Posts Tagged ‘WHO’

A Success: USAID’s Neglected Tropical Disease Program

February 16th, 2011

This post has been reprinted with permission from USAID’s IMPACTblog.

By: Elizabeth Thompson, President’s Malaria Initiative USAID/ Bureau for Global Health

A young woman is measured for height to determine her proper treatment dosage for lymphatic filariasis and soil-transmitted helminthes during a mass drug administration in Sierra Leone. Photo credit: Michel Pacque/USAID

There is a group of diseases you don’t hear much about but that has a terrible impact on more than 1 billion people around the world – that’s one sixth of the world’s population. The World Health Organization (WHO) has classified 13 of these as neglected tropical diseases (NTDs) and they include such dreaded illnesses as elephantiasis, leprosy, blinding trachoma, and intestinal worms.  Together, NTDs have a disproportionately large impact on poor and rural populations, causing severe illness, disfigurement, and disability. They also perpetuate poverty by reducing people’s ability to work and children’s intellectual and physical development.

Until recently, many countries were treating NTDs through separate, uncoordinated programs. However, pilot studies suggest that it is possible to integrate programs to control and treat seven of these diseases together by providing safe and effective drug treatments once or twice a year to all people in an affected community. This approach, which has been endorsed by WHO and is called mass drug administration (MDA), targets large, at-risk populations, rather than individuals, since NTDs tend to occur together in the same geographic area.  Pilot studies of MDAs of the seven targeted NTDs resulted in significant reductions of illness and transmission of these diseases and indicated that, though there were major challenges, integrating control programs was possible and could result in cost savings and efficiencies. However, it was not clear if integrated programs could be scaled up to the national level.

» Read more: A Success: USAID’s Neglected Tropical Disease Program

WHO Executive Board passes resolution on MDG 4 & 5 accountability

January 20th, 2011

Back in September during United Nations week, the United Nations General Assembly (UNGA) met to review the current state of the Millennium Development Goals (MDGs), which was covered on End the Neglect. Following this meeting, a resolution was put forth by the World Health Organization (WHO) that would benefit both MDG 4 and 5 – reduce child mortality, and improve maternal health, respectively. The Resolution includes a strategy to address the health of women and children, along with “the establishment of a related Commission on Information and Accountability for Women’s and Children’s Health.” The Resolution also requests that WHO Director-General Dr. Margaret Chan to see that the Commission is effective in making progress.

Click here to read more about the Resolution.

WHO Director General Highlights NTDs At 128th Session of the Executive Board

January 18th, 2011

Just yesterday, the Executive Board of the World Health Organization (WHO) opened its 128th session. Director-General Margaret Chan opened the session highlighting public health successes and challenges.

She spoke in particular about the importance of integrated control of neglected tropical diseases and emphasized how pharmaceutical commitments, like those made at the WHO Neglected Tropical Disease Report launch last October will enable many more people to recieve the vital drugs needed to treat these diseases.

To read the full speech click here. (Please note that the section on neglected tropical diseases is highlighted!)

If I Build It, Will They Come?

January 11th, 2011

On January 24, 2011, the Johns Hopkins Center for Communication Programs/K4Health Project in collaboration with the World Health Organization, USAID and the Knowledge Management Working Group will host a two-week virtual discussion on communities of practice entitled “If I Build It, Will They Come? Sustaining Active Communities of Practice for Global Health”.

The purpose of this two-week discussion is to share experiences in using virtual communities of practice (CoPs) for global health and learn about innovative approaches to engagement, participation, and measurement of CoP success. CoP leaders from K4Health, WHO, Health Information for All by 2015 (HIFA2015) and the Global Alliance for Nursing and Midwifery(GANM) will steer the discussion, but we encourage you to ask questions, share your experiences, tips and lessons learned.

Click here to join “If I Build It, Will They Come? Sustaining Active Communities of Practice for Global Health” virtual discussion, January 24-February 4, 2011.