Welcome, Guest! - Register - Login, Online: 265
Moldova.org / Social EnglishEnglish | RomanianRomanian | RussianRussian  




Libra
23 September - 22 October


You're living life on a smaller scale today and enjoying every moment as a result. If there are any big, pressing issues, you should do what you can to put them of for another day.



—— Today —— —— Tomorow ——
 
Chisinau 10 days
Hi: N/A ˚C
Low: 9 ˚C
Hi: 22 ˚C
Low: 10 ˚C
 
Bucharest 10 days
Hi: N/A ˚C
Low: 11 ˚C
Hi: 22 ˚C
Low: 11 ˚C
 
Moscow 10 days
Hi: N/A ˚C
Low: 7 ˚C
Hi: 9 ˚C
Low: 4 ˚C
 
Kyev 10 days
Hi: N/A ˚C
Low: 8 ˚C
Hi: 14 ˚C
Low: 7 ˚C

Indonesia to resume supplying UN health agency with bird flu virus samples

Indonesia has agreed to resume supplying the United Nations health agency with viruses from its bird flu outbreak, a vital tool in tracking possible mutations into a deadly human pandemic and producing vaccines, while the agency will seek to ensure equitable distribution and availability in developing countries of any such vaccines.

To this end, the UN World Health Organization (WHO) and the Indonesian Ministry of Health have jointly decided to convene a meeting of selected countries in the Asia and Pacific region to identify mechanisms for equitable access to influenza vaccine and production. Indonesia has suffered more human bird flu fatalities, 63 out of 81 cases, than any other country.

“Indonesia’s leadership alerted the international community to the needs of developing countries to benefit from sharing virus samples, including access to quality pandemic vaccines at affordable prices,” WHO said in a statement on a meeting on Friday between the agency’s Acting Assistant Director-General for Communicable Diseases David Heymann and Indonesian Health Minister Siti Fadillah Supari.

Mr. Heymann said WHO fully supported both Indonesia’s short-term discussions with vaccine production companies to meet its vaccine needs and its long-term goal to develop its local vaccine production capacity through technology transfer.

“The Minister agrees that the responsible, free and rapid sharing of influenza viruses with WHO, including [the current virus] H5N1, is necessary for global public health security and will resume sharing viruses for this purpose,” the statement said.

“WHO will continue discussions and work with the Ministry of Health and other countries to assess and develop potential mechanisms, including Material Transfer Agreements, that could promote equitable distribution and availability of pandemic influenza vaccines developed and produced from these viruses,” it added.

Just last week, WHO reported “encouraging progress” in producing a vaccine against human bird flu, which in a worst case scenario could cause a deadly pandemic killing millions, but warned that the world still lacked the manufacturing capacity to meet potential global demand.

To counter this, WHO last year launched the Global pandemic influenza action plan to increase vaccine supply, a $10-billion effort over a decade. One of its aims is to transfer technology to developing countries so they can set up their own vaccine production units.

There have so far been 274 confirmed human cases worldwide, 167 of them fatal, the vast majority in South-East Asia. UN health officials have been on constant alert to detect any mutation that could make the disease more easily transmissible in humans. Nearly all human cases so far have been traced to contact with infected birds.

The so-called Spanish flu pandemic of 1918-1920 is estimated to have killed from 20 million to 40 million people worldwide.

More than 200 million birds have died from either the virus or preventive culling in the current outbreak. // UN News Centre


Publication date: 20 February 2007   

Source:

Archive


Bookmark this news
AddThis Social Bookmark Button

ADs




Related links


Latest news

'Pooh' drawings livening up vacant home
Some residents of Flint, Mich., say a 20-year-old woman's Winnie the Pooh drawings on a vacant house make for a happier neighborhood.Flint resident Kathy Kirby said seeing drawn figures from the children's literary and film series on the run-down home helps add life to an otherwise bleak location, The Flint (Mich.) Journal reported Monday.If I have to look at something, her pictures are better than a boarded-up home, Kirby said.Kristina Pringle, who started painting the cartoon characters in Aug more...

13.10.2008 - Potluck record try fails in tasty fashion
13.10.2008 - Confederate vets put up larger flag
13.10.2008 - British brothers set pumpkin size record
13.10.2008 - Farmers: Scarecrow as good as modern tools
13.10.2008 - Pizza champ downs 45 slices in 10 minutes
13.10.2008 - Duke of Westminster fights for phone booth
13.10.2008 - Lost cows create udder chaos in Britain
13.10.2008 - Racers compete in big floating pumpkins
13.10.2008 - Britain crowns new crossword champion
13.10.2008 - Thirteen digits one too few on debt clock
13.10.2008 - Watercooler Stories
13.10.2008 - Jockstrip: The world as we know it.
13.10.2008 - Your Daily Horoscope
13.10.2008 - The almanac

The most read news


Social



What is New?


© 1997-2008 moldova.org - All rights reserved. moldova.org is a registered mark by Moldova Foundation.
Privacy Policy. Please read the terms of use when you can benefit from our services. Design and programming by Adpixel