SECTION NEWS
APHA’s 2011 Section elections are coming up soon! Online voting will open on May 16 and ends on June 20. Section members should receive an e-mail on May 16 (next Monday) which will include:
- Your online election validation number
- Your APHA membership ID number
- Voting instructions
- A direct link to your voting Web site
All you have to do is click on the direct link and VOTE!
APHA’s Trade and Health Forum has released its first newsletter! The Forum has established a quarterly APHA Trade & Health Forum Newsletter that includes brief reports from forum members regarding recent work and analyses of issues related to trade and health, as well as announcements for trade and health advocacy opportunities and events. The first spring issue can be viewed here (PDF).
David Sencer, the longest-serving director of the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) and one of the leaders of the U.S. contribution to the smallpox campaign, passed away at age 86 on May 2.
May 5 was International Day of the Midwife.
POLICY
- The Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN) and the World Health Organization (WHO) have joined forces to assist Asia Pacific countries in identifying priority actions for dengue prevention and control.
- On May 11, dozens of countries around the world will kick off the first global Decade of Action for Road Safety, from 2011-2020.
- Starting last week, China’s Ministry of Health is strengthening its tobacco rules to require 28 types of businesses, including bars, coffee shops, hotels and stadiums to become 100 percent smoke-free.
PROGRAMS
- After a sensationalistic (and rather silly) report from the AP on corruption and graft, the Global Fund has assembled a high-level panel of independent experts to assess the risk of fraud in the current portfolio. The review should be concluded by mid-September
- Sri Lanka commemorated 100 years of its National Malaria Control Program, which has brought the death toll from malaria from 80,000 per year to 0, on May 5. In 2010, only 684 cases of malaria were reported in the country.
- Health officials in India have taken up a pilot project at taluka places to identify areas with less number of institutional deliveries to bring down maternal deaths.
- UNICEF has found that boreholes drilled in response to the Zimbabwe cholera outbreak in 2008 have not been adequately supported by the government in Harare.
- USAID announced that it will be launching a $10 million mobile health program which will deliver information and tips to mothers via SMS.
RESEARCH
- Protease inhibitors used to treat patients with HIV looks to provide an effective treatment to malaria as well and are being hailed as ‘superdrugs.’
- Headaches are the most common health disorders across the world, yet they remain neglected and under-treated, according to a UN study.
- Researchers warn that East African plants that could cure malaria could disappear before scientists have a chance to study them.
DISEASES AND DISASTERS
- India’s The Hindu provides a comprehensive article on the impact of TB in the country, and on women in particular.
- India achieved a major success on the global platform by pushing for inclusion of mental health in the list of non-communicable diseases.
Thanks, as usual, to the Healthy Dose and Humanosphere.