European CDC Chief Announces Partnership with Japan
The ECDC chief said the move is part of a broader strategy to increase global public health cooperation before the next pandemic.

The European Centre for Disease Prevention and Control (ECDC) will sign an official memorandum of understanding with its Japanese counterpart next month, the director of Europe’s largest public health agency announced Wednesday.

“Next month I will sign a cooperation agreement with the Japanese Center for Disease Control,” said Pamela Rendi-Wagner, who took over the agency in June.

Her remarks came at a closed-door press briefing on pandemic preparedness at the European Health Forum in Gastein, Austria. She said the deal was part of a wider European effort to expand global cooperation within and outside the EU to better prepare for future pandemics.

“Scientists [globally] need to understand each other before the crisis, not during the crisis,” Rendi-Wagner said. “We learned our lessons from the pandemic.”

The ECDC chief added that the agency has deepened its ties with many other centres for disease control globally since the COVID-19 pandemic, including a four-year partnership with Africa CDC signed in 2021 with financial support from the European Commission.

The memorandum of understanding with Japan will add the country to a list of CDCs that have signed such agreements with the European agency, including those in the United States, China, Mexico, the United Kingdom and South Korea.

ECDC collaborators without official agreements include regional CDCs in Africa, the Caribbean and Gulf states, as well as Israel, Singapore, Thailand and Australia.

In her closing remarks, the ECDC chief warned global public health authorities that the window to prepare for the next pandemic “will close” and urged immediate action.

“Only joint and cooperative preparedness will allow us to cope with pandemics in the future,” Rendi-Wagner said.

Image Credits: ECDC.

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