Posts Tagged ‘PACE’

Dr. Thomas Cherian, Pneumonia Expert, Honored for Efforts to Reduce Deaths from Preventable and Treatable Diseases

February 4th, 2010
Dr. Cherian recieving the PACE Global Leadership Award
Dr. Cherian recieving the PACE Global Leadership Award

On the heels of the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation’s $10 billion commitment to fund vaccine research, development and delivery throughout the developing world, a leading pneumonia expert, Dr. Thomas Cherian of the World Health Organization (WHO), was honored Monday in Geneva for his efforts to accelerate access to vaccines preventing pneumococcal disease, the world’s leading vaccine-preventable killer of children under age five.

Over the course of a 25-year career that began at the Christian Medical College in Tamil Nadu, India, Dr. Cherian, who currently serves as coordinator of the Expanded Programme on Immunization at the WHO, has made significant contributions and remained committed to fighting pneumonia and pneumococcal diseases.  Last year, he led efforts to produce the first-ever country-by-country estimates of pneumococcal disease burden. This work found that in India, for example, more than 140,000 children die each year of pneumococcal disease — approximately one child every four minutes in India alone.

Dr. Cherian received the Pneumococcal Awareness Council of Expert’s (PACE) Global Leadership Award, which recognizes an individual, organization or country that has championed pneumococcal disease prevention and made a significant contribution towards policies that advance the introduction of pneumococcal conjugate vaccines.  Pneumococcal disease is a leading cause of pneumonia which kills an estimated 2 million children under age five each year.

The contributions of individuals to the health field are not always publicized but it’s the efforts of individuals like Dr. Cherian that add to the collective goal of reducing deaths from preventable and treatable diseases, whether infectious or neglected.

The Global Network and PACE are initiatives of the Sabin Vaccine Institute, whose mission is to reduce needless human suffering from infectious and neglected tropical diseases.

World Pneumonia Day 2009

November 2nd, 2009

Did you know that pneumonia is the leading killer of children under the age of five? The infection kills one child every 15 seconds.

Although it’s not a neglected tropical disease, the deadly impact that pneumonia wreaks on individuals around the world—particularly children under the age of five—is neglected and unknown by many.

WPDAnd that’s why today, November 2, marks the first annual World Pneumonia Day created to mobilize efforts to fight a neglected disease that kills more than 4 million people each year and claims the lives of more children under the age of five than AIDS, malaria, and measles combined.

You can help Sabin Vaccine Institute’s Pneumococcal Awareness Council of Experts (PACE)—a coalition of global experts working to raise awareness about pneumococcal disease, a leading cause of pneumonia—put a spotlight on this preventable infection by educating yourself, family and friends about pneumonia; signing the pledge to fight the disease; and participating in a World Pneumonia Day event.

Armed with knowledge, we can utilize the readily available tools to treat and prevent pneumonia, and protect children from ever contracting the infection.

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The Global Network and PACE are initiatives of the Sabin Vaccine Institute, whose mission is to reduce needless human suffering from infectious and neglected tropical diseases.