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Global Health NewsPublic Health News

Egypt eliminates lymphatic filariasis

by Public Health Update March 13, 2018
written by Public Health Update

Egypt: first country in Eastern Mediterranean region to eliminate lymphatic filariasis

12 March 2018 | Cairo | Geneva – Egypt becomes the first country in the Eastern Mediterranean Region of the World Health Organization (WHO) and the latest in the world to eliminate lymphatic filariasis (LF) as a public health problem.
Egypt’s success comes after almost two decades of implementing sustained control and prevention measures (including mass treatment of populations) and surveillance in affected/at-risk localities.
Egypt’s struggle to overcome lymphatic filariasis (also known as elephantiasis) is perhaps one of the oldest in the history of public health, with field activities going back to the early 20th century. Its clinical manifestations are shown in pharaonic statues and works of art, and are described in early Arabic literature, although its causal agent, the parasite Wuchereria bancrofti, was first documented there in 1874.
The disease burden was fully appreciated in the 20th century through large-scale surveys, which revealed its endemicity in rural areas, especially in the eastern Nile Delta region, where clinical manifestations such as lymphoedema and hydrocele (swollen limbs and genitals) were commonly observed.
Lymphatic filariasis is caused by infection with parasitic worms living in the lymphatic system. The infection impairs the lymphatic system triggering abnormal enlargement of body parts, causing pain, severe disability and social stigma.
The larval stages of the parasite (microfilaria) circulate in the blood and are transmitted from person to person by mosquitoes.
Manifestation of the disease after infection takes time and can result in an altered lymphatic system, causing abnormal enlargement of body parts, and leading to severe disability and social stigmatization of those affected.
Almost 856 million people in 52 countries worldwide remain threatened by LF and require preventive treatment to stop its spread. Regular MDA reduces the density of microfilariae in the bloodstream and prevents the spread of parasites to mosquitoes.
MDA can interrupt the transmission cycle when conducted annually for 4–6 years with effective coverage of the total population at risk.
Salt fortified with DEC has also been used in a few settings to interrupt the transmission cycle.
Parasites that cause LF are transmitted by four main types of mosquitoes: Culex, Mansonia, Anopheles and Aedes.

READ MORE: WHO MEDIA CENTRE

[irp posts=”15896″ name=”Govt launching anti-filariasis campaign”]

[irp posts=”7928″ name=”Diseases Control Program in Nepal : Lymphatic Filariasis”]

March 13, 2018 0 comments
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PM Shri Narendra Modi inaugurates End-TB Summit in Vigyan Bhawan, New Delhi.

by Public Health Update March 13, 2018
written by Public Health Update

PM Shri Narendra Modi inaugurates End-TB Summit in Vigyan Bhawan, New Delhi.

The Delhi End TB Summit 2018 is starting today and inaugurated by the Prime Minister of India, Narendra Modi.
As part of the summit, health ministers and programme heads from WHO South-East Asia Region will review accelerated efforts being made by countries since the adoption of Delhi Call to Action. The Regional Director, Dr Poonam Khetrapal Singh, had announced ending TB as a flagship programme in the Region, at the Delhi Call to Action. Since then, countries in the Region have beefed up efforts to end TB. India, which had set a 2025 target, is matching it up with increased funding and efforts to proactively detect and treat patients. (WHO)

PM Shri Narendra Modi inaugurates End-TB Summit in Vigyan Bhawan, New Delhi

March 13, 2018 1 comment
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Global Health NewsInternational Plan, Policy & GuidelinesPublic Health NewsResearch & PublicationTobacco Control

WHO issues new guidance on tobacco product regulation towards maximum protection of public health

by Public Health Update March 9, 2018
written by Public Health Update

WHO issues new guidance on tobacco product regulation towards maximum protection of public health

News release (WHO)

9 MARCH 2018 – CAPE TOWN: The World Health Organization (WHO) has launched new guidance on the role tobacco product regulation can play to reduce tobacco demand, save lives and raise revenues for health services to treat tobacco-related disease, in the context of comprehensive tobacco control.
A new guide, “Tobacco product regulation: Building laboratory testing capacity”, and a collection of country approaches to regulation of menthol, presented in the publication titled “Case studies for regulatory approaches to tobacco products – Menthol in tobacco products” have been launched at the 2018 World Conference on Tobacco or Health in Cape Town, South Africa.
Many countries have developed advanced policies to reduce the demand for tobacco, which kills over 7 million people annually, but governments can do much more to implement regulations to control tobacco use, especially by exploiting tobacco product regulation.
Dr Douglas Bettcher, WHO’s Director of the Department for the Prevention and Control of Noncommunicable diseases (NCDs), said “The WHO Framework Convention on Tobacco Control (WHO FCTC), a global treaty established under the auspices of the WHO to combat the tobacco epidemic, has played a critical role in tobacco control. The launch of these important publications will further aid the implementation of Articles 9 and 10 of the WHO FCTC, contributing to building tobacco product regulation capacity in WHO Member States”.
He further said “Tobacco product regulation is an under-utilized tool which has a critical role to play in reducing tobacco use. The tobacco industry has enjoyed years of little or no regulation, mainly due to the complexity of tobacco product regulation and lack of appropriate guidance in this area. These new tools provide a useful resource to countries to either introduce or improve existing tobacco product regulation provisions and end the tobacco industry ‘reign’.”
“Only a handful of countries currently regulate the contents, design features and emissions of tobacco products,” says Dr Bettcher. “This means that tobacco products are one of the few openly available consumer products that are virtually unregulated in terms of contents, design features and emissions.”
Most countries hesitate to implement policies, due in part to the highly technical nature of such policy interventions and the difficulties in translating science into regulation, explains Dr Vinayak Prasad, who leads WHO’s Tobacco Free Initiative.
“Failure to regulate represents a missed opportunity as tobacco product regulation, in the context of comprehensive control, is a valuable tool that complements other tried and tested tobacco control interventions, such as raising taxes, and ensuring smoke-free environments,” adds Dr Prasad.
“Tobacco product regulation: Building laboratory testing capacity” provides practical, stepwise approaches to implementing tobacco testing. Such guidance is relevant to a wide range of countries in various settings, including those with inadequate resources to establish a testing facility. This laboratory guide is a useful resource for countries, and provides regulators and policymakers with comprehensible information on how to test tobacco products, what products to test, and how to use testing data in a meaningful way to support regulation.
Further, it provides a step-by-step guide to developing a testing laboratory, using an existing internal laboratory, contracting an external laboratory, and making use of the available support mechanisms both within WHO and externally. This calls for country prioritization and commitment of resources to tobacco product regulation, as the guide equips regulators with the necessary tools to strengthen tobacco regulation capacity, especially in relation to Article 9 of the WHO FCTC.
The publication “Case studies for regulatory approaches to tobacco products – Menthol in tobacco products” complements the 2016 advisory note on menthol published by the WHO Study Group on Tobacco Product Regulation, which set out the available evidence on prevalence and health effects of menthol in tobacco products, as well as evidence-based conclusions and recommendations for policy-makers and regulators on menthol in its various forms.
The case studies provide practical guidance and policy options to countries about effective regulatory strategies in tobacco product regulation. This includes lessons learned and challenges encountered in developing and implementing menthol related regulation. To date, regulators have adopted multiple approaches to restricting the use of menthol. These include a ban in some product categories, a total ban on the use of all flavours and a ban on all products with a perceived menthol flavour. This publication also provides useful information on the merits and drawbacks of various regulatory approaches.

News release (WHO)

Download: Tobacco product regulation: building laboratory testing capacity

March 9, 2018 0 comments
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Global Health NewsPublic HealthPublic Health News

Global Commission for Certification of Poliomyelitis Eradication (GCC) meet in Geneva to review criteria for certification

by Public Health Update March 9, 2018
written by Public Health Update

Global Commission for Certification of Poliomyelitis Eradication (GCC) meet in Geneva to review criteria for certification

On 26-27 February 2018, the Global Commission for Certification of Poliomyelitis Eradication (GCC) met in Geneva, Switzerland, to review the criteria that will need to be met to achieve global certification of wild poliovirus (WPV) eradication.
With fewer cases of WPV reported from fewer countries than ever before, the GCC is accelerating its work to prepare for the eventual certification that WPVs have been eradicated from the world.
As part of this process, the GCC faces two important and challenging tasks:

  • obtaining and evaluating convincing evidence of interruption of poliovirus transmission; and,
  • obtaining and evaluating evidence that polioviruses will be contained to a high level where they are being held.

Discussions focused on reviewing regional progress in the remaining endemic regions of Africa and the Eastern Mediterranean, defining the parameters that will be used for certification, discussing surveillance requirements including in settings requiring additional data such as conflict settings, and evaluating requirements for safe containment of polioviruses in laboratory settings.
Critically, recognizing the increasing importance of circulating vaccine-derived poliovirus (cVDPV) outbreaks as the world moves towards the eradication of WPVs, the GCC agreed that eligibility for WPV certification must not only entail the demonstrated absence of WPV strains, but also the absence of cVDPVs (for at least 18 months for type 2, and for at least six months for types 1 and 3).
The full report from the meeting will be available upon publication (in March) at www.polioeradication.org.

Background

The certification of WPV eradication takes place when the GCC is satisfied with the evidence that WPV transmission has been successfully interrupted, and in the demonstrated absence of cVDPVs for a period of at least 18 months (for type 2) and six months (f or types 1 and 3). This verification ensures that data and evidence are analysed and validated in the most independent and objective manner.
The GCC is independent of WHO and independent of involvement in national polio vaccination implementation or polio surveillance programmes. WHO Regions are eligible for certification following the absence of WPV from any country in that region from any population source in the presence of certification-standard surveillance. Regional certification is conducted by Regional Certification Commissions (RCCs). Global certification will follow the successful certification of all six WHO regions, and will be conducted by the GCC.
As at 2018, four regions have been certified as free of WPVs: Region of the Americas (1994), the Western Pacific Region (2000), the European Region (2002), and the South-East Asia Region (2014). 

For more information, please contact:

Oliver Rosenbauer
Communications Officer
Global Polio Eradication Initiative, World Health Organization
Tel: +41 (0)79 500 6536
Email: rosenbauero@who.int
Or 

certification page of the polio eradication website.

Polio Eradication ORG

March 9, 2018 0 comments
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PH Important DayPublic Health

Women’s empowerment is a public health imperative: WHO

by Public Health Update March 8, 2018
written by Public Health Update

Women’s empowerment is a public health imperative: WHO

By Dr Poonam Khetrapal Singh, WHO Regional Director for South-East Asia

In the WHO South-East Asia Region and beyond, more than half the population – women – face what is often egregious discrimination. Discrimination in education and the opportunity to learn to read and write. Discrimination in access to nutrition and the chance to grow healthy and strong. And discrimination in the workplace, where women can be subjected to unwanted advances or have their work undervalued or unpaid.
Gender-based discrimination in these and countless other forms is a persistent problem across the South-East Asia Region and throughout women’s lives. But as much as gender-based prejudice and inequality violates human rights, stymies social and economic development, and crushes the hopes and dreams of millions of young girls and women, it also has a grave impact on public health and wellbeing.
Examples abound.
The Region-wide practice of early marriage and pregnancy, for instance, is a direct threat to the health of young women and their children, especially in rural areas. Around six million girls aged 15-19 years give birth in our Region every year, while in four of the Region’s countries the adolescent birth rate is more than 50 per 1000 women aged 15-19 years. This provides immense dangers to the health of young women – dangers that can be avoided via rapid social empowerment (including access to contraception) and the implementation of laws against early marriage.
Gender-based inequities likewise impede women’s access to essential health services, causing a range of adverse outcomes. Start with childbirth: Many deliveries still occur in the home, often in the presence of a birth attendant who is unskilled. This occurs partly as a result of women’s inadequate access to health-related knowledge and a lack of decision-making power, and partly due to ongoing service gaps. Though during the Millennium Development Goal era the Region made world-beating progress in reducing maternal and child mortality, further gains are needed to bring the maternal mortality rate to below 70 per 100 000 births, as per the Sustainable Development Goal target.
Still, there is room for optimism: The Region-wide struggle to end gender-based discrimination and advance women’s empowerment – particularly for rural women and girls – has never been stronger. WHO South-East Asia is proud to champion this cause, reflecting as it does our core values and commitment to human rights, as well as our evidence-based conviction that empowered women create healthier, happier communities that produce transformative change, both locally and globally.
Until full equality is achieved, however, WHO will continue to work with our Member countries to promote and support the health of women and girls. That means continuing to train skilled birth attendants able to provide life-saving services when childbirth becomes complicated. It means continuing to advocate for increased access to contraceptives and the provision of adolescent sexual and reproductive health services. And it means continuing to actively campaign against gender-based violence and harmful practices such as female genital mutilation that can cause life-threatening injuries to young girls and adolescents.
This International Women’s Day, let us acknowledge that gender-based discrimination exists and is a daily occurrence in each of the South-East Asia Region’s countries. Let us understand that it needn’t be this way, and that gender equality can be rapidly achieved with sincere, society-wide resolve. And let us take full stock of the fact that women’s empowerment is more than a tool to advance social or economic ends – that it is a public health imperative, and one that demands our most strident pursuit.

WHO SEARO Media Centre

March 8, 2018 0 comments
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PH Important DayPublic Health

Kidneys & Women’s Health: Include, Value, Empower

by Public Health Update March 8, 2018
written by Public Health Update

Kidneys & Women’s Health: Include, Value, Empower
WKD website hero image
World Kidney Day is a global awareness campaign aimed at raising awareness of the importance of our kidneys.

World Kidney Day comes back every year in March 8. All across the globe many hundred events take place. Awareness about preventive behaviors, awareness about risk factors, and awareness about how to live with a kidney disease.
Mission
World Kidney Day aims to raise awareness of the importance of our kidneys to our overall health and to reduce the frequency and impact of kidney disease and its associated health problems worldwide.

Objectives

  • Raise awareness about our “amazing kidneys” Highlight that diabetes and high blood pressure are key risk factors for Chronic Kidney Disease (CKD).
  • Encourage systematic screening of all patients with diabetes and hypertension for CKD.
  • Encourage preventive behaviours.
  • Educate all medical professionals about their key role in detecting and reducing the risk of CKD, particularly in high risk populations.
  • Stress the important role of local and national health authorities in controlling the CKD epidemic. On World Kidney Day all governments are encouraged to take action and invest in further kidney screening.
  • Encourage Transplantation as a best-outcome option for kidney failure, and the act of organ donation as a life-saving initiative.

On this occasion, World Kidney Day and the International Women’s Day 2018 are commemorated on the same day, offering us the opportunity to reflect on the importance of women’ s health and specifically their kidney health. On its 13th anniversary, World Kidney Day promotes affordable and equitable access to health education, healthcare and prevention for kidney diseases for all women and girls in the world.

WORLD KIDNEY DAY

March 8, 2018 0 comments
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PH Important DayPublic Health

International Women's Day 2018 #PressforProgress

by Public Health Update March 8, 2018
written by Public Health Update

International Women’s Day 2018 #PressforProgress

International Women’s Day (March 8) is a global day celebrating the social, economic, cultural and political achievements of women. The day also marks a call to action for accelerating gender parity.
International Women’s Day (IWD) has been observed since the early 1900’s – a time of great expansion and turbulence in the industrialized world that saw booming population growth and the rise of radical ideologies. International Women’s Day is a collective day of global celebration and a call for gender parity. No one government, NGO, charity, corporation, academic institution, women’s network or media hub is solely responsible for International Women’s Day. Many organizations declare an annual IWD theme that supports their specific agenda or cause, and some of these are adopted more widely with relevance than others.

International Women’s day

Gender equality must be at the core of ‘Health for All”

International Women’s Day Statement by WHO Director-General Dr Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus

7 MARCH 2018 – On this International Women’s Day, we imagine a world where every woman and girl has access to quality and affordable health care, a world in which women and girls can freely exercise their sexual and reproductive health rights, and one where all women and girls are treated and respected as equals.
The theme for this year’s International Women’s Day is the “Time is Now: Rural and urban activists transforming women’s lives”; and today is a good day for each and every one of us to speak-up for gender equality and women’s rights.
At the World Health Organization, we’re speaking up for women and girls’ right to health. When women and girls are able to stay in school longer, plan or prevent pregnancies and access health services without discrimination, they can improve their economic opportunities, and ultimately transform their futures.
But, we also must do more than speak. We must act.
Nothing will help women and girls more than ensuring that everyone, everywhere, can benefit from quality health services when and where they need them, without fear of falling into poverty when using them.
Today, at least half of the world’s people are lack access to essential health services – such as antenatal care throughout pregnancy, or immunizations to prevent maternal and neonatal tetanus or HPV – because they are not available or are financially out of reach. A disproportionate number of these people are women and girls.
Almost 100 million people are also being pushed into extreme poverty – living on less than $1.90 per day – because they have to pay for health services out of their own pockets. This is unacceptable. A woman should not have to choose whether to send her child to school, purchase food or pay for a health visit.
Universal health coverage – WHO’s top priority – means that health packages designed for women and adolescent girls should include services to promote health and prevent and treat disease. Excluding access to contraception from health plans, therefore limiting women’s and adolescent girls’ ability to plan or prevent pregnancies, is not health for all. It’s discrimination and it fuels further gender inequality.
Fundamental to achieving universal health coverage is equity. All women and girls – rich or poor, urban or rural, educated or illiterate – must be able to access the health services equally. But, in low- and middle-income countries, the proportion of births attended by skilled health personnel differs by up to 80 percentage points between the richest and poorest women. The presence of skilled health personnel during childbirth is a key to preventing maternal and newborn deaths.
These skilled birth attendants and the largely female health workforce must also be allowed to participate in leadership and decision-making, access formal employment, make a fair wage, and work in a place free from physical and sexual violence.
I am working to make sure we also walk the talk when it comes to women in the health workforce. Today, more than 60% of our senior positions are held by women, and we’re working to ensure our regional and country offices follow suit. We can’t be effective at promoting universal health coverage if we don’t have all voices at the table – and today I’m excited to see the female faces from all over the world sharing their ideas for change.
We know that, when universal health coverage is achieved, poverty will be reduced, jobs will be created, economies will grow, and communities will be protected against disease outbreaks. But we also know women’s economic opportunities will advance, and their children’s health and development will follow in step.

WHO Media centre

 

March 8, 2018 0 comments
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PH Important DayPublic Health

World Birth Defects Day 3 March 2018

by Public Health Update March 3, 2018
written by Public Health Update

World Birth Defects Day is observed every year on March 3 to raise awareness of this serious global problem and advocate for more surveillance, prevention, care and research to help babies and children.
An estimated 8 million babies around the world are born with a serious birth each year. Birth defects are a leading cause of death in the first year of life, and babies who survive may have physical or intellectual disabilities, taking a costly toll on their families, communities and nations.

Birth Defects

Birth defects, also named congenital anomalies, are  structural or functional anomalies due to prenatally determined  developmental anomalies that can be identified prenatally, at birth, or sometimes may only be detected later in infancy.

Examples of birth defects

  • Structural: Heart Defects, Spina Bifida, Hypospadias, Limb Deficiency, Club Foot, Down Syndrome
  • Functional: Metabolic Diseases, Hearing Loss, Thalassemia, Cystic Fibrosis, Autism Spectrum Disorders 

some steps women can take to improve the chances of a healthy pregnancy and reduce the risk of birth defects:

  • Start taking a daily multivitamin containing 400 mcg of folic acid, a B vitamin, even if you’re not trying to get pregnant. Folic acid every day, beginning before pregnancy and continuing through your pregnancy, is proven to help prevent serious birth defects of the brain and spine. It’s also a good idea to eat foods that contain folate, the natural form of folic acid, including lentils, green leafy vegetables, black beans, and orange juice [or other high folate foods popular in your area]. [Name of your organization] also recommends folic-acid enriched cereals, breads, and pasta; and foods made from folic-acid enriched corn masa flour, such as cornbread, corn tortillas, tacos, and tamales.
  • Get as healthy as possible before pregnancy. See your health care provider for a checkup to learn about any conditions that can be treated before you get pregnant.
  • Be up-to-date with your vaccinations (shots). Talk to your healthcare provider about vaccinations you should receive before or during pregnancy, including rubella and influenza (flu).
  • Learn how to avoid Zika virus, cytomegalovirus (CMV), and sexually transmitted infections that can harm you and a developing baby.
  • Practice good hygiene: Wash your hands often with soap and water, especially before preparing or eating foods; after being around or touching pets and other animals. If you’re around young children, don’t share food, glasses or utensils and do not put a child’s cup or pacifier in your mouth.

http://www.worldbirthdefectsday.org/

March 3, 2018 0 comments
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Public Health

5 keys to a healthy diet

by Public Health Update March 3, 2018
written by Public Health Update

A healthy diet helps protect against malnutrition in all its forms, as well as noncommunicable diseases (NCDs), including diabetes, heart disease, stroke and cancer.

Here are 5 keys to a healthy diet:
28280097 1199677330162905 1670310297918788134 n
World Health Organization South-East Asia Region – WHO SEARO

March 3, 2018 0 comments
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ActivitiesPH Important DayPublic Health

World Hearing Day 2018: Hear the Future

by Public Health Update March 3, 2018
written by Public Health Update

World Hearing Day 2018: Hear the Future

World Hearing Day is held on 3 March each year to raise awareness on how to prevent deafness and hearing loss and promote ear and hearing care across the world. 

World Hearing Day 2018: Hear the Future

With the theme “Hear the future”, World Hearing Day 2018 will draw attention to the anticipated increase in the number of people with hearing loss around the world in the coming decades. It will focus on preventive strategies to stem the rise and outline steps to ensure access to the necessary rehabilitation services and communication tools and products for people with hearing loss.

Hear the Future

Hear the Future


The key messages for this event will highlight the:

  • expected rise in prevalence of hearing loss globally over the coming years (based on statistical projections);
  • efforts that are required to stem the rise through appropriate preventive action;
  • need to ensure that people with hearing loss have access to the required rehabilitation services and the communication tools and products they require. (World Health Organization)

28378304 584195618587093 7299580525446960221 n


INFN Green Pastures Hospital, Pokhara is celebrating World Hearing Day on Saturday, 3rd March 2018. The theme of the event is “Hear the future” . There’s a 5k rally starting 7:45 am from Chipledhunga-via Mahendra Pool, Prithvi Chowk, Indra chowk, Ghale Chowk, Nayagaon and ends at Green Pastures Hospital.
From 10:30 onwards, there will be games for school children, educational talk for general public, invited health institutions and deaf association.
Please join this event, do spread the word of the event. (INFN Green Pastures Hospital)
28640587 1695789803814627 303750828 o

March 3, 2018 0 comments
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