Posts Tagged ‘pneumonia’

Reading List 1/25/2011

January 25th, 2011

We have a new reading list to kick off your Tuesday! Today we’re reading about Sierra Leone introducing a new pneumococcal vaccine program, recent news about The Global Fund, and what Bill Gates and Microsoft are contributing to the world of global health and parasitic diseases.

Children’s lives at risk from vaccine funding gap, The Guardian
MASSIVE CORRUPTION! (…in Small Global Health Grants?), William Savedoff, Center for Global Development
Global Fund statement on abuse of funds in some countries, The Global Fund
Bill Gates sees philanthropy bug spreading, Kate Kelland, The Globe and Mail
Microsoft Looks To Get Into the Parasite Business, David Richards, SmartHouse

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.

Looking Back on a Week Dedicated to Maternal Child Health

November 6th, 2009

This morning in the Capitol, a number of us from the Global Network and Sabin Vaccine Institute participated in a breakfast reception capping off a week’s worth of events around World Pneumonia Day.  The speakers themselves were thoughtful, engaging, and succinct (a beautiful thing in this city).  Senator Bill Frist, involved through his work with Save the Children and Hope Through Healing Hands, spoke about the need for public private partnerships around pneumonia and other maternal child health interventions; he also urged the community to keep pushing bills like S.1966, the Global Child Survival Act of 2009, for co-sponsors and ‘teachable moments’ with staff around the issues.  Rep. Carol Shea-Porter, whose resolution recognizing World Pneumonia Day passed this week, was also on hand to advocate for continued pneumonia awareness, urging advocates to ‘be the conscience’ for Representatives on maternal child health.  Finally, Dr. Orin Levine–a leading pneumonia advocate and member of PACE–spoke movingly about how appalling it is to have pneumonia kill so many children each year when known solutions are cheap and available.

But as I sat there drinking my coffee, I was struck by two thoughts tertiary to the event itself:

  • The Mansfield Room, in which the reception was held, is like many rooms in the Capitol in that its appearance conveys a sense of grandeur and gravitas.  To be in that room discussing maternal child health issues signaled to me that we have come a long way in bringing these issues to the fore as important, urgent matters for key policymakers
  • At the Global Network, it is easy to fall into an NTD-focused mindset. Yet an event like today’s, focused primarily on pneumonia, was remarkably relevant to the work we are doing around maternal child health as a broader platform.  Even the messaging–”cheap interventions, proven solutions, a need for partnership to deliver treatments in the field…”–echoed the messages we recite daily with respect to NTDs.  As we move forward with our policy and advocacy work, it serves both the NTD and the broad MCH communities well to exploit such overlap to the benefit of millions of mothers and children around the world.