’t take up a bigger proportion of biopharma R&D dollars in the future.
Apr 24, 2019
By John LaMattina Contributor

 

Foreign Affairs
http://www.foreignaffairs.com/
Accessed 27 Apr 2019
[No new, unique, relevant content]

 

Foreign Policy
http://foreignpolicy.com/
Accessed 27 Apr 2019
[No new, unique, relevant content]

 

The Guardian
http://www.guardiannews.com/
Accessed 27 Apr 2019
Anti-vaxxers are taking populism to a new, deadly level
Gaby Hinsliff
27 Apr 2019

Measles is on the march again – but scare tactics won’t improve vaccination rates
Andre Spicer
26 Apr 2019

 

New Yorker
http://www.newyorker.com/
Accessed 27 Apr 2019
[No new, unique, relevant content]

 

New York Times
http://www.nytimes.com/
Accessed 27 Apr 2019
U.S.
More Than 700 at 2 California Universities Under Quarantine Amid Measles Outbreak
The number of staff members and students who were under quarantine on Friday was up by about 400 from the day before, according to the authorities.
April 26

Health
Religious Objections to the Measles Vaccine? Get the Shots, Faith Leaders Say
Devout parents who are worried about vaccines often object to ingredients from pigs or fetuses. But the leaders of major faiths have examined these fears and still vigorously endorse vaccination.
April 26

U.S.
Trump Tells Americans: Go Get Your Measles Vaccination
U.S. President Donald Trump on Friday urged Americans to protect themselves with the measles vaccination as the number of cases of the once-eradicated disease in the United States hit the highest levels since 2000.
April 26

Asia Pacific
Polio Vaccinator Is Shot and Killed in Pakistan
The woman was part of a vaccination campaign. Another worker in her team was injured. A total of three polio workers have been killed this week as unfounded rumors against vaccines spread.
April 25

 

Wall Street Journal
http://online.wsj.com/home-page?_wsjregion=na,us&_homepage=/home/us
Accessed 27 Apr 2019
Essay
The Founding Generation Also Had to Fight ‘Anti-Vaxxers’
By Mark Honigsbaum
In the 1720s, Cotton Mather supported an early form of inoculation; Washington, Jefferson and Adams followed suit.
Appeared in the April 26, 2019, print edition.

Review & Outlook
‘They Have to Get the Shots’
By The Editorial Board
Measles is spreading again, so urging vaccination is vital.
Appeared in the April 26, 2019, print edition.

 

Washington Post
http://www.washingtonpost.com/
Accessed 27 Apr 2019
[No new, unique, relevant content]

Think Tanks et al

Think Tanks et al

Brookings
http://www.brookings.edu/
Accessed 27 Apr 2019
[No new relevant content]

 

Center for Global Development
http://www.cgdev.org/page/press-center
[No new relevant content]

 

CSIS
https://www.csis.org/
Accessed 27 Apr 2019
[No new relevant content]

 

Council on Foreign Relations
http://www.cfr.org/
Accessed 27 Apr 2019
[No new relevant content]

 

Kaiser Family Foundation
https://www.kff.org/search/?post_type=press-release
Accessed 27 Apr 2019
April 23, 2019 Fact Sheet
The President’s Malaria Initiative and Other U.S. Government Global Malaria Efforts
This fact sheet provides a snapshot of global malaria efforts and examines the U.S. government’s role in addressing malaria worldwide, including current programs, funding, and key issues.

Vaccines and Global Health: The Week in Review :: 20 April 2019

.– 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_20 Apr 2019

– 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

UNICEF launches #VaccinesWork campaign to inspire support for vaccines

Milestones :: Perspectives :: Research

UNICEF launches #VaccinesWork campaign to inspire support for vaccines
Amid growing outbreaks of vaccine-preventable diseases, UNICEF’s campaign will use social media to show that most parents trust vaccines to protect their children
17/04/2019
NEW YORK, 18 April 2019 – UNICEF is launching a new global campaign on 24 April to emphasize the power and safety of vaccines among parents and wider social media users.

The campaign will run alongside World Immunization Week from 24 to 30 April to spread the message that together communities, including parents, can protect everyone through vaccines.

#VaccinesWork has long been used to bring together immunization advocates online. This year, UNICEF is partnering with the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation, the World Health Organization (WHO), and Gavi, the Vaccine Alliance to encourage even greater reach. The Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation will contribute USD$ 1 to UNICEF for every like or share of social media posts using the hashtag #VaccinesWork in April, up to USD$1 million, to ensure all children get the life-saving vaccines they need…

… “We want the awareness that #VaccinesWork to go viral,” said Robin Nandy, UNICEF’s Chief of Immunization. “Vaccines are safe, and they save lives. This campaign is an opportunity to show the world that social media can be a powerful force for change and provide parents with trustworthy information on vaccines.”

The campaign is part of a global, week-long celebration under the theme, Protected Together: Vaccines Work, to honour Vaccine Heroes – from parents and community members to health workers and innovators.

“More children than ever before are being reached with vaccines today,” said Violaine Mitchell, Interim Director of Vaccine Delivery at the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation. “We are delighted to work with UNICEF and all the global and country partners around the world who are working tirelessly to ensure all children, especially those in the world’s poorest countries, can be protected from life-threatening infectious diseases.”

Despite the benefits of vaccines, an estimated 1.5 million children died of vaccine-preventable diseases in 2017. While this is often due to lack of access to vaccines, in some countries, families are delaying or refusing to vaccinate their children because of complacency or skepticism about vaccines. This has resulted in several outbreaks, including an alarming surge in measles, especially in higher-income countries. Uncertainty about vaccines on digital and social media platforms is one of the factors driving this trend.

That is why the centerpiece of this UNICEF campaign is a 60-second animated film, “Dangers,” which, along with illustrated animations for social media posts and posters, is based on the relatable insight that kids, by their very nature, are little daredevils who are constantly putting themselves in danger. Available in Arabic, Chinese, French, Hindi, Russian, Spanish and Tagalog, the video explains that while parents can’t prevent all the dangers their kids get themselves into, they can use vaccination to help prevent the dangers that get into their kids.

In addition, UNICEF experts will be answering questions about vaccination, including how vaccines work, how they are tested, why children should receive vaccines, as well as the risks of not vaccinating children in a timely manner.

Measles

Milestones :: Perspectives :: Research

Measles

 

New measles surveillance data for 2019 – WHO
15 April 2019, GENEVA – Measles cases have continued to climb into 2019. Preliminary global data shows that reported cases rose by 300 percent in the first three months of 2019, compared to the same period in 2018. This follows consecutive increases over the past two years.

While this data is provisional and not yet complete, it indicates a clear trend. Many countries are in the midst of sizeable measles outbreaks, with all regions of the world experiencing sustained rises in cases. Current outbreaks include the Democratic Republic of the Congo, Ethiopia, Georgia, Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Madagascar, Myanmar, Philippines, Sudan, Thailand and Ukraine, causing many deaths – mostly among young children.

Over recent months, spikes in case numbers have also occurred in countries with high overall vaccination coverage, including the United States of America as well as Israel, Thailand, and Tunisia, as the disease has spread fast among clusters of unvaccinated people…

::::::

 

New England Journal of Medicine
April 18, 2019   Vol. 380 No. 16
http://www.nejm.org/toc/nejm/medical-journal
Perspective
Measles in 2019 — Going Backward
Catharine I. Paules, M.D., Hilary D. Marston, M.D., M.P.H., and Anthony S. Fauci, M.D.

In 2000, the United States achieved a historic public health goal: the elimination of measles, defined by the absence of sustained transmission of the virus for more than 12 months. This achievement resulted from a concerted effort by health care practitioners and families alike, working to protect the population through widespread immunization. Unfortunately, that momentous achievement was short-lived, and localized measles outbreaks have recently been triggered by travel-related introductions of the virus by infected persons, with subsequent spread through under-vaccinated subpopulations. According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, 555 cases of measles in 20 states had already been confirmed from January 1 through April 11, 2019 (see graph). The increase in measles cases in the United States mirrors patterns elsewhere: several other countries that had eliminated measles are now seeing resurgences.

Measles is a highly contagious cause of febrile illness typically seen in young children.1 It is transmitted primarily by means of respiratory droplets and small-particle aerosols and can remain viable in the air for up to 2 hours. Exposed people who are not immune have up to a 90% chance of contracting the disease, and each person with measles may go on to infect 9 to 18 others in a susceptible population.2

Most people with measles recover uneventfully after approximately 1 week of illness characterized by fever, malaise, coryza, conjunctivitis, cough, and a maculopapular rash. However, measles is by no means a trivial disease; before widespread vaccination, the virus caused 2 million to 3 million deaths globally per year.1 Even today, it remains a leading cause of vaccine-preventable illness and death worldwide, claiming more than 100,000 lives each

year.2 Common complications include secondary infections related to measles-induced immunosuppression, diarrhea, keratoconjunctivitis (which may lead to blindness, particularly in vitamin A–deficient populations), otitis media, and pneumonia (the leading cause of measles-related deaths). In approximately 1 in 1000 cases of measles, serious and often fatal neurologic complications such as acute disseminated encephalomyelitis and measles inclusion-body encephalitis occur, and most patients who survive these complications have long-term neurologic sequelae. In addition, a rare neurologic complication (affecting approximately 1 in 10,000 patients) called subacute sclerosing panencephalitis (SSPE) can occur years after measles virus infection, with a severe, progressive, and fatal course.

If the potential danger posed by measles is clear, so is the solution. Live-attenuated measles vaccines are among the most highly effective vaccines available (providing 97% protection with two doses, given at 12 to 15 months and 4 to 6 years of age), with a proven safety record.1 The most common side effects of the measles vaccine are a sore arm and fever. A small proportion of vaccinees (about 5%) will develop a rash; an even smaller proportion will have a febrile seizure or transient decrease in platelet counts. A very rare complication, meningoencephalitis, has been described, almost always in immunocompromised vaccinees.

Measles vaccination has prevented an estimated 21 million deaths worldwide since 2000.3

Despite these substantial gains, global elimination goals have not been met, and previous strides are now being threatened by a 31% increase in the number of measles cases reported globally between 2016 and 2017.3 The growing number of travel-related infections and local outbreaks in the United States reflects this alarming trend, yet the U.S. situation is dwarfed by outbreaks elsewhere in the world. For example, the World Health Organization (WHO) reported 117,075 measles cases and 1205 deaths in Madagascar between early October 2018 and early April 2019. Venezuela is also experiencing a large-scale epidemic, with endemic measles transmission now reestablished in a country where it had previously been eliminated.3 In Europe, the number of reported cases in 2018 was triple that in 2017 and 15 times that in 2016.4 In addition, it is likely that endemic measles has now been reestablished in several European countries where transmission had previously been interrupted.3

The resurgence in measles cases is all the more frustrating since the disease is entirely preventable through vaccination. Measles has all the components of an eradicable disease: there is a safe and highly effective vaccine, it has a readily diagnosable clinical syndrome, and it has no animal reservoir to maintain circulation.1 But because of the highly contagious nature of the virus, near-perfect vaccination coverage (herd immunity of 93 to 95%) is needed to effectively protect against a measles resurgence. Although there are valid reasons why some people might not be vaccinated, such as a medical contraindication due to marked immunosuppression, the failure to vaccinate too often stems from misconceptions about vaccine safety, especially those resulting from a now-debunked claim that posited a connection between the vaccine and autism. The growing antivaccination movement, based heavily on philosophical objections to vaccinations, poses a threat to public health. Vaccine hesitancy has been identified by the WHO as one of the top 10 threats to global health and is a serious hurdle to the global elimination and eradication of measles.

If we continue to lose ground on measles prevention through vaccination, we face the reemergence of measles into new populations, which will pose new and varied challenges. Historically, measles has been a disease of children, with severe disease seen primarily in children younger than 5 and those with poor nutritional status, particularly if they have vitamin A deficiency. The successful implementation of measles vaccination programs is changing the epidemiology of measles from seasonal epidemics in young children to sporadic cases in older children and adults, including pregnant women. Data assessing the effects of measles infection in these latter populations are sparse but are suggestive of increased morbidity and mortality.2

The greatest risk of measles-related complications occurs in immunosuppressed people. This population may have atypical presentations with severe complications that have not been documented in immunocompetent patients, such as giant-cell pneumonia and measles inclusion-body encephalitis. Exposure to measles in people with HIV infection has led to serious complications and even death. Higher rates of measles complications and deaths have also been reported in patients with cancer, patients with solid organ transplants, people receiving high-dose glucocorticoids, and those receiving immunomodulatory therapy for rheumatologic disease. People with profound immunosuppression cannot be safely vaccinated with the live-attenuated vaccine and must rely on herd immunity to protect them from measles infection.

Exposure to measles in the community certainly represents a danger to high-risk persons during a local outbreak; however, nosocomial transmission may pose an even greater threat and has been reported throughout the world. For example, during a measles outbreak in Shanghai in 2015, a single child with measles in a pediatric oncology clinic infected 23 other children, more than 50% of whom ended up with severe complications, and the case fatality rate was 21%.5 When the umbrella of herd immunity is compromised, such populations are highly vulnerable.

Unlike many infectious diseases, measles is a public health problem with a clear scientific solution. Measles vaccination is highly effective and safe. Each complication or death related to measles is a preventable tragedy that could have been avoided through vaccination. The recent upsurge in U.S. measles cases, including the worrisome number seen thus far in 2019, represents an alarming step backward. If this trend is not reversed, measles may rebound in full force in both the United States and other countries and regions where it had been eliminated. Promoting measles vaccination is a societal responsibility, with the ultimate goal of global elimination and eradication — relegating measles to the history books

DRC – Ebola

Milestones :: Perspectives :: Research

DRC – Ebola

 

37: Situation report on the Ebola outbreak in North Kivu
16 April 2019
…Implementation of ring vaccination protocol
:: As of 16 April 2019, 101,195 contacts and contacts of contacts have been vaccinated. Of those 26,613 were contacts and 74,367 contacts of contacts. The vaccinated people at risk included 29,688 HCWs/FLWs, and 26,361 children 1-6 years old. Detailed micro-plans are also in use to monitor the progress and number of cases with and without rings. Table 2 provides an overview of the status as of 15 April 2019.

:: Between 2-4 April 2019, Strategic Advisory Group of Experts (SAGE) convened a meeting to review epidemiological data from North Kivu for children below 1 year of age and for lactating women. Although clinical data on the safety and efficacy of the rVSV-ZEBOV-GP Ebola vaccine for these two specific groups are absent, SAGE considers that the high attack rates and high case fatality ratios for these groups, together with the accumulating data on vaccine safety and efficacy for other groups, justify inclusion of children who are above the age of 6 months and of lactating women in the ongoing ring vaccination efforts in North Kivu. SAGE strongly urged the implementation of studies to evaluate additional Ebola candidate vaccines, including where possible in pregnant and lactating women and in infants. (Please see here for a summary of the SAGE meeting highlights)

:: On 12 April 2019, INRB and WHO published a preliminary analysis of the efficacy of RVSV-ZEBOV-GP emerging from the DRC outbreak data (Please see here for preliminary analysis). The data suggest high efficacy of this candidate vaccine and of the ring vaccination in this outbreak.

:: There are currently 23 vaccination teams comprised of 276 Congolese vaccinators with basic GCP training, 50 Congolese with formal GCP training, and 43 experienced Guinean/African GCP researchers.

:: There is continuation of ring vaccination in Beni, Katwa, Butembo, Mandima, Bunia, Vuhovi, and Lubero health zones around confirmed cases, as well as front-line providers in Goma.

:: Current vaccination strategies being employed on the ground include site by site vaccination, simultaneous vaccination of contacts and their contacts in the community, healthcare worker vaccination, and targeted geographic vaccination of areas where contacts of contacts cannot be clearly identified due to insecurity…

Disease Outbreak News (DONs)
Ebola virus disease – Democratic Republic of the Congo
11 April 2019
The rise in number of Ebola virus disease (EVD) cases observed in the North Kivu provinces of the Democratic Republic of the Congo continues this week. During the last 21 days (20 March to 9 April 2019), 57 health areas within 11 health zones reported new cases…

…WHO and partners in Risk Communication and Community Engagement are continuing with activities to build and maintain a trusting relationship between communities and the Ebola response teams. Dialogues with community committees are ongoing in the hotspot areas of Butembo, Katwa, and Vuhovi, and form a key part of a larger increase ownership of the Ebola response by the communities. Information about community disquiet are systematically collected and monitored to ensure that any misunderstanding leading to reluctance, refusal, or resistance of the Ebola response is followed up with and resolved as quickly as possible. This has been made possible by feedback from the community members, received through ongoing dialogue and various research activities within both the Democratic Republic of the Congo, and neighbouring areas.

In an effort to address the feedback received and specific concerns over the outbreak response, guided visits of the Ebola Treatment Centres (ETCs) in various affected areas have been organized. Students and community associations who attended these guided visits to the ETCs can see first-hand how EVD patients are treated and help stop the potential dissemination of misinformation surrounding EVD and the ongoing response efforts…

 

Emergencies

Emergencies

 

POLIO
Public Health Emergency of International Concern (PHEIC)
Polio this week as of 17 April 2019
:: Co-chairs of Immunization Management Group (IMG) announced that the global goal set out in 2013 of 126-OPV using countries to introduce 1 dose of IPV in their immunization programme has been achieved.
:: Eminent Islamic religious scholars from Afghanistan and Pakistan came together in Muscat, Oman for the first ever joint Ulama Conference, under the aegis of the Islamic Advisory Group (IAG). for polio eradication The IAG convened religious scholars in a bid to appreciate their value as community leaders and secure bilateral support for polio eradication efforts across the joint poliovirus transmission corridors. At the end of the two-day conference, the scholars issued a joint declaration in support of the polio efforts. Watch the Opening Session here. Read the declaration here.
:: In keeping with the recommendations of the Emergency Committee under the International Health Regulations (IHR), Afghanistan and Pakistan have introduced an all-age polio vaccination for travelers crossing international borders to increase general population immunity the common wild poliovirus transmission corridor. Read more.

Summary of new viruses this week:
:: Afghanistan—three wild poliovirus type 1 (WPV1)-positive environmental samples;
:: Pakistan—three WPV1-positive environmental samples;
:: Nigeria—one circulating vaccine-derived type 2 (cVDPV2) case and seven cVDPV2-positive environmental samples.

::::::

Joining hands across the border
All travellers crossing the border between Pakistan and Afghanistan are vaccinated against polio, regardless of age
GPEI  16/04/2019
On both sides of the historical 2640-kilometre-long border between Pakistan and Afghanistan, communities maintain close familial ties with each other. The constant year-round cross border movement makes for easy wild poliovirus transmission in the common epidemiological block.

As a new tactic in their joint efforts to defeat poliovirus circulation, Afghanistan and Pakistan have introduced all-age polio vaccination for travellers crossing the international borders in efforts to increase general population immunity against polio and to help stop the cross-border transmission of poliovirus. The official inauguration of the all-age vaccination effort took place on 25 March 2019 at the border crossings in Friendship Gate (Chaman-Spin Boldak) in the south, and in Torkham in the north…

…It is estimated that the Friendship Gate border alone receives a daily foot traffic of 30 000. Travellers include women and men of all ages, from children to the elderly.

Pakistan and Afghanistan first increased the age for polio vaccination at the border in January 2016, from children under five years to those up to 10 years old. The decision was in line with the recommendations of the Emergency Committee under the International Health Regulations (IHR) which declared the global spread of polio a “public health emergency of international concern”,

The all-age vaccination against polio at the border crossings serves a practical implementation of another recommendation of the IHR Committee: that Pakistan and Afghanistan should “further intensify cross­border efforts by significantly improving coordination at the national, regional and local levels to substantially increase vaccination coverage of travelers crossing the border and of high risk cross­border populations.

…As part of the newly introduced all-age vaccination, all people above 10 years of age who are given OPV at the border are issued a special card as proof of vaccination. The card remains valid for one year and exempts regular crossers from receiving the vaccination again. Children under 10 years of age will be vaccinated each time they cross the border.

Before all-age vaccination began at Friendship Gate and Torkham, public officials held extensive communication outreach both sides of the border to publicize the expansion of vaccination activities from children under 10 to all ages. Radio messages were played in regional languages, and community engagement sessions sensitized people who regularly travel across the border. Banners and posters were displayed at prominent locations….

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::::::

 

Editor’s Note:
WHO has posted a refreshed emergencies page which presents an updated listing of Grade 3,2,1 emergencies as below.

WHO Grade 3 Emergencies  [to 20 Apr 2019]
Bangladesh – Rohingya crisis
:: Bi‐weekly Situation Report 7 – 11 April 2019

HIGHLIGHTS
:: Ten new diphtheria cases were reported in week 14, (1 confirmed, 9 suspected), bringing the total number of reported case-patients to 8 545.
:: To gain an understanding of how women and men perceive immunization in camps, WHO organized two focus group discussions.
:: Water Quality Surveillance round 10 has been started in all refugee areas.

Varicella Update
A total of 2161 varicella cases were reported this week via weekly report form (2783 cases in week 13).
Risk Communication
WHO organized, two separate focus group discussions (FGDs), one for only women of all ages, and another of only men of all ages, held at the Camp 14 in Ukhiya of the Cox’s Bazar district. This was to gain an understanding of how women and men perceive immunization in the camps. The questions were kept open-ended to understand perception and attitude related to importance of Immunization, importance of Immunization schedule and compliance, gaps in communication with respect to immunization. Observations from these FGDs revealed that everyone in both the groups had heard about necessity of immunization but did not have clear reasons to believe or act. People opted for it because it is a free service and they trust health workers. Absence of knowledge about relevance of complying with the immunization schedule and dangers of missing out on any vaccine was identified.

Cyclone Idai
:: Cyclone-affected communities in Zimbabwe being vaccinated against cholera
Campaign targets nearly 500,000 people in Chimanimani and Chipinge
HARARE, Zimbabwe, 16 April 2019 – An oral cholera vaccine (OCV) campaign targeting some 487,825 people began Tuesday in Zimbabwe in the two districts most affected by cyclone Idai.
During the campaign all residents of Chimanimani and Chipinge districts aged 12 months and older will receive the vaccine to protect them against cholera.
While there have been no reported cases of cholera in the cyclone-affected areas in Zimbabwe, the Zimbabwe Ministry of Health and Child Care is launching the campaign, with support from UNICEF and the World Health Organization (WHO), as a proactive, preventative measure.
Funded by Gavi, the Vaccine Alliance, more than 975 000 OCV doses will be administered in two rounds for full immunity. The second dose will be given approximately two weeks after the first…

Democratic Republic of the Congo
:: 37: Situation report on the Ebola outbreak in North Kivu  16 April 2019
:: Disease Outbreak News (DONs)Ebola virus disease – Democratic Republic of the Congo
11 April 2019
[See Ebola above for detail]

Myanmar  – No new digest announcements identified
Nigeria – No new digest announcements identified
Somalia – No new digest announcements identified
South Sudan – No new digest announcements identified
Syrian Arab Republic – No new digest announcements identified
Yemen  – No new digest announcements identified

::::::
 
WHO Grade 2 Emergencies  [to 20 Apr 2019]
Brazil (in Portugese)
:: Últimas notícias – Cerca de 70 milhões de pessoas serão vacinadas durante a Semana de Vacinação nas Américas  18 de abril de 2019

Cameroon  – No new digest announcements identified
Iraq – No new digest announcements identified
Libya – No new digest announcements identified
occupied Palestinian territory  – No new digest announcements identified
Sudan – No new digest announcements identified
Central African Republic  – No new digest announcements identified
Ethiopia – No new digest announcements identified
MERS-CoV – No new digest announcements identified
Niger – No new digest announcements identified
Ukraine – No new digest announcements identified
Zimbabwe – No new digest announcements identified

::::::
 

WHO Grade 1 Emergencies  [to 20 Apr 2019]
Afghanistan – No new digest announcements identified
Chad  – No new digest announcements identified
Indonesia – Sulawesi earthquake 2018  – No new digest announcements identified
Kenya   – No new digest announcements identified
Lao People’s Democratic Republic  – No new digest announcements identified
Mali  – No new digest announcements identified
Namibia – viral hepatitis  – No new digest announcements identified
Peru  – No new digest announcements identified
Philippines – Tyhpoon Mangkhut  – No new digest announcements identified
Tanzania  – No new digest announcements identified

::::::
::::::

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. 
Syrian Arab Republic  
:: Syria: Humanitarian Response in Al Hol camp, Situation report No. 2
 
Yemen – No new digest announcements identified

::::::

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.
CYCLONE IDAI
:: 20 April 2019   Mozambique: Cyclone Idai & Floods Situation Report No. 16 (A …
:: 18 April 2019   Zimbabwe: Floods Situation Report No. 3, As of 17 April 2019

WHO & Regional Offices [to 20 Apr 2019]

WHO & Regional Offices [to 20 Apr 2019]

17 April 2019   News release
WHO releases first guideline on digital health interventions
WHO today released new recommendations on 10 ways that countries can use digital health technology, accessible via mobile phones, tablets and computers, to improve people’s health and essential services.
“Harnessing the power of digital technologies is essential for achieving universal health coverage,” says WHO Director-General Dr Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus. “Ultimately, digital technologies are not ends in themselves; they are vital tools to promote health, keep the world safe, and serve the vulnerable.”
Over the past two years, WHO systematically reviewed evidence on digital technologies and consulted with experts from around the world to produce recommendations on some key ways such tools may be used for maximum impact on health systems and people’s health…

13 April 2019   News release
At WHO Forum on Medicines, countries and civil society push for greater transparency and fairer prices
At a global forum on fair pricing and access to medicines, delegates from governments and civil society organizations called for greater transparency around the cost of research and development as well as production of medicines, to allow buyers to negotiate more affordable prices.

The forum, co-hosted by the World Health Organization (WHO) and the Government of South Africa, aimed to provide a global platform for frank discussion among all stakeholders – including governments, civil society organizations and the pharmaceutical industry – in order to identify strategies to reduce medicine prices and expand access for all.

The affordability of medicines has long been a concern for developing countries, but today it is also a global one. Each year, 100 million people fall into poverty because they have to pay for medicines out-of-pocket. High-income countries’ health authorities are increasingly having to ration medicines for cancer, hepatitis C and rare diseases. The problem extends to older medicines whose patents have expired, such as insulin for diabetes.

“Medical innovation has little social value if most people cannot access its benefits,” said Dr Mariângela Simão, WHO Assistant Director General for Medicines and Health Products.  “This is a global human rights issue – everyone has a right to access quality healthcare.”

report commissioned by WHO in 2017 showed that the cost of production of most medicines on WHO’s Essential Medicines List was a small fraction of the final price paid by governments, patients or insurance schemes. Some delegates at the forum noted that a lack of transparency around prices paid by governments means that many low- and middle-income countries pay higher prices for certain medicines than wealthier countries do.

There was consensus that countries can take an initial step towards fostering greater transparency by sharing price information. Countries from the so-called Beneluxa network have already joined forces to share such information, and the results have been promising. The data highlights discrepancies in what different countries are paying and can serve as a powerful tool to negotiate reduced prices. WHO’s database on vaccine markets and shortages – MI4A – was also highlighted at the forum as a useful tool to achieve competitive vaccine prices.

The event highlighted other successful examples of countries’ collaboration around achieving more affordable medicine prices; these include pooled procurement and voluntary sharing of policies. If several countries in the same region purchase medicines as a block, they can negotiate reduced prices due to the larger volume of medicines purchased.  And European countries led by Austria have been sharing different policies to expand access to medicines through the WHO-supported PPRI (Pharmaceutical Pricing and Reimbursement Policies).

Industry bodies at the forum expressed support for the goal of access to medicines for all, and expressed their commitment to the Sustainable Development Agenda, which calls for partnership with the private sector to address global challenges such as access to medicines.

WHO will launch a public online consultation in the coming weeks to collect views and suggestions for a definition of what actually constitutes a ‘fair price’ from relevant stakeholders.

::::::

 
Weekly Epidemiological Record, 19 April 2019, vol. 94, 16 (pp. 189–196)
:: Joint External Evaluation of the International Health Regulations (2005): common priority actions for improvement in the Eastern Mediterranean Region

::::::

WHO Regional Offices
Selected Press Releases, Announcements
WHO African Region AFRO
:: WHO Africa mourns the loss of a colleague killed in a hospital attack in the Democratic Republic of the Congo  19 April 2019
:: Cyclone-affected communities in Zimbabwe being vaccinated against cholera: Campaign targets nearly 500,000 people in Chimanimani and Chipinge  17 April 2019
:: WHO and partners successfully vaccinate over 400,000 children against Measles in Borno State -Target 838,582 children more.  12 April 2019

WHO Region of the Americas PAHO
:: Colombia, an example to follow in the effort of ensuring ‘health for all” (04/19/2019)
:: Director General of WHO recognizes Colombia’s solidarity in ensuring the health of migrants (04/19/2019)
:: Nearly 70 million people to be vaccinated during Vaccination Week of the Americas (04/18/2019)

 

WHO South-East Asia Region SEARO
No new digest content identified.

 

WHO European Region EURO
:: Celebrating universal health coverage across the WHO European Region 17-04-2019

 

WHO Eastern Mediterranean Region EMRO
No new digest content identified.

WHO Western Pacific Region
No new digest content identified.

 

CDC/ACIP [to 20 Apr 2019]

CDC/ACIP [to 20 Apr 2019]
http://www.cdc.gov/media/index.html
https://www.cdc.gov/vaccines/acip/index.html

 

MMWR News Synopsis for Friday, April 19, 2019
Estimated Number of Cases of High-Grade Cervical Lesions Diagnosed Among Women — United States, 2008 and 2016
This first estimate of U.S. cervical precancers using population-based data, including the decline in detection of precancers in women under 30 years old, is important in understanding precancer trends across all age groups and helps explain the impact of changing cervical cancer prevention strategies, including HPV vaccination and cervical cancer screening guidelines. We report the first estimate of the number of high-grade cervical precancers (CIN2+ cases) in the United States using population-based data. In 2008, before vaccine impact, an estimated 216,000 women were diagnosed with CIN2+, and 10 years after vaccine introduction, an estimated 196,000. In 2008, 55% of cervical precancers were detected in women less than 30 years of age; in 2016, only 36% of cervical precancers were diagnosed in this age group. This decline reflects both the impact of the U.S. HPV vaccination program and changes in cervical cancer screening recommendations between 2008 and 2016. Some of the changes include initiating cervical cancer screening at an older age, incorporating HPV testing as part of screening, and having longer intervals between screenings. Overall, an estimated 76% of cervical precancers were attributable to HPV vaccine types.

Outbreak of Human Immunodeficiency Virus Infection Among Heterosexual Persons Who Inject Drugs and Are Living Homeless — Seattle, Washington, 2018
Vulnerability to outbreaks of HIV infection among people who inject drugs is widespread throughout the U.S. and control of these outbreaks requires sustained vigilance and rapid public health responses. Public health officials in King County, WA, identified a cluster of 14 cases of HIV infection diagnosed between February and November 2018 among homeless heterosexuals, most of whom were injecting drugs. This cluster was part of a larger, almost 300% increase in new HIV diagnoses among heterosexuals who injected drugs in King County between 2017 and 2018. That this outbreak occurred in King County, the first urban area in the U.S. to achieve World Health Organization goals for HIV diagnosis and treatment and despite the presence of a syringe exchange program that distributed over 7 million syringes in 2018, highlights the fact that vulnerability to outbreaks of HIV among people who inject drugs is widespread.

Announcements

Announcements

 
Paul G. Allen Frontiers Group    [to 20 Apr 2019]
https://www.alleninstitute.org/news-press/
News
Gene drives get a precision upgrade
April 16, 2019
Method to fine tune DNA could be used to engineer malaria-resistant mosquitoes, reduce
 
 
BMGF – Gates Foundation [to 20 Apr 2019]
http://www.gatesfoundation.org/Media-Center/Press-Releases
No new digest content identified.
 
 
Bill & Melinda Gates Medical Research Institute [to 20 Apr 2019]
https://www.gatesmri.org/
The Bill & Melinda Gates Medical Research Institute is a non-profit biotech organization. Our mission is to develop products to fight malaria, tuberculosis, and diarrheal diseases—three major causes of mortality, poverty, and inequality in developing countries. The world has unprecedented scientific tools at its disposal; now is the time to use them to save the lives of the world’s poorest people
No new digest content identified.
 
 
CARB-X [to 20 Apr 2019]

Home


CARB-X is a non-profit public-private partnership dedicated to accelerating antibacterial research to tackle the global rising threat of drug-resistant bacteria.
No new digest content identified.
 
 
CEPI – Coalition for Epidemic Preparedness Innovations [to 20 Apr 2019]

Home page


No new digest content identified.
 
 
Clinton Health Access Initiative, Inc. (CHAI) [to 20 Apr 2019]

About


No new digest content identified.
EDCTP    [to 20 Apr 2019]
http://www.edctp.org/
The European & Developing Countries Clinical Trials Partnership (EDCTP) aims to accelerate the development of new or improved drugs, vaccines, microbicides and diagnostics against HIV/AIDS, tuberculosis and malaria as well as other poverty-related and neglected infectious diseases in sub-Saharan Africa, with a focus on phase II and III clinical trials
Latest news
15 April 2019
WANECAM consortium kicks off clinical study for next-generation antimalarial drug
The West African Network for Clinical Trials of Antimalarial Drugs (WANECAM), a consortium of ten academic organisations in Africa and Europe, starts off the ‘WANECAM 2’ study in Bamako, Mali with a meeting on 15 April 2019. EDCTP invests EUR 10 million in the project. WANECAM will conduct clinical trials of a novel antimalarial combination comprising KAF156 (ganaplacide) and lumefantrine in a new once-daily formulation. The project is led by Professor Abdoulaye Djimdé of the Université des Sciences, Techniques et Technologies de Bamako…The above message is based on the consortium press release (PDF)…
 
 
Emory Vaccine Center [to 20 Apr 2019]
http://www.vaccines.emory.edu/
No new digest content identified.
 
 
European Medicines Agency [to 20 Apr 2019]
http://www.ema.europa.eu/ema/
News and press releases
No new digest content identified.
 
 
European Vaccine Initiative [to 20 Apr 2019]
http://www.euvaccine.eu/news-events
Latest news
No new digest content identified.
 
 
FDA [to 20 Apr 2019]
https://www.fda.gov/NewsEvents/Newsroom/PressAnnouncements/default.htm
No new digest content identified.
 
 
Fondation Merieux [to 20 Apr 2019]

Accueil


No new digest content identified.
 
 
Gavi [to 20 Apr 2019]
https://www.gavi.org/
Latest News
Challenging impossible: eight game-changing approaches to vaccination
17 April 2019
Making sure that vaccines reach as many children as possible around the world requires a healthy dose of innovation. For World Immunization Week 2019, we are showcasing a series of innovations – from cutting-edge to low-tech – that further our mission to create equal access to new and underused vaccines for children living in the world’s poorest countries.
 
 
GHIT Fund [to 20 Apr 2019]
https://www.ghitfund.org/newsroom/press
GHIT was set up in 2012 with the aim of developing new tools to tackle infectious diseases that devastate the world’s poorest people. Other funders include six Japanese pharmaceutical
No new digest content identified.

Global Fund [to 20 Apr 2019]
https://www.theglobalfund.org/en/news/
News
No new digest content identified.

Hilleman Laboratories [to 20 Apr 2019]
http://www.hillemanlabs.org/
No new digest content identified.

Human Vaccines Project [to 20 Apr 2019]

Press Releases


No new digest content identified.

IAVI [to 20 Apr 2019]
https://www.iavi.org/newsroom
No new digest content identified.

IFFIm
http://www.iffim.org/library/news/press-releases/
09 April 2019
IFFIm issues sukuk to the Islamic Development Bank
Private transaction raised US$ 50 million for immunisation.
 
 
IFRC   [to 20 Apr 2019]
http://media.ifrc.org/ifrc/news/press-releases/
Selected Press Releases, Announcements
Syria: Heaviest flooding in decade worsens humanitarian crisis in Al Hasakeh region
Damascus/Beirut/Geneva, 17 April 2019 – Heavy rains have caused the worst flooding in a decade across Syria’s Al Hasakeh region, where 118,000 people are facing near complete destruction of their homes and livelihoods. The majority of the affected popu …
17 April 2019
 
 
Iran
Iran floods: Two million people in need of humanitarian aid
Tehran/Geneva, 15 April 2019 – An estimated 2 million people – one in every 40 people in Iran – need humanitarian assistance as a result of the massive floods that have swept across the country. Heavy rains and flash floods have affected more than 2,00 …
15 April 2019
 
 
Mozambique
Mozambique Cyclone: Signs of recovery, but long road still ahead
Beira/Nairobi/Geneva, 14 April 2019 – One month after the worst disaster in Mozambique’s recent history, signs of recovery are beginning to emerge as people return home and as the deadly cholera outbreak appears to be starting to abate. However, hundre …
14 April 2019
 
 
IVAC  [to 20 Apr 2019]
https://www.jhsph.edu/research/centers-and-institutes/ivac/index.html
No new digest content identified.
 
 
IVI   [to 20 Apr 2019]
http://www.ivi.int/
IVI News & Announcements
[Undated]
IVI-led CAPTURA consortium wins Fleming Fund award for work on antimicrobial resistance (AMR) data across Asia
SEOUL, South Korea — An international consortium, led by the International Vaccine Institute (IVI), has received funding from the UK’s Fleming Fund Regional Grants to conduct the Capturing Data on Antimicrobial Resistance (AMR) Patterns and Trends in Use in Regions of Asia (CAPTURA) project. The CAPTURA consortium also includes the Public Health Surveillance Group (PHSG), the Brigham and Women’s Hospital, and the University of Oxford’s Big Data Institute (BDI)…
 
 
JEE Alliance  [to 20 Apr 2019]
https://www.jeealliance.org/
Selected News and Events
Strategic Partnership for International Health Regulations (2005) and Health Security
19.4.2019
The implementation of the International Health Regulations (2005) Monitoring and Evaluation Framework will draw on WHO’s convening role to facilitate strategic cooperation and generate
 
 
MSF/Médecins Sans Frontières  [to 20 Apr 2019]
http://www.msf.org/
Selected News; Project Updates, Reports [as presented on website]
DRC Ebola outbreaks
Crisis update – April 2019
Crisis Update 18 Apr 2019
 
 
Ethiopia
Alarming rates of malnutrition among displaced people in sout…
Press Release 17 Apr 2019
 
 
Libya
Detained refugees trapped, Libyan families flee, as fighting worsens in Tripoli
Project Update 17 Apr 2019
 
 
Cyclone Idai & Southern Africa flooding
MSF emergency response to Cyclone Idai and flooding
Crisis Update 17 Apr 2019
 
 
Colombia
Assisting Venezuelan migrants in Colombia
Project Update 17 Apr 2019
 
 
South Sudan
There’s a lot to be done to address the uncountable health needs
Voices from the Field 16 Apr 2019
 
 
NIH  [to 20 Apr 2019]
http://www.nih.gov/news-events/news-releases
April 18, 2019
NIH funds study in four states to reduce opioid related deaths by 40 percent over three years
— Findings to serve as a blueprint for communities nationwide
 
 
Decline in measles vaccination is causing a preventable global resurgence of the disease
April 18, 2019 — Decline in measles vaccination is causing a preventable global resurgence of the disease
[See Milestones/Perspectives above for details]
 
 
In rare cases, immune system fails despite HIV suppression
April 18, 2019 — NIH scientists identify paradoxical response to HIV medication in five individuals
 
 
Novel antibody may suppress HIV for up to four months
April 17, 2019 — NIH researchers, international collaborators report results of small, open-label study
 
 
Gene therapy restores immunity in infants with rare immunodeficiency disease
April 17, 2019 — NIH scientists and funding contributed to development of experimental treatment
 
 
PATH  [to 20 Apr 2019]
https://www.path.org/media-center/
No new digest content identified.
 
 
Sabin Vaccine Institute  [to 20 Apr 2019]
http://www.sabin.org/updates/pressreleases
No new digest content identified.
 
 
UNAIDS [to 20 Apr 2019]
http://www.unaids.org/en
Selected Press Releases/Reports/Statements
18 April 2019
Cyclone Idai flood survivors ‘just want to go home’
 
 
16 April 2019
Côte d’Ivoire signals renewed will to tackle issue of user fees for HIV services
 
 
15 April 2019
Urgent action needed to address HIV in Haut Mbomou, Central African Republic
 
 
15 April 2019
Parental consent is required in the majority of countries worldwide
 
 
UNICEF  [to 20 Apr 2019]
https://www.unicef.org/media/press-releases
Selected Statements, Press Releases, Reports
Statement
Children’s lives and well-being in danger as fighting intensifies in Tripoli, Libya
Joint statement by Henrietta Fore, UNICEF Executive Director, and Virginia Gamba, Special Representative of the Secretary-General for Children and Armed Conflict
18/04/2019
 
 
Press release
Cyclone Idai: Education at risk for more than 305,000 children in Mozambique – UNICEF
More than 3,400 classrooms damaged or destroyed in storm
18/04/2019
 
 
Press release
UNICEF launches #VaccinesWork campaign to inspire support for vaccines
Amid growing outbreaks of vaccine-preventable diseases, UNICEF’s campaign will use social media to show that most parents trust vaccines to protect their children
17/04/2019
[See Milestones/Perspectives above for details]
 
 
Press release
6,000 children reunited with families after years of separation in South Sudan
17/04/2019
 
 
Vaccine Confidence Project  [to 20 Apr 2019]
http://www.vaccineconfidence.org/
No new digest content identified.
 
 
Vaccine Education Center – Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia  [to 20 Apr 2019]
http://www.chop.edu/centers-programs/vaccine-education-center
No new digest content identified.
 
 
Wellcome Trust  [to 20 Apr 2019]
https://wellcome.ac.uk/news
News | 17 April 2019
Four ways we’re working with DFID to thwart epidemics
To prevent future epidemics and improve the response to ones that are already happening, there needs to be evidence, knowledge and the right tools. To help provide these, Wellcome is working with the UK Department for International Development (DFID) in a five-year initiative.
 
 
The Wistar Institute   [to 20 Apr 2019]
https://www.wistar.org/news/press-releases
 
 
Press Release
Apr. 17, 2019
Identification of a Critical Regulator of Immune Suppressive Cells Reveals a Novel Target for Cancer Immunotherapy
Pharmacological block of the FATP2 protein selectively inhibits myeloid-derived suppressor cells and shows antitumor effects in preclinical models.
 
 
Press Release
Apr. 18, 2019
Innovative Synthetic DNA-based Cancer Immunotherapy Approach Shows Tumor-clearing Ability in Preclinical Models
PHILADELPHIA — (April 18, 2019) — Wistar scientists have developed a novel synthetic DNA approach for patient-specific production of cancer-targeting molecules called bispecific T cell engagers. DNA-encoded bispecific T cell engagers (dBiTEs) designed against the HER2 protein were tested in preclinical models of ovarian cancer and induced tumor regression, demonstrating the potential of this novel approach for immunotherapy. Study results were published online in JCI Insights.
 
 
World Organisation for Animal Health (OIE)   [to 20 Apr 2019]
http://www.oie.int/en/for-the-media/press-releases/2019/
No new digest content identified.

 
BIO    [to 20 Apr 2019]
https://www.bio.org/insights/press-release
Apr 16 2019
Biotechnology Industry Takes Action To Diversify Leadership
The Biotechnology Innovation Organization (BIO) announced today the “Right Mix Matters” campaign to increase diversity and inclusion in the biotech industry. Following on its previously announced goals to increase gender, racial, ethnic and LGBTQ representation on biotech company boards, in C-suites and in functional leadership positions, BIO is providing specific tools to accelerate diversity and thereby advance an even more globally competitive industry.

DCVMN – Developing Country Vaccine Manufacturers Network [to 20 Apr 2019]
http://www.dcvmn.org/
No new digest content identified.

IFPMA [to 20 Apr 2019]

News Releases


No new digest content identified.

PhRMA [to 20 Apr 2019]
http://www.phrma.org/press-room
No new digest content identified.

Journal Watch

Journal Watch

   Vaccines and Global Health: The Week in Review continues its weekly scanning of key peer-reviewed journals to identify and cite articles, commentary and editorials, books reviews and other content supporting our focus on vaccine ethics and policy. Journal Watch is not intended to be exhaustive, but indicative of themes and issues the Center is actively tracking. We selectively provide full text of some editorial and comment articles that are specifically relevant to our work. Successful access to some of the links provided may require subscription or other access arrangement unique to the publisher.

If you would like to suggest other journal titles to include in this service, please contact David Curry at: david.r.curry@centerforvaccineethicsandpolicy.org

Measles, Mumps, Rubella Vaccination and Autism: A Nationwide Cohort Study

Annals of Internal Medicine
16 April 2019 Vol: 170, Issue 8
http://annals.org/aim/issue

Original Research |16 April 2019
Measles, Mumps, Rubella Vaccination and Autism: A Nationwide Cohort Study Free
Anders Hviid, DrMedSci; Jørgen Vinsløv Hansen, PhD; Morten Frisch, DrMedSci; Mads Melbye, DrMedSci
Abstract
Background:
The hypothesized link between the measles, mumps, rubella (MMR) vaccine and autism continues to cause concern and challenge vaccine uptake.
Objective:
To evaluate whether the MMR vaccine increases the risk for autism in children, subgroups of children, or time periods after vaccination.
Design:
Nationwide cohort study.
Setting:
Denmark.
Participants:
657 461 children born in Denmark from 1999 through 31 December 2010, with follow-up from 1 year of age and through 31 August 2013.
Measurements:
Danish population registries were used to link information on MMR vaccination, autism diagnoses, other childhood vaccines, sibling history of autism, and autism risk factors to children in the cohort. Survival analysis of the time to autism diagnosis with Cox proportional hazards regression was used to estimate hazard ratios of autism according to MMR vaccination status, with adjustment for age, birth year, sex, other childhood vaccines, sibling history of autism, and autism risk factors (based on a disease risk score).
Results:
During 5 025 754 person-years of follow-up, 6517 children were diagnosed with autism (incidence rate, 129.7 per 100 000 person-years). Comparing MMR-vaccinated with MMR-unvaccinated children yielded a fully adjusted autism hazard ratio of 0.93 (95% CI, 0.85 to 1.02). Similarly, no increased risk for autism after MMR vaccination was consistently observed in subgroups of children defined according to sibling history of autism, autism risk factors (based on a disease risk score) or other childhood vaccinations, or during specified time periods after vaccination.
Limitation:
No individual medical charts were reviewed.
Conclusion:
The study strongly supports that MMR vaccination does not increase the risk for autism, does not trigger autism in susceptible children, and is not associated with clustering of autism cases after vaccination. It adds to previous studies through significant additional statistical power and by addressing hypotheses of susceptible subgroups and clustering of cases.
Primary Funding Source:
Novo Nordisk Foundation and Danish Ministry of Health.
 

 

Development and Performance of a Checklist for Initial Triage After an Anthrax Mass Exposure Event

Annals of Internal Medicine
16 April 2019 Vol: 170, Issue 8
http://annals.org/aim/issue

Original Research |16 April 2019
Development and Performance of a Checklist for Initial Triage After an Anthrax Mass Exposure Event
Nathaniel Hupert, MD, MPH; Marissa Person, MSPH; Dan Hanfling, MD; Rita M. Traxler, MHS; William A. Bower, MD; Katherine Hendricks, MD, MPH&TM
Background:
Population exposure to Bacillus anthracis spores could cause mass casualties requiring complex medical care. Rapid identification of patients needing anthrax-specific therapies will improve patient outcomes and resource use.

Deliberate Indifference: Inadequate Health Care in U.S. Prisons

Annals of Internal Medicine
16 April 2019 Vol: 170, Issue 8
http://annals.org/aim/issue

Ideas and Opinions
Deliberate Indifference: Inadequate Health Care in U.S. Prisons
Ashley Hurst, JD, MDiv, MA; Brenda Castañeda, JD; Erika Ramsdale, MD
Whether health care should be a fundamental right in the United States is an ongoing debate. However, one group—incarcerated persons—has a constitutionally protected right to adequate health care. Nevertheless, there is a growing epidemic of inadequate health care in U.S. prisons. Shrinking prison budgets, a prison population that is the highest in the world, and for-profit health care contracts all contribute to this epidemic. The medical community has an obligation to respond by providing and advocating for adequate health care for incarcerated persons.

Healthcare professionals’ knowledge, attitude and acceptance of influenza vaccination in Saudi Arabia: a multicenter cross-sectional study

BMC Health Services Research
http://www.biomedcentral.com/bmchealthservres/content
(Accessed 20 Apr 2019)

Research article
Healthcare professionals’ knowledge, attitude and acceptance of influenza vaccination in Saudi Arabia: a multicenter cross-sectional study
All healthcare professionals (HCPs) are at high risk of influenza infection. Therefore, immunization is recommended for all HCPs. Due to safety and effectiveness concerns, HCPs have a low vaccination rate. Thi
Authors: Thamir M. Alshammari, Kazeem B. Yusuff, Muhammad Majid Aziz and Gehad M. Subaie
Citation: BMC Health Services Research 2019 19:229
Published on: 15 April 2019

 

The usefulness and acceptability of a personal health record to children and young people living with a complex health condition: A realist review of the literature

Child Care, Health and Development
Volume 45, Issue 3  Pages: 313-472  May 2019
https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/toc/13652214/current

REVIEW ARTICLES  Open Access
The usefulness and acceptability of a personal health record to children and young people living with a complex health condition: A realist review of the literature
 There are a growing number of children and young people (CYP) with chronic health needs or complex disabilities. Increasingly, CYP with life‐limiting or life‐threatening conditions are surviving into adulthood. Communication between CYP, their family, and health professionals can be challenging. The use of a personal health record (PHR) is one potential strategy for improving communication by promoting CYP’s health advocacy skills. However, PHR implementation has proved difficult due to technical, organisational, and professional barriers. The aim of this realist review is to identify the factors, which help or hinder the use of PHRs with CYP living with a complex health condition.
Janet Diffin, Bronagh Byrne, Helen Kerr, Jayne Price, Aine Abbott, Dorry McLaughlin, Peter O’Halloran
Pages: 313-332
First Published: 28 February 2019

How are evidence generation partnerships between researchers and policy-makers enacted in practice? A qualitative interview study

Health Research Policy and Systems
http://www.health-policy-systems.com/content
[Accessed 20 Apr 2019]

Research
|   15 April 2019
How are evidence generation partnerships between researchers and policy-makers enacted in practice? A qualitative interview study
Evidence generation partnerships between researchers and policy-makers are a potential method for producing more relevant research with greater potential to impact on policy and practice. Little is known about how such partnerships are enacted in practice, however, or how to increase their effectiveness. We aimed to determine why researchers and policy-makers choose to work together, how they work together, which partnership models are most common, and what the key (1) relationship-based and (2) practical components of successful research partnerships are.
Authors: Anna Williamson, Hannah Tait, Fadi El Jardali, Luke Wolfenden, Sarah Thackway, Jessica Stewart, Lyndal O’Leary and Julie Dixon

 

Health and immunisation services for the urban poor in selected countries of Asia

Infectious Diseases of Poverty
http://www.idpjournal.com/content
[Accessed 20 Apr 2019]

Commentary
|   18 April 2019
Health and immunisation services for the urban poor in selected countries of Asia
Asia is a region that is rapidly urbanising. While overall urban health is above rural health standards, there are also pockets of deep health and social disadvantage within urban slum and peri-urban areas that represent increased public health risk. With a focus on vaccine preventable disease and immunisation coverage, this commentary describes and analyses strengths and weaknesses of existing urban health and immunisation strategy, with a view to recommending strategic directions for improving access to immunisation and related maternal and child health services in urban areas across the region. The themes discussed in this commentary are based on the findings of country case studies published by the United Nations Childrens Fund (UNICEF)  on the topic of immunisation and related health services for the urban poor in Cambodia, Indonesia, Mongolia, Myanmar, the Philippines, and Vietnam.
Authors: John Grundy, Xiaojun Wang, Kunihiko Chris Hirabayashi, Richard Duncan, Dexter Bersonda, Abu Obeida Eltayeb, Godwin Mindra and Robin Nandy

Tuberculosis and integrated child health — Rediscovering the principles of Alma Ata

International Journal of Infectious Diseases
March 2019 Volume 80, Supplement, S1-S84
https://www.ijidonline.com/issue/S1201-9712(19)X0005-3

Articles
Tuberculosis and integrated child health — Rediscovering the principles of Alma Ata
Anne K. Detjen, Shaffiq Essajee, Malgorzata Grzemska, Ben J. Marais
S9–S12
Published online: February 27, 2019
Highlights
:: The renewed commitment to Primary Health Care (PHC) presents an opportunity to reconsider latent synergies and novel partnerships for child health and development.
:: TB and HIV partners need to align better and jointly formulate strategies to scale up pediatric TB and HIV in an integrated MNCH and PHC context.
:: Integrated, family-centered approaches, implemented at the community and primary care facility level are key for bridging the pediatric TB and HIV gaps.

BCG vaccination following latent TB treatment: Possible implications for different settings

International Journal of Infectious Diseases
March 2019 Volume 80, Supplement, S1-S84
https://www.ijidonline.com/issue/S1201-9712(19)X0005-3

BCG vaccination following latent TB treatment: Possible implications for different settings

  1. Goscé, J. Bitencourt, R.K. Gupta, S. Arruda, L.C. Rodrigues, I. Abubakar

S17–S19
Published online: February 25, 2019

Building a European database to gather multi-country evidence on active and latent TB screening for migrants

International Journal of Infectious Diseases
March 2019 Volume 80, Supplement, S1-S84
https://www.ijidonline.com/issue/S1201-9712(19)X0005-3

Building a European database to gather multi-country evidence on active and latent TB screening for migrants
Joanna Nederby Öhd, Knut Lönnroth, Ibrahim Abubakar, Robert W. Aldridge, Connie Erkens, Jerker Jonsson, Valentina Marchese, Alberto Matteelli, Dee Menezes, Dominik Zenner, Maria-Pia Hergens
S45–S49
Published online: March 1, 2019

A Model for Public Access to Trustworthy and Comprehensive Reporting of Research

JAMA
April 16, 2019, Vol 321, No. 15, Pages 1429-1542
http://jama.jamanetwork.com/issue.aspx

Viewpoint
A Model for Public Access to Trustworthy and Comprehensive Reporting of Research
Marina Broitman, PhD; Harold C. Sox, MD; Jean Slutsky, PA, MSPH
free access
JAMA. 2019;321(15):1453-1454. doi:10.1001/jama.2019.2807
This Viewpoint describes the peer review processes of the Patient-Centered Outcomes Research Institute, the yield since 2010 of publicly posted final reports of funded comparative effectiveness studies, and speculates that the benefits of the legislatively mandated process may someday outweigh its many current procedural challenges.

Assessing researchers with a focus on research integrity

The Lancet
Apr 20, 2019  Volume 393Number 10181p1569-1668, e38
https://www.thelancet.com/journals/lancet/issue/current

Editorial
Assessing researchers with a focus on research integrity
The Lancet
Despite decades of progress in global health, many low and middle income countries are not reaching their health Sustainable Development Goals, creating a sense of urgency to prioritise health in resource-strained environments. The use of artificial intelligence (AI) is becoming increasingly attractive to the health-care industry. The accompanying enthusiasm remains awkwardly placed somewhere between aspiration and reality.

The Artificial Intelligence in Global Health report, published on April 1, 2019, was funded by the USAID’s Center for Innovation and Impact and the Rockefeller Foundation, in close coordination with the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation. The report looks at 27 cases of AI use in health care and distils them into four key groupings—population health, patient and front-line health worker virtual assistants, and physician clinical decision support. It hypothesises how AI solutions could improve access, quality, and efficacy of global health systems while accounting for their technological maturity and feasibility. The identified challenges, the most highly volatile being privacy, ethics, and data ownership, are in line with recent debates on regulation and policy for AI technology implementation in health care. To mitigate these challenges, stakeholders would need to be held accountable and be transparent whether supporting innovation, interoperability, or capacity building. The report sets the framework for a proactive and strategic approach to accelerate the development of cost-effective use of AI in global health by investing in case-specific, systematic, and technology-related key areas.

This report outlines an aspirational yet pragmatic framework for better coordination for AI investment between donors, governments, and the private sector, while harnessing a futuristic vision—the digitisation of global health. Because the cost-effectiveness of these AI solutions has yet to be validated, the call for investments feels somewhat premature. Traditionally, the global health community is a late adopter of new technologies. Hence, it is imperative that they have an integral and active role in the dialogue early on. As this report rightfully stipulates, technology will get there, but will the world follow?

A Belmont Report for Health Data

New England Journal of Medicine
April 18, 2019   Vol. 380 No. 16
http://www.nejm.org/toc/nejm/medical-journal

Perspective
A Belmont Report for Health Data
Efthimios Parasidis, J.D., M.B.E., Elizabeth Pike, J.D., LL.M., and Deven McGraw, J.D., M.P.H., LL.M.
Just as indignities common in human-subjects research led to the articulation of ethical principles in the Belmont Report 40 years ago, contemporary concerns about data use call for stakeholders to promulgate ethical guidance for health data.

Combating infectious disease epidemics through China’s Belt and Road Initiative

PLoS Neglected Tropical Diseases
http://www.plosntds.org/
(Accessed 20 Apr 2019)

Policy Platform
Combating infectious disease epidemics through China’s Belt and Road Initiative
Jin Chen, Robert Bergquist, Xiao-Nong Zhou, Jing-Bo Xue, Men-Bao Qian
| published 18 Apr 2019 PLOS Neglected Tropical Diseases
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pntd.0007107
…Conclusion and implication
A major part of the BRI focuses on support and communication to build a new mechanism for global health, prioritising the prevention and control of infectious diseases, preventing outbreaks becoming epidemics, and providing UHC, thus overcoming the vicious circle of poverty and ill health. China will strengthen cooperation with particular regard to the control of TB, echinococcosis, and dengue within the 69 countries and deliver enhanced communication and research leading to the elimination of LF, malaria, and schistosomiasis. Based on opportunities the BRI provides and the cooperative experience gained, the framework shown in Fig 3 should become available and applicable to the response to these challenges by sharing information, joint control, and technical know-how.

UHC and response to the challenges posed by infectious disease epidemics are vital for the new era, with health considerations at the core of the BRI. Despite the serious threats of the infectious disease epidemics, the emphasis on health through the BRI puts us in an excellent position to achieve the health-related aspects of the SDGs by implementing the Health Silk Road concept of improved life through health-related communication. Based on technical experience in this field, mature collaborating mechanisms, and the provision of financial support, the strategies in the context of the BRI reinforce the various countries’ extensive engagement in combating infectious disease epidemics.

The case-area targeted rapid response strategy to control cholera in Haiti: a four-year implementation study

PLoS Neglected Tropical Diseases
http://www.plosntds.org/
(Accessed 20 Apr 2019)

The case-area targeted rapid response strategy to control cholera in Haiti: a four-year implementation study
Stanislas Rebaudet, Gregory Bulit, Jean Gaudart, Edwige Michel, Pierre Gazin, Claudia Evers, Samuel Beaulieu, Aaron Aruna Abedi, Lindsay Osei, Robert Barrais, Katilla Pierre, Sandra Moore, Jacques Boncy, Paul Adrien, Florence Duperval Guillaume, Edouard Beigbeder, Renaud Piarroux
Research Article | published 16 Apr 2019 PLOS Neglected Tropical Diseases
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pntd.0007263

Low population Japanese encephalitis virus (JEV) seroprevalence in Udayapur district, Nepal, three years after a JE vaccination programme: A case for further catch up campaigns?

PLoS Neglected Tropical Diseases
http://www.plosntds.org/
(Accessed 20 Apr 2019)

Low population Japanese encephalitis virus (JEV) seroprevalence in Udayapur district, Nepal, three years after a JE vaccination programme: A case for further catch up campaigns?
Lance Turtle, Hannah E. Brindle, William Schluter, Brian Faragher, Ajit Rayamajhi, Rajendra Bohara, Santosh Gurung, Geeta Shakya, Sutee Yoksan, Sameer Dixit, Rajesh Rajbhandari, Bimal Paudel, Shailaja Adhikari, Tom Solomon, Mike J. Griffiths
Research Article | published 15 Apr 2019 PLOS Neglected Tropical Diseases
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pntd.0007269

Medical prescribing and antibiotic resistance: A game-theoretic analysis of a potentially catastrophic social dilemma

PLoS One
http://www.plosone.org/
[Accessed 20 Apr 2019]

Research Article
Medical prescribing and antibiotic resistance: A game-theoretic analysis of a potentially catastrophic social dilemma
Andrew M. Colman, Eva M. Krockow, Edmund Chattoe-Brown, Carolyn Tarrant
Research Article | published 19 Apr 2019 PLOS ONE
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0215480
 

Waning immunity

Science         
19 April 2019  Vol 364, Issue 6437
http://www.sciencemag.org/current.dtl

Feature
Waning immunity
By Jon Cohen
Science19 Apr 2019 : 224-227 Full Access
Vaccine protection can fade in months or last a lifetime.Understanding why could lead to more durable immune responses.
Summary
The power of vaccines depends on their ability to train the immune system to recognize microbes and then, if an infection with one of them occurs, to mount a vigorous attack. But the immunity triggered by vaccines wanes over time, and researchers have a wobbly handle on the durability of the protection offered for several diseases. New studies suggest vaccine-induced immune responses against influenza, mumps, pertussis, and yellow fever may all disappear at a faster rate than appreciated, calling into question the timing of booster shots recommended by health officials. For adults who have received all six of their diphtheria and tetanus shots as children, their protection might be so robust that they do not need the booster that’s routinely used in the United States every 10 years. A central problem is that immunologists have not systematically investigated the mechanisms behind vaccine durability. A remarkably durable vaccine against human papillomavirus that contains what’s known as a viruslike particle offers some clues of ways forward, as it spurs the immune system to make antibodies from long-lived plasma cells, which to date have been in the shadows of their superstar cousins known as memory B cells. There is also a push to better connect data from vaccine “breakthrough” infections during outbreaks and the immune response analyses being done in laboratories that study immunization.

Parents’ healthcare-seeking behavior for their children among the climate-related displaced population of rural Bangladesh

Social Science & Medicine
Volume 226  Pages 1-274 (April 2019)
https://www.sciencedirect.com/journal/social-science-and-medicine/vol/226/suppl/C

Research article  Abstract only
Parents’ healthcare-seeking behavior for their children among the climate-related displaced population of rural Bangladesh
Md Rabiul Haque, Nick Parr, Salut Muhidin
Pages 9-20

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

From Google Scholar & other sources: Selected Journal Articles, Newsletters, Dissertations, Theses, Commentary
Open Forum Infectious Diseases
Volume 6, Issue 4, April 2019,
Mandatory Flu Vaccine for Healthcare Workers: Not Worthwhile
MB Edmond
Abstract
In 2010, the Society for Healthcare Epidemiology published a recommendation that annual influenza vaccination of healthcare workers be made a condition of employment despite no high-level evidence to support this recommendation. A better strategy for reducing the transmission of respiratory viruses in the healthcare setting would be to encourage vaccination and reduce presenteeism, which is very common among healthcare workers with influenza-like illness. In a hospital with a baseline vaccination compliance of 70%, reducing presenteeism by 2% has the equivalent impact of mandating vaccination in terms of the number of healthcare workers with influenza-like illness at work. Expectations for compliance with interventions to improve the quality of care should be correlated tightly to the underlying evidence to support the intervention, reserving mandates for interventions with very high quality supporting evidence.

 

Annual Review of Virology
Review in Advance first posted online on April 15, 2019
The MMR Vaccine and Autism
F DeStefano, TT Shimabukuro
Abstract
Autism is a developmental disability that can cause significant social, communication, and behavioral challenges. A report published in 1998, but subsequently retracted by the journal, suggested that measles, mumps, and rubella (MMR) vaccine causes autism. However, autism is a neurodevelopmental condition that has a strong genetic component with genesis before one year of age, when MMR vaccine is typically administered. Several epidemiologic studies have not found an association between MMR vaccination and autism, including a study that found that MMR vaccine was not associated with an increased risk of autism even among high-risk children whose older siblings had autism. Despite strong evidence of its safety, some parents are still hesitant to accept MMR vaccination of their children. Decreasing acceptance of MMR vaccination has led to outbreaks or resurgence of measles. Health-care providers have a vital role in maintaining confidence in vaccination and preventing suffering, disability, and death from measles and other vaccine-preventable diseases.

Paediatrics & Child Health
Volume 24, Issue 2, May 2019
Vaccine-preventable diseases: Uncommon disease primer for the front-line provider
S Desai, N MacDonald
Abstract
This practice point provides quick information for front-line health care providers on vaccine-preventable diseases which, given the success of immunization programs in Canada, are now uncommon or rarely seen. These infections can still occur in children and youth from Canada and elsewhere, and their clinical identification has important public health implications. Knowledge of signs and symptoms, immunizing travellers and newcomers to Canada, awareness of outbreaks in-community and elsewhere, and early consultation with an expert in infectious diseases and public health authorities in suspected cases, are key preventive care measures.

 

Journal of Computational Social Science
First Online: 09 April 2019
Personal stories matter: topic evolution and popularity among pro-and anti-vaccine online articles
Z Xu
Abstract
People tend to read health articles that have gone viral online. A large portion of online popular vaccine articles are against vaccines, which lead to increased exemption rates and recent outbreaks of vaccine-preventable diseases. Since anti-vaccine articles’ themes and persuasive strategies change fast, their effects on viewers’ behaviors may change over time. This study examined how pro- and anti-vaccine topics and public interests have changed from 2007 to 2017. Computational methods (e.g., topic modeling) were used to analyze 923 online vaccine articles and over 4 million shares, reactions, and comments that they have received on social media. Pro-vaccine messages (PVMs) that used personal stories received the most heated discussion online and pure scientific knowledge received the least attention. PVMs that present vaccine disagreements and limitations were not popular. These findings indicate the importance of narratives and directly attacking opposing arguments in health message design. Anti-vaccine messages (AVMs) that discussed flu shots and government conspiracy received the most attention. Since April 2015, even though more PVMs appeared online, AVMs, especially those about vaccine damage, were increasingly more popular than PVMs. Some social events and disease outbreaks might contribute to the popularity of AVMs. Newly emerged anti-vaccine topics (e.g., false rumors of CDC conspiracy) should be noted. This study shows that certain topics can be more popular online and can potentially reach a larger population. It also reveals the evolution of vaccine-related topics and public’s interest. Findings can help to design effective interventions and develop programs to track and combat misinformation

BMJ Global Health
Apr 2019, 4 (2)
Practice
Private sector engagement and contributions to immunisation service delivery and coverage in Sudan
Nada Ahmed1, Denise DeRoeck2, Nahad Sadr-Azodi3
Abstract
For more than two decades, the private sector in the Sudan (henceforth, Sudan), including non-governmental organisations and for-profit providers, has played a key role in delivering immunisation services, especially in the conflict-affected Darfur region and the most populated Khartoum state. The agreements that the providers enter into with state governments necessitate that they are licenced; follow the national immunisation policy and reporting and supervision requirements; use the vaccines supplied by government; and offer vaccinations free-of-charge. These private providers are well integrated into the states’ immunisation programmes as they take part in the Ministry of Health immunisation trainings and district review meetings and they are incorporated into annual district immunisation microplans. The purpose of this article is to describe the private sector contributions to equitable access to immunisation services and coverage, as well as key challenges, lessons learned and future considerations. Fifty-five per cent of private health facilities in Sudan (411 out of 752) provide immunisation services, with 75% (307 out of 411) based in Khartoum state and the Darfur region. In 2017, private providers administered around 16% of all third doses of pentavalent (diphtheria, pertussis, tetanus, hepatitis B and Haemophilus influenzae type b) vaccines to children. Private health providers of immunisation services have especially been critical in filling the gaps in government services in hard-to-reach or conflict-affected areas and among marginalised populations, and thus in reducing inequities in access. Through its experience in engaging the private sector, Sudan has learned the importance of regulating and licencing private facilities and incorporating them into the immunisation programme’s decision-making, planning, regular evaluation and supervision system to ensure their compliance with immunisation guidelines and the overall quality of services. In moving forward, strategic engagement with the private sector will become more prominent as Sudan transitions out of donors’ financial assistance with its projected income growth.

 
 
BMJ Global Health
Apr 2019, 4 (2)
Analysis
Immunisation financing and programme performance in the Middle East and North Africa, 2010 to 2017
Helen Saxenian1, Nahad Sadr-Azodi2, Miloud Kaddar3, Kamel Senouci4
Abstract
Immunisation is a cornerstone to primary health care and is an exceptionally good value. The 14 low-income and middle-income countries in the Middle East and North Africa region make up 88% of the region’s population and 92% of its births. Many of these countries have maintained high immunisation coverage even during periods of low or negative economic growth. However, coverage has sharply deteriorated in countries directly impacted by conflict and political unrest. Approximately 1.3 million children were not completely vaccinated in 2017, as measured by third dose of diphtheria–pertussis–tetanus vaccine. Most of the countries have been slow to adopt the newer, more expensive life-saving vaccines mainly because of financial constraints and the socioeconomic context. Apart from the three countries that have had long-standing assistance from Gavi, the Vaccine Alliance, most countries have not benefited appreciably from donor and partner activities in supporting their health sector and in achieving their national and subnational immunisation targets. Looking forward, development partners will have an important role in helping reconstruct health systems in conflict-affected countries. They can also help with generating evidence and strategic advocacy for high-priority and cost-effective services, including immunisation. Governments and ministries of health would ensure important benefits to their populations by investing further in their immunisation programmes. Where possible, the health system can create and expand fiscal space from efficiency gains in harmonising vaccine procurement mechanisms and service integration; broader revenue generation from economic growth; and reallocation of government budgets to health, and from within health, to immunization

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.
 
 
The Atlantic
http://www.theatlantic.com/magazine/
Accessed 20 Apr 2019
[No new, unique, relevant content]
 
 
BBC
http://www.bbc.co.uk/
Accessed 20 Apr 2019
[No new, unique, relevant content]
 
 
The Economist
http://www.economist.com/
Accessed 20 Apr 2019
The needle and the damage avoided
New York’s measles outbreak puts vaccination rules on the spot
Many states have a “misinformed-parent exemption”
Print edition | United States
Apr 17th 2019 | BROOKLYN
 
 
Financial Times
http://www.ft.com/home/uk
Accessed 20 Apr 2019
[No new, unique, relevant content]
 
 
Forbes
http://www.forbes.com/
Accessed 20 Apr 2019
[No new, unique, relevant content]
 
 
Foreign Affairs
http://www.foreignaffairs.com/
Accessed 20 Apr 2019
[No new, unique, relevant content]
 
 
Foreign Policy
http://foreignpolicy.com/
Accessed 20 Apr 2019
Your Cell Phone Is Spreading Ebola
A deadly outbreak in Congo has become a global emergency because of a raging conflict over valuable minerals.
Voice | April 17, 2019,
Laurie Garrett
 
 
The Guardian
http://www.guardiannews.com/
Accessed 20 Apr 2019
Mounting concern over cholera health crisis in Yemen
More than 2,000 new cases reported every day, with 25% of those affected being children under five
17 Apr 2019   Yemen is facing a massive resurgence of cholera in what was already one of the world’s worst outbreaks, with more than 137,000 suspected cases and almost 300 deaths reported in the first three months of this year.
With well over 2,000 suspected cases being recorded every day – a doubling since the beginning of the year – aid agencies fear they could be facing a major new health crisis.
Amid mounting concern over the return of the epidemic – which first broke out in the war-devastated country in 2016 – aid agencies are reporting cases in 21 out of 23 governorates, with children under five making up a quarter of those affected…
 
 
New Yorker
http://www.newyorker.com/
Accessed 20 Apr 2019
[No new, unique, relevant content]
 
 
New York Times
http://www.nytimes.com/
Accessed 20 Apr 2019
Africa
Attackers Kill Doctor at Hospital in Congo’s Ebola Epicenter
Attackers stormed a hospital at the epicenter of Congo’s Ebola outbreak and killed “a dear colleague,” the head of the World Health Organization said Friday as he condemned the latest violence against health workers trying to contain the virus.
April 19
 
 
Travel
El Al Airline Warns of Measles After Flight Attendant Falls Into Coma
The woman was hospitalized after contracting the disease, and passengers on a flight from J.F.K. to Tel Aviv are told to watch for symptoms.
April 18
 
 
U.S.
Judge Upholds New York City’s Mandatory Measles Vaccination Order
A Brooklyn judge on Thursday ruled against a group of parents who challenged New York City’s recently imposed mandatory measles vaccination order, rejecting their arguments that the city’s public health authority exceeded its authority.
April 15
 
 
New York
Measles Outbreak: Yeshiva’s Preschool Program Is Closed by New York City Health Officials
The program is the first one to be closed as part of the city’s escalating effort to stem the country’s largest measles outbreak in decades.
April 15
 
 
SLATE
https://slate.com/
Accessed 20 Apr 2019
Forget About “Because Science”
Persuading people to vaccinate their children requires engaging with them about their values.
By Gregory E. Kaebnick and Michael Gusmano
April 15, 20197:30 AM
 
 
STAT
https://www.statnews.com/
Accessed 20 Apr 2019
First Opinion
Life-course vaccination can protect adults from infectious disease
By Lois Privor-Dumm
April 16, 2019
 
 
Wall Street Journal
http://online.wsj.com/home-page?_wsjregion=na,us&_homepage=/home/us
Accessed 20 Apr 2019
New York
New York City Issues Summonses to Parents of Three Unvaccinated Children
By Melanie Grayce West
April 18, 2019 9:50 pm ET
New York City’s health department said t it has issued three civil summonses to parents who failed to comply with a vaccine mandate and that the number of confirmed measles cases has jumped from 329 to 359.
 
 
Region
New York City Extends Order for Mandatory Measles Vaccinations
By Melanie Grayce West
April 17, 2019 4:53 pm ET
The order applies to children 6 months and older, with fines for noncompliance.
 
 
Washington Post
http://www.washingtonpost.com/
Accessed 20 Apr 2019
Apr 18, 2019
Washington state Senate passes vaccine bill in rebuke to anti-vaxxers
Lena H. Sun and Lenny Bernstein

 

Think Tanks et al

Think Tanks et al

 

Brookings
http://www.brookings.edu/
Accessed 20 Apr 2019
[No new relevant content]

 
Center for Global Development  
http://www.cgdev.org/page/press-center
[No new relevant content]

 

CSIS
https://www.csis.org/
Accessed 20 Apr 2019
[No new relevant content]

 

Council on Foreign Relations
http://www.cfr.org/
Accessed 20 Apr 2019
April 19, 2019
Democratic Republic of Congo
The Ebola Vaccine Is Highly Effective in Eastern Congo
An experimental vaccine developed by Merck & Co is proving to be 97.5 percent effective at preventing Ebola. The World Health Organization’s Strategic Advisory Group of Experts is now permitting the use of the vaccine based on its Expanded Access/Compassionate protocol for experimental vaccines. The vaccine is already protecting some ninety thousand people in the eastern Congo, where there has been a devastating outbreak of Ebola.
Blog Post by John Campbell Africa in Transition

 

Kaiser Family Foundation
https://www.kff.org/search/?post_type=press-release
Accessed 20 Apr 2019
[No new relevant content]

Vaccines and Global Health: The Week in Review :: 13 April 2019

.– 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_13 Apr 2019

– 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

Milestones :: Perspectives :: Research DRC – Ebola

Milestones :: Perspectives :: Research

 

DRC – Ebola
 
36: Situation report on the Ebola outbreak in North Kivu
9 April 2019
Situation update

The recent escalation in the number of Ebola virus disease (EVD) cases continues in the North Kivu provinces of the Democratic Republic of the Congo. This past week saw 65 new confirmed cases reported in the last seven days, predominantly from the areas of Katwa, Mandima, Butembo, and Vuhovi…

::::::
 

IFRC – DR Congo: “Ebola is spreading faster, and many people are no longer seeking care”
Nairobi/Geneva, 11 April 2019 –The deadly Ebola outbreak in the Democratic Republic of the Congo is worsening as trust in the response effort falters, says the International Federation of Red Cross and Red Crescent Societies.

This warning follows confirmation of 18 new Ebola cases on Tuesday (9 April) – the highest single day figure in the now eight month-long outbreak. DR Congo’s Health Ministry also reported that 10 died people from Ebola on Tuesday, including eight who died in their communities having not sought treatment and support.

“This is a very distressing development,” said Emanuele Capobianco, IFRC’s Director of Health and Care. “The bottom line is that Ebola is now spreading faster, and many people are no longer seeking care. It is clear that some vulnerable communities do not trust Ebola responders.”

Redoubling efforts to engage with these communities is critical, according to Capobianco.

“Trust can be built by going community to community, working with local leaders and villagers, listening to their concerns with empathy, and incorporating their feedback and preferences into how we work,” he said.

In-depth community engagement is central to the Red Cross operation in North Kivu and Ituri provinces in eastern DR Congo, where more than 700 Red Cross volunteers from Ebola-affected communities are at work. They have reached more than 1 million people with locally adapted information and have collected more than 130,000 “pieces” of community feedback…

 

::::::

 

Statement on the meeting of the International Health Regulations (2005) Emergency Committee for Ebola virus disease in the Democratic Republic of the Congo on 12th April 2019

12 April 2019   Statement  Geneva
The meeting of the Emergency Committee convened by the WHO Director-General under the International Health Regulations (IHR) (2005) regarding Ebola virus disease (EVD) in the Democratic Republic of the Congo took place on Friday, 12th April, 2019, from 13:00 to 17:20 Geneva time (CET).

Key Findings:
It was the view of the Committee the ongoing Ebola outbreak in North Kivu and Ituri provinces of the Democratic Republic of the Congo does not constitute a Public Health Emergency of International Concern (PHEIC). However, the Committee wished to express their deep concern about the recent increase in transmission in specific areas, and therefore the potential risk of spread to neighbouring countries.

The Committee also wishes to commend the efforts of responders from the government of the Democratic Republic of Congo, the World Health Organization and partners to contain the outbreak in a complex and difficult setting.

Additionally, the Committee has provided the following public health advice: 
:: The committee advises to redouble efforts to detect cases as early as possible, identify and follow up all contacts, ensure the highest level of coverage vaccination of all contacts and contacts of contacts.

:: Sustained efforts must be made to prevent nosocomial transmission and to shorten time between onset of disease and access to high standards of care and therapeutics at Ebola treatment units.

:: Special emphasis should be placed on addressing the rise in case numbers in the remaining epicentres, notably Butembo, Katwa, Vuhovi, and Mandima.

:: The Committee advises WHO and all partners to identify, target, and scale up community dialogue and participation, engagement of traditional healers, and other community engagement tactics to strengthen and broaden community acceptance.

:: The Committee also noted the need to follow the recommendations of SAGE with regards to the vaccination strategy provided at its latest meeting.

:: The safety of responders should be prioritized, while avoiding the securitization of the response.

:: Because there is a very high risk of regional spread, neighbouring countries should continue to accelerate current preparedness and surveillance efforts, including vaccination of health care workers and front-line workers in surrounding countries.

:: Cross-border collaboration should continue to be strengthened, including timely sharing of data and alerts, cross-border community engagement and awareness raising. In addition, work should be done to better map population movements and understand social networks bridging national boundaries.

:: The Committee maintains its previous advice that it is particularly important that no international travel or trade restrictions should be applied. Exit screening, including at airports, ports, and land crossings, is of great importance; however, entry screening, particularly in distant airports, is not considered to be of any public health or cost-benefit value.

:: The committee strongly emphasized the critical need to strengthen currents efforts in both preparedness and response. This will require substantial, immediate and sustained additional financial support.

:: While there is no added benefit to declaring a PHEIC at this stage, there was concern about current levels of transmission requiring close attention to the evolving situation. The committee advised the WHO Director General to continue to monitor the situation closely and reconvene the Emergency Committee as needed.

Fast rollout of cholera vaccines for people in need in Mozambique

Milestones :: Perspectives :: Research

OCV – Cyclone Idai

Fast rollout of cholera vaccines for people in need in Mozambique
10 April 2019, Maputo – The Ministry of Health in Mozambique has concluded a successful six-day emergency cholera vaccination campaign that reached more than 800 000 people in four districts affected by Cyclone Idai.

The campaign was supported by around 1200 community volunteers and partners including the World Health Organization (WHO), UNICEF, Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF), International Federation of the Red Cross and Red Crescent Societies (IFRC) and Save the Children.

“From start to finish, this campaign was one of the fastest ever, thanks to experienced people at the Ministry of Health, who knew there was a high risk of a cholera outbreak and made a rapid request for the vaccines as soon as the cyclone hit,” says Dr Djamila Cabral, Head of the WHO office in Mozambique. “The Ministry did an excellent job organizing the campaign and reaching so many people in such a short time. The oral cholera vaccine is one of the vital measures that can help save lives and stop the spread of this terrible disease during an outbreak.”

The oral cholera vaccines, donated by Gavi from the Global Cholera Vaccine Stockpile, arrived in Beira on Tuesday 2 April and, within 24 hours, began reaching people in need.

The vaccines were given to communities identified by the Government at highest risk – those without access to safe water and sanitation – in Beira, Dondo, Nhamatanda and Buzi districts.

Vaccine uptake has been very high and the campaign has been well received by the communities. Remaining vaccines will be used for other at-risk communities that were not reached by the initial campaign…

Humanitarian mechanism for vaccines used for first time in Europe to counter high prices

Milestones :: Perspectives :: Research

Humanitarian mechanism for vaccines used for first time in Europe to counter high prices – MSF
:: A new humanitarian mechanism for vaccines has been used for the first time in Europe, allowing MSF to vaccinate refugee children in Greece at an affordable price.
:: Children were vaccinated with the pnemococcal conjugate vaccine, which is usually prohibitively expensive in Europe.
:: We urge for more vaccines to be included in the humanitarian mechanism, allowing children to be protected against more diseases.
Press Release 12 April 2019 Athens — Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF) has started vaccinating refugee children on the Greek islands of Chios, Samos and Lesvos using a programme set up to allow children in humanitarian emergencies to access the pneumococcal conjugate vaccine (PCV) at an affordable price.
This marks the first time the ‘Humanitarian Mechanism’ is used in a high-income country—the programme offers the vaccine at a special reduced price of about US$9 per child (for the three doses needed for full immunisation) for humanitarian use by civil society organisations and UN agencies. Pneumonia remains the single largest killer of children under five worldwide, and children living in precarious conditions—including those in refugee camps—are at particularly high risk.

Reverse global vaccine dissent

Featured Journal Content

Science
12 April 2019 Vol 364, Issue 6436
http://www.sciencemag.org/current.dtl
EDITORIAL
Reverse global vaccine dissent
Heidi J. Larson1, William S. Schulz2
[See Milestones above for full text]
This year, the World Health Organization named vaccine hesitancy as one of the top 10 global health threats, alongside threats as grave as climate change, antimicrobial resistance, Ebola virus, and the next influenza pandemic. What happened? How did vaccine reluctance and refusal become such a major risk?

The concerns driving antivaccine sentiment today are diverse. For example, from 2003 to 2004, a vaccine boycott in Nigeria’s Kano State sparked the retransmission of polio across multiple countries as far as Indonesia. Rumors of vaccine contamination with antifertility agents contributed to distrust and reinforced the boycott, costing the Global Polio Eradication Initiative over U.S. $500 million to regain the progress that was lost. In Japan, vaccination against human papilloma virus plummeted to almost zero after young women complained of movement disorders and chronic pain, causing the government to suspend proactive recommendation of the vaccine nearly 6 years ago. Similar episodes occurred in Denmark, Ireland, and Colombia as YouTube videos of the girls’ symptoms spread anxiety, despite evidence of the vaccine’s safety.

The global surge in measles outbreaks has been exacerbated by vaccine refusers. In 2015, the measles strain that sparked the Disneyland outbreak came from visitors from the Philippines, infecting people who had refused vaccination. And in Indonesia, Muslim leaders issued a fatwa against a measles vaccine containing “haram” porcine compounds, while naturopathic “cupping” methods were promoted on Facebook as an alternative to vaccination. In 2018, a mix of political, religious, and alternative health antivaccine messages circulated on WhatsApp and Facebook in Southern India, disrupting a local measles-rubella vaccination campaign.

The phenomenon of vaccine dissent is not new. The pages of 18th-century London antivaccination pamphlets bristle with many of today’s memes, but these ideas now spread over unprecedented distances with remarkable speed, clustering in online neighborhoods of shared beliefs. This clustering can tear the protective fabric—the “herd (community) immunity”—that the majority of vaccine acceptors have woven. As the portion of the community that is vaccinated decreases, there is less protection for others who may be too young, unable, or choose not to be vaccinated. For some diseases, it only takes a small minority to disrupt the protective cover.

It is just over 20 years since British physician Andrew Wakefield sowed seeds of doubt about the safety of the MMR (measles, mumps, rubella) vaccine, suggesting a link between the vaccine and autism. Suspicions around the vaccine traveled globally, instilling anxiety among the most and least educated alike. The discredited Wakefield alone, though, cannot be blamed for today’s waves of vaccine discontent. He seeded a message on the eve of a technological revolution that disrupted business, politics, societies, and global health. The same year that Wakefield published his research, Google opened its doors. The launches of Facebook, YouTube, Twitter, and Instagram soon followed. These social media platforms have magnified individual sentiments that might have stayed local. Emotions are particularly contagious on social media, where personal narrative, images, and videos are shared easily.

Today’s tech companies are now being called to account for their role in spreading vaccine dissent. Last month, the American Medical Association urged the chief executives of key technology companies to “ensure that users have access to scientifically valid information on vaccinations.” But this is not merely an issue of correcting misinformation. There are social networks in which vaccine views and information are circulating in online communities, where vaccine choices become part of one’s overall identity.

To mitigate the globalization of vaccine dissent, while respecting legitimate sharing of concerns and genuine questions, a mix of relevant expertise is needed. Technology experts, social scientists, vaccine and public health experts, and ethicists must convene and take a hard look at the different roles each group has in addressing this challenge. It needs everyone’s attention.

Emergencies

Emergencies

POLIO
Public Health Emergency of International Concern (PHEIC)
Polio this week as of 10 April 2019
:: The report by the Director-General World Health Organization on the eradication of poliomyelitis is online, ahead of the 72nd World Health Assembly scheduled for May 2019. The report summarizes the remaining challenges to a polio-free world and presents the main elements of the new GPEI Polio Endgame Strategy 2019-2023.
:: An Independent Outbreak Response Assessment (OBRA) took place in Kinshasa, Democratic Republic of Congo on 5 April 2019. The OBRA was carried out to evaluate the quality of the response to the VDPV2 epidemic in the DRC and make the necessary recommendations to interrupt the transmission as soon as possible.
:: The Inaugural WHO Partners Forum convened in Stockholm, Sweden between 8-11 April 2019 with an aim to start a series of conversations with partners to help WHO meet the strategic goals as committed in the Thirteenth General Programme of Work (GPW13) for 2019-2023. The two-day meeting highlighted WHO’s impact on global health, encouraged support from WHO partners to enhance the quality and quantity of resources, and take stock of the innovations and lessons learned to strengthen partnerships and financing activities.  Read more here.

Summary of new viruses this week:
:: Pakistan – four WPV1-positive environmental samples

Editor’s Note:
WHO has posted a refreshed emergencies page which presents an updated listing of Grade 3,2,1 emergencies as below.

WHO Grade 3 Emergencies [to 13 Apr 2019]

Bangladesh – Rohingya crisis
:: Bi‐weekly Situation Report 6 – 2 April 2019 pdf, 734kb

Cyclone Idai
:: Fast rollout of cholera vaccines for people in need in Mozambique 10 April 2019, Maputo
[See Milestones above for detail]

Democratic Republic of the Congo
:: Statement on the meeting of the International Health Regulations (2005) Emergency Committee for Ebola virus disease in the Democratic Republic of the Congo on 12th April 2019
12 April 2019 Statement Geneva
:: 36: Situation report on the Ebola outbreak in North Kivu 9 April 2019
:: DONs – Ebola virus disease – Democratic Republic of the Congo 11 April 2019
[See Ebola above for detail]

South Sudan
:: The Ministry of Health with support from WHO and partners investigates a cluster of unexplained deaths in Jie payam, Kapoeta East 8 April 2019

Myanmar – No new digest announcements identified
Nigeria – No new digest announcements identified
Somalia – No new digest announcements identified
Syrian Arab Republic – No new digest announcements identified
Yemen – No new digest announcements identified

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WHO Grade 2 Emergencies [to 13 Apr 2019]

Brazil (in Portugese)
:: Brasil lança campanha de vacinação contra a influenza 10 de abril de 2019

Cameroon 
:: As internally displaced persons reach nearly 1 million in Ethiopia, WHO reinforces medical supplies 8 April 2019

Iraq
:: WHO sends shipment of kits and medical supplies to Missan governorate Baghdad 8 April 2019 – Responding to the needs of the Directorate of Health in Missan following the recent floods that hit the area, WHO, with the generous support of donors, sent a large consignment of emergency kits and medical supplies on 4 April to support the Directorate, 304 kilometres south east of Baghdad…

Libya
:: Amid Tripoli clashes, WHO rushes medical aid to the wounded in Libya Tripoli, 11 April – As clashes around Tripoli continued and the number of wounded rose to the hundreds, WHO reacted swiftly to provide field hospitals and ambulances with critically-needed life saving supplies.

occupied Palestinian territory 
:: Mobile clinic brings mammography services to remote communities in the West Bank
April 2019

Sudan
:: Sudan prepares to vaccinate over 11 million children against measles and polio 8 April 2019

Central African Republic – No new digest announcements identified
Ethiopia – No new digest announcements identified
MERS-CoV – No new digest announcements identified
Niger – No new digest announcements identified
Ukraine – No new digest announcements identified
Zimbabwe – No new digest announcements identified

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WHO Grade 1 Emergencies [to 13 Apr 2019]
Afghanistan – No new digest announcements identified
Chad – No new digest announcements identified
Indonesia – Sulawesi earthquake 2018 – No new digest announcements identified
Kenya – No new digest announcements identified
Lao People’s Democratic Republic – No new digest announcements identified
Mali – No new digest announcements identified
Namibia – viral hepatitis – No new digest announcements identified
Peru – No new digest announcements identified
Philippines – Tyhpoon Mangkhut – No new digest announcements identified
Tanzania – No new digest announcements identified

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WHO AFRO – Outbreaks and Emergencies Bulletin
Week 14: 01-07 April 2019
The WHO Health Emergencies Programme is currently monitoring 65 events in the region. This week’s edition covers key new and ongoing events, including:
:: Ebola virus disease outbreak in the Democratic Republic of the Congo
:: Cyclone Idai in Southern Africa (Mozambique, Zimbabwe and Malawi)
:: Humanitarian crisis in Cameroon
:: Humanitarian crisis in Ethiopia.

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. 
Syrian Arab Republic – No new digest announcements identified
Yemen – No new digest announcements identified

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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.
CYCLONE IDAI
:: 12 April 2019  Mozambique: Cyclone Idai & Floods Situation Report No. 10
:: 12 April 2019  Zimbabwe: Floods Situation Report No. 2, As of 10 April 2019
:: 10 April 2019  Southern Africa: Cyclone Idai Snapshot (as of 9 April 2019)

WHO & Regional Offices [to 13 Apr 2019]

WHO & Regional Offices [to 13 Apr 2019]
12 April 2019 Statement
Statement on the meeting of the International Health Regulations (2005) Emergency Committee for Ebola virus disease in the Democratic Republic of the Congo on 12th April 201
[See DR Congo – Ebola above for more detail]

9 April 2019 News release
Inaugural WHO Partners Forum launches new push for collaboration on global health
To meet the world’s most pressing health challenges, WHO, governments and global health leaders today called for improved partnerships and resourcing to support WHO’s mission to deliver care, services and protection for billions of people by 2023.
The inaugural two-day WHO Partners Forum opens Tuesday (9 April) in Stockholm and will be co-hosted with the Government of Sweden.
The meeting will result in a shared understanding of how to strengthen partnerships and improve effective financing of WHO, with an emphasis on predictability and flexibility.
…Other participants in the Inaugural WHO Partners Forum include leadership of the Global Fund to Fight AIDS, Tuberculosis and Malaria, the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation, International Federation of Red Cross and Red Crescent Societies and Gavi, the Vaccine Alliance.

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Weekly Epidemiological Record, 5 April 2019, vol. 94, 14/15 (pp. 169–188)
:: Surveillance to track progress towards polio eradication worldwide, 2017–2018
:: Epidemic meningitis control in countries in the African meningitis belt, 2018

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IVB Calls for consultants / proposals
11 April 2019
Estimating coverage of pipeline vaccine products and delivery technologies
Deadline for applications: 3 May 2019

11 April 2019
Consultant to assist with developing guidance materials, tools and strategies for the optimal use of new and under-utilized vaccinespdf, 401kb
Deadline for applications: 25 April 2019

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WHO Regional Offices
Selected Press Releases, Announcements
WHO African Region AFRO
:: WHO and partners successfully vaccinate over 400,000 children against Measles in Borno State -Target 838,582 children more. 12 April 2019
:: Ghana announces the roll out of Malaria Vaccine Implementation Programme (MVIP)
11 April 2019
:: Mauritius launched its Seasonal Influenza Vaccination Programme for 2019 11 April 2019
:: Fast rollout of cholera vaccines for people in need in Mozambique 10 April 2019

WHO Region of the Americas PAHO
:: PHC 30-30-30, PAHO’s new Regional Compact on Primary Health Care for Universal Health(04/11/2019)

WHO South-East Asia Region SEARO
:: Quality primary care key to advancing universal health coverage: WHO SEAR/PR/1709
New Delhi, 5 April 2019: The World Health Organization today said quality healthcare services for people at the community level across all age groups, wherever they live and whenever they need them, without financial hardship, is fundamental to advancing universal health coverage for achieving health and well-being of evryone, everywhere…

WHO European Region EURO
:: Ukraine’s Affordable Medicines Programme shown to have significantly improved access to medicines12-04-2019
:: Member States urged to ramp up fight against noncommunicable diseases 12-04-2019
:: Small countries of the WHO European Region exchange ideas and experiences of equity, sustainable development 09-04-2019
:: WHO urges stronger action to reduce deaths from noncommunicable diseases in Europe by one third 09-04-2019

WHO Eastern Mediterranean Region EMRO
:: WHO Regional Director expresses solidarity with flood victims in Islamic Republic of Iran April 11, 2019
:: WHO sends medical aid to Libya amid clashes in Tripoli 11 April 2019
:: Polio vaccination campaign to vaccinate more than 6 million children in Iraq 11 April 2019
:: WHO airlifts medical supplies for flood response in Islamic Republic of Iran 10 April 2019

WHO Western Pacific Region
No new digest content identified.