Patriarchy, Stigma and Inequality Are Slowing Down AIDS Response 29/11/2022 Megha Kaveri Winnie Byanyima (UNAIDS), George Simbachawene (Prime Minister’s Office for policy coordination and parliamentary affairs, Tanzania) and Dr Godwin O Mollel (Deputy minister of health, Tanzania). The world is not on track to end AIDS by 2030 due to patriarchy, stigma against vulnerable communities and inequality, according to UNAIDS in its 2022 World AIDS Report. The report, titled “Dangerous Inequalities”, points out that unequal power dynamics between men and women and norms that prevent girls and women from exercising their bodily autonomy are major reasons behind the slowdown in HIV response. The criminalisation of gay relationships and discrimination against key populations like gay men, men who have sex with men and transgender persons are also major stumbling blocks in the global HIV response. “The world will not be able to defeat AIDS while reinforcing patriarchy. The only effective route map to ending AIDS and achieving the sustainable development goals is a feminist route map. We can take action now to tackle gender inequalities and promote healthy masculinities—to take the place of the harmful behaviours which exacerbate risks for everyone,” Winnie Byanyima, the executive director of UNAIDS wrote in the foreword. Launching the report in Tanzania on Tuesday, Byanyima added that AIDS can end only if there is equality in the world. “The reason why we call it “dangerous” is because, currently, we are not on track, globally, to end AIDS by 2030 as was agreed by all the governments of the world. We are not on track. And the reason is inequality…But we can end AIDS by equalising.” The gender lens While 49% of new HIV infections across the world were among women and girls in 2021, in high-incidence regions like sub-Saharan Africa, women and girls accounted for nearly 63% of the new HIV infections. Women experiencing intimate partner violence in the past year are also three times more likely to have contracted HIV recently. This finding, coupled with the recent report by UN Women and UN Office on Drugs and Crimes (UNODC), which stated that more than five women are killed every hour by intimate partners or their own families, highlights women’s vulnerability. Distribution of new HIV infection by age and sex in sub-Saharan Africa, 2021. Patriarchal norms also prevent men and adolescent boys from seeking the healthcare services they need, according to the report. “Transforming harmful gender and masculinity norms among men and boys will help reduce their HIV risks, but it will also reduce risks and vulnerabilities to HIV among women and adolescent girls, including by respecting their sexual and reproductive health and rights and upholding zero tolerance for any violence against them,” the report added. Calling for an inclusive and comprehensive curriculum at schools that includes sexuality education, Byanyima said that pushing girls to complete secondary education would reduce their vulnerability to HIV infection by up to 50%. “We must combine services for sexual and reproductive health together with services for preventing and responding to gender-based violence and services for preventing and responding to HIV. These three must come together.. We must design it in such a way that they are tailored to meet the needs of girls and women in all their diversity.” Decriminalisation of queer relationships While there is a significant decline in the incidence of HIV in western, southern, eastern and central Africa since 2010, the decrease is not significant among gay men and other men who have sex with men in these regions. “Key populations” – groups particularly vulnerable to HIV including men who have sex with men, people injecting drugs and sex workers – accounted for about 5% of the global population in 2021 but they and their sexual partners accounted for about 70% of new HIV infections. While several countries have decriminalised queer relationships, many countries still consider it a criminal act. Byanyima called for the decriminalisation of queer relationships to improve access to healthcare. “When you decriminalise, people will come forward and get services. Decriminalising saves lives…I suggest let’s confine these colonial and harmful laws to history. We don’t need them. God can judge them if they’re wrong. We don’t need the laws. They take people away from services. But we don’t only need to decriminalise, we need to fight stigma. Stigma is a sentence passed by society on people for who they are. Stigma kills. We need to end the stigma for people living with HIV.” Similarly, people who engage in sex work and those who inject drugs are at a higher risk of contracting HIV, which can only be addressed by involving community-led organisations in an effective manner to reach these key populations with prevention and treatment services. “While efforts to expand services for key populations are critical to reducing the epidemic’s burden in these groups, the mere availability of services will not have the needed impact without concerted efforts to address societal enablers.” Children left out of the equation The UNAIDS report stated that children are disproportionately affected by HIV. While they make up 4% of the total HIV burden in 2021, they account for 15% of all AIDS-related deaths. The report also flagged that the gap between HIV treatment coverage for adults and children has widened since 2010. Antiretroviral treatment coverage comparison between children and adults at the global level, 2010-21. It is estimated that globally, 800,000 children living with HIV are not receiving treatment. The report also stated that in Africa, the decrease in the number of new HIV infections among children has stagnated in the past five years. “Late diagnosis is an important contributor to the treatment inequalities that children experience. Globally, only 62% of HIV-exposed infants are tested within the first two months of life, but in western and central Africa, only one in four HIV-exposed infants receive early infant diagnostic services,” the report highlighted. “The treatment gap for children can be closed if more pregnant and breastfeeding women and their infants are supported to confirm the child’s HIV status at birth and at the end of breastfeeding.” Allocation to key populations must increase In 2021, low and middle-income countries channelled only 3% of their total HIV spending towards prevention and societal enabler programmes for key populations. UNAIDS said that this share has to increase to 21% by 2025 for the HIV response to be on the right track. Pointing out that increases in bilateral investment in HIV response in low and middle-income countries are usually met with similar increases in domestic investments in HIV response, UNAIDS said that donor and development partner investments into this cause must expand. Comparison of expenditure of external and domestic funding towards HIV response, 2018-20. Similarly, the agency also called for focussed investments towards programmes that benefit young women and girls. Image Credits: UNAIDS. Three New Leaders Appointed to WHO Senior Team – But Unlikely to be Permanent 29/11/2022 Kerry Cullinan A WHO press conference earlier this year. Professor Hanan Balkhy will step into the shoes of Dr Mariângela Simão, the World Health Organization’s (WHO) Assistant Director-General for access to medicines and health products, when she leaves on Thursday, according to WHO sources. Professor Hanan Balkhy Currently WHO Assistant Director-General of antimicrobial resistance, Balkhy served as executive director of infection prevention and control in Saudia Arabia for 10 years. Meanwhile, Australian national Professor John Reeder, WHO’s Director of the Special Programme for Research and Training in Tropical Diseases (TDR), steps into the Chief Scientist role about to be vacated by Dr Soumya Swaminathan. Dr Teresa Kasaeva, who directs the WHO’s global TB programme, will replace Dr Ren Minghui as Assistant Director-General for universal health coverage (UHC), and communicable and non-communicable diseases. It is understood that the three will be acting in the various positions, but the WHO did not respond to Health Policy Watch queries about the appointments or their status. As Health Policy Watch reported previously, eight members of the WHO’s 16-member senior leadership team at the Geneva headquarters will leave the global body at the end of November. This is the biggest single leadership change that Tedros has made since 2019, two years after he took office, when he made a set of sweeping changes as part of his “Transformation” agenda for the organization. It has been anticipated for months by Geneva insiders who say the Director-General has been itching to shake up his team since being re-elected for a second term. Additionally, there have been pressures from large donors for Tedros to streamline his senior team, which is the largest it has ever been. All three current appointments are internal, which could indicate that Tedros is responding both to criticism that he has not promoted enough people within WHO’s ranks and to pressure from member states led by the US to trim personnel costs. Tedros is unlikely to replace Dr Nono Simelela, an Assistant Director-General and special adviser and may also rationalise other posts to save costs. Other staff departing this week are Jane Ellison, executive director for external relations and governance, Dr Jaouard Mahjour, Assistant Director-General for emergency preparedness and international health regulations and Dr Naoko Yamamoto, Assistant Director-General for UHC and healthier populations. Despite India’s Recent Expansion of Abortion Rights There Are Many Obstacles – Especially for Young Unmarried Women 29/11/2022 Megha Kaveri There are still many barriers to women getting abortions in India. Although India’s Supreme Court issued a landmark decision granting all women the right to an abortion up to 24 weeks of pregnancy in late September, many obstacles stand in the way of women getting abortions – including the conservative attitudes of health workers towards unmarried women. The Supreme Court decision erased the difference between married women and unmarried women, which had been enshrined in a 2021 amendment of India’s Medical Termination of Pregnancy (MTP) Act, passed in 1971. Under the 1971 law, abortion was technically allowed for all women up until 20 weeks – although in fact multiple cultural and practical obstacles existed for unmarried women. The 2021 amendment expanded abortion rights for certain categories of women, such as survivors of rape and incest, allowing them to obtain abortions until 24 weeks. It also allowed married women to terminate their pregnancies up to 24 weeks under certain circumstances, such as failure of contraception – but did not allow unmarried pregnant women the same right. Expansion of abortion rights aims to reduce deaths from botched procedures Inside a healthcare facility in India. The expansion of abortion access is aimed at protecting women’s health, as eight women a day are estimated to die in India as a result of botched abortions, according to the United Nations Population Fund, UNFPA. Over a quarter (27%) of all the abortions in India are performed by women themselves in their homes, according to National Family Health Survey (NFHS) – 5. Around 16% of women who had abortions reported complications, and 90% of these needed medical treatment. But while the ruling has been praised as a milestone for India and South East Asia, with respect to reproductive health rights, activists in India say that the situation on the ground remains unchanged in many respects. Women seeking access to abortion continue to face social stigmas and prejudices that are far from the liberal attitudes reflected in the court decision. Judgemental health workers Ground-breaking research conducted by the progressive Indian YP Foundation, has identified a range of barriers – from high costs of the procedure to judgemental health care workers. Many teenagers seeking abortion in India today contend with laws criminalising consensual sex, judgment & shaming by caregivers & pressure to make false rape complaints to break up interfaith & intercaste couples @Saumya_Kalia reports. 1/2https://t.co/cjYnnCL0uf — Article 14 (@Article14live) November 21, 2022 Service providers’ impose value judgements on premarital sex, as well as abortion, the research found, with some providers insisting that unmarried women obtain their parents’ consent for the procedure. The research fellows, who posed as patients at health facilities and conducted surveys amongst young people and in seven Indian states, also found confidentiality breaches in government facilities, caste prejudice and gender disparity in treatment, with those women who were accompanied by male partners getting a much better reception. Finally there are the arbitrary costs of abortion in public clinics, as well as providers’ reference to expensive private facilities even when lower-cost alternatives exist. Anecdotally, as well, the stories mount up, as well. One tweet by an Indian doctor stating that it was important for her to ask patients if they were married as this determined how she would treat them, opened a floodgate of responses from angry social media users, many of whom had bad experiences with doctors, especially gynaecologists. All these lovely 'woke' women tweeting about being offended by the question, "are you married," asked by their ObGyn, let me tell you something as a doctor. Martial status is imperative in the diagnosis and treatment of a patient, especially in OBG. (1/n) — dr_vee (@dr_vee95) June 28, 2022 There have been a number of reports of gynaecologists, even in India’s urban centres, refusing to perform a vaginal examination on an adult patient without the consent of their parent or partner. Years ago, Akshita* remembers visiting her gynaecologist in Hyderabad after she missed a period. “I was suspecting polycystic ovarian disorder (PCOD) and requested a diagnosis. I made it clear to the doctor that I was not sexually active,” she told Health Policy Watch. However, her doctor refused to believe her and then went on to suggest a diet plan without diagnosing her condition. The experience traumatised the 22-year-old Hyderabad-based young professional, who avoided going to a doctor for a long time after. “When I have gone for smaller, simpler things, they have traumatised me so thoroughly. I cannot imagine what it would be like to approach one for something like a birth control or abortion, which they would definitely be much more judgemental about and would straight up deny access to these services.” Informal networks pushing back on stigmas and prejudice Women queuing up in front of a pharmacy in India. Though ECPs are not illegal/banned in India, many pharmacies don’t stock them. The petition that pushed the Indian top court to issue its milestone pro-choice verdict in September was filed filed by a 25-year-old unmarried woman who was 22 weeks’ pregnant. In her petition, she said that her partner refused to marry her and she didn’t want to have the baby out of wedlock due to societal stigma. She also asserted that she could not afford to raise a child as she was unemployed and did not come from a wealthy family. In the southern Indian state of Tamil Nadu, Chennai activist Archanaa Sekar works with an informal network of women in the city who have been instrumental in helping such women to get abortions from non-judgemental gynaecologists. Her group also has organised with local government actors and pharmacies to ensure that emergency contraceptive pills (ECPs), which are not normally stocked, may be made available. While acknowledging that the September Supreme Court decision was groundbreaking, she added that it will still take a long time for new legal thinking to filter into health workers’ responses, and broader societal values. Meanwhile, advocacy and women’s support networks will play a critical role in expanding women’s access, little by little, on the ground. #IMPORTANT #UPDATE: #ECP’s in #TAMILNADU The Director of the Drugs Control Dept. will direct pharmacies to make emergency contraceptive pills available for OVER THE COUNTER purchase. The Dept. will clarify to all pharmacies that ECP’s are LEGAL/NOT BANNED, must be stocked & sold — Archanaa Seker (@Archytypes) November 13, 2020 “As a doctor, one is in a position of power of allowing a person access to abortion. Unfortunately, we are still not in a place where a professional comes into the table just as a professional. They bring their baggage and prejudices with them,” said Sekar, in an interview with Health Policy Watch. “With respect to abortion, there is a cultural, moral understanding that killing anything seems wrong and therefore you think abortion is illegal,” she said. “So, for you to come around to the fact that abortion is legal, it takes a while. In all of this, in case of something like pregnancies you are losing precious time.” “Unlike environmental laws where it is easy to expose people flouting the law, in cases of abortion it is difficult to speak out against someone who goes against the law and denies abortion,” Seker explained. “To a layperson it doesn’t matter whether the law exists or not. Because the law is not going to protect them,” she added. “People need to know their rights. If we are doing any kind of rights education, are we including a module also on laws such as the MTP Act and the Mental Healthcare Act?” Deeper issue remains attitudes towards sexuality But even deeper attitudes towards sex and sexuality, which remain taboo topics in much of Indian society, also come into play in the abortion access landscape, she says. Sex education continues to be banned in states like Gujarat, Karnataka and Maharashtra, for example. And even when sex education is included in the curriculum, students are taught to abstain. Most adolescents in India are not aware of contraception or how to use it, which leads to unsafe sex and unwanted pregnancies, she noted. “Until we take the shame out of sex, we are not going to take the stigma out of contraception or abortion access.” The Rosa Luxemburg Foundation provided support for this article. Image Credits: Srimathi Jayaprakash/ Unsplash, The White Ribbon Alliance/Flickr, Trinity Care Foundation/Flickr. How One Man With COPD Suffered Through COVID-19 29/11/2022 Editorial team A special project celebrating the fifth anniversary of “Our Views, Our Voices” | Learn more Jaime Barba Jaime Barba, from Mexico, developed Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease (COPD) after smoking for 32 years. When COVID-19 struck, the country converted the hospital at which Barba received treatment into a COVID facility, leaving him no place to be treated if his COPD worsened. Eventually, he and his wife both tested positive for the virus. “Although our symptoms were mild and my respiratory system did not affect me, I had other affectations, mainly kidneys and prostate that are still under treatment,” Barba wrote in his NCD Diary. “When we were positively diagnosed, it was distressing not to have guaranteed care in case it became complicated and hospitalization was necessary.” But the hardest part was the mental battle, he explained. “Since the COVID-19 pandemic began, we have been on the razor’s edge between remaining confined and trying to generate resources to survive,” wrote Barba. “I have suffered insomnia, sometimes even panic attacks with chest pain and shortness of breath, and gastritis and colitis are normal.” People with lung diseases are among the most likely to develop serious cases of COVID-19. Some of Barba’s ex-smoker friends or people with other NCDs died during the pandemic, some of them from COVID-19 and others due to lack of care and medicines for their chronic diseases. While the fear was high, he said the pandemic also brought him closer to other people with NCDs. They shared video calls and chats and served as a support network – emotionally and sometimes physically. “Someone needed an oxygen tank and another had an unused one, so lent it to them,” Barba gave as an example. “The need of some and the disposition of others leads us to get what is necessary and optimize the use of the available equipment and drugs that have risen in price or are out of stock. WhatsApp groups are the main channel for exchanging inputs and information quickly. We do video conferences and promote participation in some that seem relevant, we see each other there, we talk. Many times, they serve as therapy since we need to keep in touch and seeing each other through virtual channels is comforting.” He said there is one message that he still feels the need to get across, even as the pandemic has become less bold: “As people with non‑communicable diseases, we must say loudly: ENOUGH! No more! We want sufficient health care for all!” Read Jaime Barba’s full NCD Diary. Read previous Image Credits: Courtesy of NCD Alliance. How Palliative Care Made One Woman ‘Whole Again’ 29/11/2022 Editorial team A special project celebrating the fifth anniversary of “Our Views, Our Voices” | Learn more Ashla Rani Joining Pallium India in 2014 gave Ashla Rani back her life. Rani fell off a moving train and suffered a spinal cord injury that left her bed-bound and dependent on others for almost everything. She became depressed, asking herself, ‘Why bother to live’? Finally, friends suggested Pallium India, an NGO through which palliative care is provided and advocated for. “I was accepted into the fold, and moved to their headquarters in Thiruvananthapuram in 2014,” wrote Rani. “The impact my healthcare provider has had on my NCD journey is unbelievable; and nothing short of a fairy tale. I feel whole again, doing meaningful work, having a life purpose.” Pallium India became Rani’s home. She said the team listened and treated her and her mother with empathy and care. They also focused not only on treatment but on wellbeing and quality of life. “My medical needs were addressed on time, preventing secondary complications,” Rani wrote. She eventually took up a role in the facility. In her NCD Diary, Rani highlights other cases where Pallium India was able to help, such as a mother with type 1 diabetes who had a diabetic foot and was nearly blind. When she came to Pallium India, her sugar levels were out of control and she and her son were on the verge of starvation. “We got her a diabetologist, who adjusted her medicines to maintain her sugar levels, which saved her limb from amputation,” Rani recalled. “She’s now able to walk with special footwear. We brought her to an eye hospital to receive surgery that allowed her to see her son after four years. With community support, she’s rented a house, where she lives with her son. He receives education support from Pallium India.” Diverse challenges Rani said that people living with noncommunicable diseases face diverse challenges and often do not receive adequate care. It is especially challenging in India, where rehabilitation facilities can be expensive or far away, so many people end up lying in their beds at home and dying of secondary complications. “When there’s a person with some disability in a family, it’s not just that person who is suffering,” Rani added. “The family members around that person also suffer in different ways.” She shared her calls to action: Meaningfully involve people with disabilities in the NCD response in India and globally, ensuring equal representation in discussions and decisions. Create interdisciplinary teams at the community healthcare level to prevent and manage NCDs, including trained staff to counsel and encourage people living with NCDs to live their lives to the fullest and not hide in private spaces. Create support groups for each NCD as despite many shared priorities, different types have specific needs and issues to be addressed. Establish rehab centers and home-based care for NCDs. This should include home-based palliative care for mobility-challenged people living with NCDs. Read Ashla Rani full story. Read previous post. Image Credits: Courtesy of NCD Alliance. From Monkeypox to Mpox 29/11/2022 Kerry Cullinan Colorized transmission electron micrograph of monkeypox particles (purple) found within an infected cell (brown), cultured in the laboratory. Image captured and color-enhanced at the NIAID Integrated Research Facility (IRF) in Fort Detrick, Maryland. The term monkeypox will be replaced by mpox within the next year, according to the World Health Organization (WHO). This follows “racist and stigmatizing language” being used in relation to the large outbreak of mpox for the first time in Europe and the US. The WHO said it had been approached by a number of individuals and countries that had asked the WHO to propose a way forward to change the name. “Assigning names to new and, very exceptionally, to existing diseases is the responsibility of WHO under the International Classification of Diseases and the WHO Family of International Health Related Classifications through a consultative process which includes WHO member states,” the WHO said in a statement on Monday. After consultations to gather views from a range of experts, countries and the general public, who were invited to submit suggestions for new names, the WHO has recommended the name change. Considerations for the recommendations included rationale, scientific appropriateness, extent of current usage, pronounceability, usability in different languages, absence of geographical or zoological references, and the ease of retrieval of historical scientific information. Human monkeypox was given its name in 1970 after the virus that causes the disease was discovered in captive monkeys in 1958. This was way before the publication of WHO best practices in naming diseases, in 2015, which recommended that new disease names should minimize the unnecessary negative impact of names on trade, travel, tourism or animal welfare, and avoid causing offence to any cultural, social, national, regional, professional or ethnic groups. Image Credits: NIAID/Flickr. ‘Zero-COVID’ Protestors Win Concessions But Expert Urges China to Increase ‘Hybrid Immunity’ Before Abandoning Policy 28/11/2022 Kerry Cullinan University professors stand between protestors and police at Fudan University in China. Almost three years of harsh lockdowns, enforced quarantines in state facilities and daily testing have tried the patience of many Chinese people, who since Friday have taken to the streets from Shanghai and Nanjing in the east, to central Chengdu and Wuhan and Urumqi and Korla in the north and west. While scores of people have been arrested, protestors have also won some concessions. In Urumqi, where four million people have been in lockdown for over 100 days, officials announced on Monday that it would allow people to travel on buses to do errands and parcel deliveries would resume. Meanwhile, Beijing officials also announced on Sunday that lockdowns of residential areas would not be enforced for longer than 24 hours. These are small indications that Chinese leader Xi Jinping’s “zero-COVID” policy is becoming increasingly impossible to enforce in the face of people’s growing anger and desperation. Two weeks ago, China’s State Council cut compulsory quarantine in a state facility for international visitors and the close contacts of people with COVID from seven to five days, with a further three days at home. It also did away with restrictions on secondary contacts. But a surge in COVID cases in Beijing was followed swiftly by lockdowns, school and restaurant closures, dampening hopes that the country was quietly abandoning the zero-COVID approach. Journalist arrested, assaulted China is trying to both quell and downplay the protests. On Monday, there was increased military and police deployment at sites of weekend protests, and BBC reporter Ed Lawrence was arrested and reportedly assaulted in police custody in Shanghai while reporting on the protests. BBC Statement on Ed Lawrence pic.twitter.com/wedDetCtpF — BBC News Press Team (@BBCNewsPR) November 27, 2022 The weekend protests were sparked by the deaths of 10 people in a fire in an apartment building in Urumqi, the capital of Xinjiang, on Thursday. The screams of people trapped in the burning building last Thursday were captured on social media amid reports that apartment doors had been closed from the outside to enforce the city’s lockdown. Firefighters took more than three hours to stop the fire as cars blocked their path – many with flat batteries after months of not being driven. @renzhiqiang2 ♬ 原聲 – renzhiqiang2 Sealing the doors of COVID-19 contacts is reported to be a common occurrence in China as part of the country’s enforced lockdowns. 用木棍封门,显然还不够。建议官方用钢筋焊死,同时把门上通电,并请官方派两名军人在门外架上机枪。 生我九州者,虽远必封! pic.twitter.com/ajHSk7Jk7Z — 领导干部 (@808Penny) August 30, 2022 Outrage at the deaths in Urumqi led to vigils and protests being arranged in Shanghai, Xi’an, Chongqing and Nanjing, as well as various university campuses, and people turned up in their thousands at some of the protests. Amid chants of ‘Lift lockdown’, ‘No PCR test’ and “We want freedom’, anti-Xi and anti-Communist Party chanting could also be heard. Many people carried blank sheets of white paper to symbolise government censorship, but reports on the protests on Weibo, the Chinese social media platform, were short-lived. Chinese protestors hold blank papers to signify censorship. Back in May, WHO Secretary-General Dr Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus told a media briefing that China’s strategy was no longer sustainable in the face of the more infectious but less lethal Omicron. “When we talk about the zero-COVID strategy, we don’t think that it’s sustainable, considering the behaviour of the virus now and what we anticipate in the future,” said Tedros, prompting a rebuke from Chinese officials Aside from its zero-COVID policy, China’s vaccines, Sinopharm and Coronavac, are only about 60% effective against severe infection in comparison to over 90% protection offered by mRNA vaccines. China still to reckon with COVID infections However, it is possible that China will still have its reckoning with COVID as its weary citizens resist further controls and the highly infectious virus spreads through a population with little immunity. Global data analysis group Airfinity estimates that 1.3 and 2.1 million lives could be at risk if China lifts its zero-COVID policy “given low vaccination and booster rates as well as a lack of hybrid immunity”. It based its risk analysis on the cumulative peak cases and deaths from Hong Kong’s BA.1 wave as a proxy for mainland China. “Mainland China has very low levels of immunity across its population. Its citizens were vaccinated with domestically produced jabs Sinovac and Sinopharm which have been proven to have significantly lower efficacy and provide less protection against infection and death,” Airfinity said in a statement on Monday. “This vaccine-induced immunity has waned over time and with low booster uptake and no natural infections, the population is more susceptible to severe disease. China’s current booster uptake is 40%, whilst Hong Kong’s primary series uptake was 34% back in February 2022 when it saw a large spike in cases due to the BA.1 omicron variant,” said Airfinity. Dr Louise Blair, Airfinity’s head of vaccines and epidemiology, called on China to “ramp up vaccinations to raise immunity in order to lift its zero-COVID policy, especially given how large its elderly population is”. Blair said that China needs “hybrid immunity” from both vaccinations and infections to ensure “much less impactful and deadly COVID-19 waves”. Localised protests Prior to the national weekend protests, there have been intense local protests, particularly at the Foxconn facility in Zhengzhou, which makes 70% of the Apple’s iPhones. Workers work long shifts and usually stay in massive factory dormitories that can house up to 300,000 people. But after a small COVID outbreak in the city in October, Foxconn closed the dining halls and introduced “closed loop” production to cut workers’ contact with the outside world to meet production demands for the launch of the iPhone14. Tesla and other factories have used this approach during lockdowns in Shanghai in March. But Foxconn workers started to panic in fear of being forcibly quarantined there, and have clashed a number of times with police. Numerous reports of poor treatment and neglect at state quarantine facilities have also leaked out in public, alongside videos of small children removed from COVID-exposed parents being forced to fend for themselves in such facilities. 上海儿童集中营。 pic.twitter.com/BNTbOPXBLD — 方舟子 (@fangshimin) April 2, 2022 Image Credits: Twitter. Uganda Extends Lockdowns in Bid to End Ebola Outbreak 28/11/2022 Stefan Anderson 68 days and 52 deaths into Uganda’s Ebola outbreak, authorities are hopeful the spread of the virus has been contained. Uganda’s President Yoweri Museveni has extended quarantine measures in the two districts at the epicentre of the country’s Ebola epidemic for another 21 days, citing the need to protect gains in the fight against the virus. This marks the third renewal of lockdowns in Kassanda and Mubende, and authorities are hopeful it will be the last. Movement in and out of the districts was first restricted on 15 October, and renewed for another 21 days on 5 November. The measures include a curfew and the closure of social spaces like churches, bars and markets. “It may be too early to celebrate success, but overall, I have been briefed that the picture is good,” Museveni said in a televised address delivered by vice-president Jessica Alupo. While the situation is “still fragile”, Museveni said Ugandan health authorities are “very optimistic” that the outbreak will end “in the coming month.” The government’s optimism is buoyed by Uganda’s continued progress in stamping out the outbreak. Three districts have completed over 42 days since the last case of Ebola was detected, while six districts – including the epicentres of Kassanda and Mubende as well as the capital, Kampala – remain in “follow-up” protocols. The virus has so far claimed 56 lives, while another 22 probable Ebola deaths were registered before the government issued its official declaration of the outbreak on 20 September. “If we open now and a case appears, we will have destroyed all the gains we have made in this war,” Museveni said. “Our healthcare workers will continue to do all it takes to save lives and bring the epidemic to an end.” Full reopening if the 21-day mark is reached With numbers dropping, bed occupancy rates within the past 24 hours stood at just 27.9% in Mubende isolation units. The government’s decision to extend lockdowns by 21 days is based on the incubation period of Ebola. The three-week mark is a key indicator of whether transmission has been stopped. Mid-way through November, Mubende appeared to be in the clear. The district had gone 13 days without reporting a new case. But on day 14, a 23-year-old medical student with links to previous cases was diagnosed with the virus. “Without completing 21 days, as we saw with Mubende, a case can pop up anywhere,” the President said. “It is important that we complete the entire cycle.” Kassanda has now reached 15 days since reporting a new case, while Mubende has not registered a confirmed case for 14 days. If both districts hold on for another week, Uganda’s fifth deadly encounter with the Sudan strain of Ebola may come to a swift end. “We are relying on you to cooperate and bring this epidemic to an end,” the President told residents of Kassanda and Mubende, noting their commitment and sacrifice thus far. “If there is no case by the end of the 21-day period, we will re-open fully.” Threat of urban transmission avoided Ebola’s invasion of Uganda’s Gulu municipality and its slum-like camps for internally displaced persons in 2000 was the cause of the deadliest Ebola epidemic in the country’s history. When six school children were diagnosed with Ebola in Kampala in late October, fears of the virus embedding itself in the capital spiked. On paper, Ebola’s mortality rate of up to 90% makes the virus easy to contain. Museveni also noted that as a virus transferred through contact and bodily fluids, Ebola, despite its “devastating nature”, is far easier to control than airborne threats like COVID-19. But if allowed to embed itself in densely populated areas, things can quickly spiral out of control. “If we had allowed the escalation of the outbreak into Kampala, the consequences would have been bad, including possible exportation to our African brothers in neighbouring countries,” Museveni said. Despite calls from doctors and health advocates to lockdown the capital earlier this month, Museveni and Health Minister Jane Ruth Aceng elected not to bow to the pressure. So far, their decision appears to be validated. “The opportunity for immediate quarantine of contacts was lost for Mubende and Kassanda,” Museveni said, noting the first suspected cases were registered on 6 September, two weeks before authorities declared the outbreak. This was not the case for Kampala. Knowledge of the threat allowed health authorities to be on reactive footing, and respond quickly to isolate infected people and their contacts. Today, over 300 contacts remain under institutional quarantine overseen by the Ministry of Health. Vaccine Trials Are Underway WHO Africa Director Dr Matshidiso Moeti visited Kassanda and Mubende earlier this month to coordinate with Ugandan health authorities and other international partners in responding to the outbreak. There is currently no known vaccine for the Sudan strain of Ebola responsible for the Ugandan outbreak. But the outbreak presents a unique opportunity to bridge this treatment gap, and a series of trials have been set in motion with the aim of minimizing hospitalisations and deaths. A coalition of organizations including CEPI, Gavi, the World Health Organization and Ugandan health authorities are deploying three vaccine candidates to about 3,000 people who have been in contact with Ebola patients. “As we speak, the government of Uganda is finalizing the regulatory approvals,” Africa CDC Director Dr Ahmed Ogwell told CNN. If any of the candidates can succeed, authorities are hopeful this will be the last outbreak Uganda faces without medical defenses. “By embedding research at the heart of the outbreak response, we can achieve two goals,” the WHO said in a statement. “Evaluate potentially efficacious candidate vaccines, potentially contribute to end this outbreak, and protect populations at risk in the future.” Image Credits: WHO, WHO, WHO. Parliamentarians Seek to Address Post-COVID ‘Tsunami’ of Health System Problems 28/11/2022 Maayan Hoffman UNITE president Ricardo Leite (fourth from right) and MPs at the World Health Summit. “There is this tsunami that is happening after the earthquake that was COVID-19 that is now coming to shore and hitting health systems across the world,” said Ricardo Baptista Leite, president and founder of UNITE, a global network of parliamentarians committed to addressing global health challenges. “The pandemic also led to a huge economic crisis and even poor countries in the global South, who might have been less affected by the pandemic, are going to pay a very severe price due to economic consequences that will lead to challenges in responding to the health needs of those countries,” he said. A week before his organization brings together hundreds of parliamentarians from around the world to discuss the most pressing issues in public health at a global summit, the Portuguese MP, who collaborates closely with the World Health Organization (WHO), warned Health Policy Watch of the need to take swift and collective action before the next pandemic. “This is the moment when international institutions and governments need to step up their game and tackle the global health crisis,” Leite said. “We must double up our efforts to make sure we are better equipped in the future and can respond to health needs.” Leite is a long-time global health advocate. He is also a trained medical doctor in infectious diseases and heads the Public Health department at Católica University of Portugal. False sense of security He told Health Policy Watch that whenever the world has felt “capable of controlling infectious disease, we create a false sense of security that we can lower our guard. Whenever we lower our guard, infectious diseases come back with a vengeance.” This can be seen throughout history with multiple pandemics over the centuries, but also in this century with the emergence of antibiotics and the belief that with penicillin we could control infections – a belief now being called into question with the development of antibiotic-resistant bacteria. Antibiotic-resistant bacteria are responsible for the deaths of some 700,000 people each year – with scientists predicting that these infections could kill more people than cancer by 2050. The pandemic has set back the fight against many diseases by years. Take HIV/AIDS. In December 2020, UNAIDS released its 95-95-95 targets, calling for 95% of all people living with HIV to know their HIV status, 95% of all people with diagnosed HIV infection to receive sustained antiretroviral therapy and 95% of all people receiving antiretroviral therapy to have viral suppression by 2025. But during COVID-19, in many countries, measurement of these goals ceased altogether. Where tracking continued, in some cases, diagnoses were slower. “HIV is an interesting proxy for all infectious and communicable diseases out there,” Leite said. In addition, COVID-19 led to a rise in people being diagnosed with late-stage cancer, an increase in cases related to chronic diseases due to people being kept away from health systems, and a spike in mental illness globally. “Pandemics are a strong demonstration of the case that infectious diseases can undermine our efforts toward prosperity for all,” Leite said. He added that during his time as a medical volunteer in Ukraine he saw a huge rise in multi-resistant and extremely resistant tuberculosis in the region. Leite predicted that as the war continues, it will be almost impossible not to see the TB spillover into neighboring countries and then across the world. “There has to be a clear understanding from the world that dealing with infectious diseases is not only something recommended but is a prerequisite for economic and social development worldwide,” he said. The role of parliamentarians WHO parliamentarian session during the World Health Summit (UNITE) Part of the solution is getting parliamentarians around the table, according to Leite. In 2017, the United Nations passed a resolution on the nexus of global health and foreign policy, encouraging a multi-stakeholder approach to achieve universal health coverage. “The voice of parliamentarians was not part of the discussion,” Leite said. “One cannot expect to build a global health architecture or move forward science-based policy making if we do not keep those who write policy in the loop. We cannot make sure money gets where it needs to if we do not include those that make and approve budgets in parliaments.” While he admitted that UNITE is not a “silver bullet,” he said it is a valuable tool for bringing parliamentarians from more than 90 countries together to share experiences and learn how they can best bring their own country toward a more sustainable future. “The first step was to get the conversation going. The second was to develop regional leadership. We now have 10 regional chapters, each led by an MP or former MP. Then we developed policy hubs, specialized teams that focus on specific policy areas, so they can drill down on concrete policymaking in key areas,” Leite explained. “We empower policymakers to be leaders for change in their own countries.” UNITE’s three priorities At its founding, UNITE was focused solely on issues of infectious diseases, but COVID-19 led it to change its mandate over the summer of 2022 and the organization is now focused more generally on global health matters. “The pandemic has demonstrated that global health issues and infectious diseases go hand in hand,” Leite told Health Policy Watch. “We cannot solve many challenges related to infectious disease, which were the basis of our work in the first years, without addressing all the other global health challenges out there.” UNITE is now taking a three-priority approach, focusing on pandemic prevention preparedness and response; the future of health systems; and health as a human right. The group signed a memorandum of understanding recently with WHO to work together on these pillars and supply parliamentary feedback and insight to support WHO’s related efforts. Next week: UNITE Global Summit From 5-7 December, UNITE will host its global summit in Lisbon, bringing together its parliamentarians and leaders from the global health community to expand and forge new partnerships. Members of the lawmaking, civil society, medical and academic communities will meet to talk about what they feel are the most pressing issues on the global health agenda. Another priority that UNITE is bringing to the forefront of the parliamentarian agenda is the use of digital health to promote universal health coverage. “In the last few months with the creation of the digital health hub, parliamentarians were able to discuss with other stakeholders how to build the right frameworks and increase budgets to implement digital health transformation that can promote access to millions,” Leite said. Finally, Leite added that with its new direction in mind, UNITE members would try to answer three questions during the event: What progress have we made so far during the UN’s Sustainable Development Goals period? What have we learned to help us make even more progress by 2030? What is the role of parliamentarians in helping drive that progress? MPs and the pandemic treaty Session on the pandemic treaty at the World Health Summit. In the past, parliamentary involvement has helped achieve public health goals. In Portugal, Leite cited an example from 22 years ago when the parliament decided to decriminalize the use of drugs. “This was not making drug use legal, but now no one goes to jail for using drugs,” he explained. “We stopped looking at people who use drugs as criminals but instead as people who potentially had a health challenge that needed to be dealt with.” Instead of jail time, drug abusers receive harm reduction and other social and health services. When the legislation was passed, around 1% of the Portuguese population used heroin. Since then, Leite said, the numbers have dropped dramatically. Drug-related crime is down, and new HIV cases tied to drug use have fallen from as high as 60% to only 2%. “The fact that we provided harm reduction services and shifted from a criminal perspective to a health perspective was transformative in achieving better health outcomes and partially solving the drug problem in Portugal,” Leite said. A more recent example was the decision by the African Union to set up the African Medicines Agency, which will become a regulatory body for access to health technologies in the continent and creates a common standard of rules based on science to ensure the safety of citizens in the region. Leite equated the AMA to the European Medicines Agency. UNITE founder Ricardo Baptista Leite and Dr Tedros at signing of an MOU between the two organizations. Moving forward, UNITE Parliamentarians will play a key role in finalizing WHO’s pandemic treaty, aimed at guiding the global response to pandemics. “The regulations that were in place when COVID-19 hit were not sufficient or were not properly enforced,” Leite said. He added that “there is a lack of acknowledgement and awareness among most citizens and many parliamentarians around the world that these negotiations are taking place. We need parliamentarians involved early on. If governments agree on a document, parliaments must ratify it.” In an era of “polarized politics and fake news,” he said that if parliamentarians are not part of the process there is a risk that such a treaty would not be ratified, and the world would be left exactly where it was in December 2019. “Everyone is committed to finding a balanced approach to what we hope will create a toolkit from a policy perspective that can help the world be better prepared to detect outbreaks early and lock them down before they transform into pandemics,” Leite said. “It is not acceptable that 100 years after the Spanish flu we saw so many countries react to COVID-19 the same way as they did 100 years before,” he continued. “We have an obligation to be better prepared to constrain any risk, to keep as many people as possible safe. This is a prerequisite for economic and social development. “We need to keep peace and prosperity as our main goal,” Leite concluded. Image Credits: UNITE. There are a Wide Range of Treatments for Obesity, but Many People Cannot Afford Care 28/11/2022 Editorial team A special project celebrating the fifth anniversary of “Our Views, Our Voices” | Learn more Amber Huett-Garcia at her high and low weight from 2008 to 2021. Amber Huett-Garcia is trying to drive global change for affordable treatment, care and support for individuals suffering from obesity. A resident of the United States and born into a family suffering from generational obesity, she weighed 101 pounds by the time she was in kindergarten. As an adult, she lost 245 pounds and reduced her BMI from 69 to 24. She did it through a combination of treatments, including bariatric surgery, medication and mental health care. While Huett-Garcia is lucky to have a comprehensive employer-based healthcare plan, she recognizes that many people in the United States do not. And for those who are obese, the cost of care can be enormous. The cost of obesity Obesity costs the US healthcare system nearly $173 billion a year, according to the latest report by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Personal medical costs for people living with obesity are close to $1,500 more per year than those who do not suffer from the condition. For people living with obesity and who are on Medicare, few treatments are covered. For example, Medicare has zero anti-obesity medication coverage. Moreover, roughly 40% of the US population lacks coverage for bariatric surgery for obesity, which has been proven most effective. “Affordable healthcare is a human right,” Huett-Garcia said. Amber Huett-Garcia taking part in the “Stop Weight Bias” campaign. She has called for action to ensure that insurance plans pay for the treatment of a wider range of conditions, including obesity, by covering comprehensive science-based interventions. She has also asked that decision-makers within healthcare systems listen and amplify the voices of people with NCDs. “The lives of people living with NCDs depend on it,” she concluded. Read Amber Huett-Garcia’s full NCD Diary. Read previous post. Image Credits: Courtesy of NCD Alliance. Posts navigation Older postsNewer posts This site uses cookies to help give you the best experience on our website. Cookies enable us to collect information that helps us personalise your experience and improve the functionality and performance of our site. By continuing to read our website, we assume you agree to this, otherwise you can adjust your browser settings. Please read our cookie and Privacy Policy. Our Cookies and Privacy Policy Loading Comments... You must be logged in to post a comment.
Three New Leaders Appointed to WHO Senior Team – But Unlikely to be Permanent 29/11/2022 Kerry Cullinan A WHO press conference earlier this year. Professor Hanan Balkhy will step into the shoes of Dr Mariângela Simão, the World Health Organization’s (WHO) Assistant Director-General for access to medicines and health products, when she leaves on Thursday, according to WHO sources. Professor Hanan Balkhy Currently WHO Assistant Director-General of antimicrobial resistance, Balkhy served as executive director of infection prevention and control in Saudia Arabia for 10 years. Meanwhile, Australian national Professor John Reeder, WHO’s Director of the Special Programme for Research and Training in Tropical Diseases (TDR), steps into the Chief Scientist role about to be vacated by Dr Soumya Swaminathan. Dr Teresa Kasaeva, who directs the WHO’s global TB programme, will replace Dr Ren Minghui as Assistant Director-General for universal health coverage (UHC), and communicable and non-communicable diseases. It is understood that the three will be acting in the various positions, but the WHO did not respond to Health Policy Watch queries about the appointments or their status. As Health Policy Watch reported previously, eight members of the WHO’s 16-member senior leadership team at the Geneva headquarters will leave the global body at the end of November. This is the biggest single leadership change that Tedros has made since 2019, two years after he took office, when he made a set of sweeping changes as part of his “Transformation” agenda for the organization. It has been anticipated for months by Geneva insiders who say the Director-General has been itching to shake up his team since being re-elected for a second term. Additionally, there have been pressures from large donors for Tedros to streamline his senior team, which is the largest it has ever been. All three current appointments are internal, which could indicate that Tedros is responding both to criticism that he has not promoted enough people within WHO’s ranks and to pressure from member states led by the US to trim personnel costs. Tedros is unlikely to replace Dr Nono Simelela, an Assistant Director-General and special adviser and may also rationalise other posts to save costs. Other staff departing this week are Jane Ellison, executive director for external relations and governance, Dr Jaouard Mahjour, Assistant Director-General for emergency preparedness and international health regulations and Dr Naoko Yamamoto, Assistant Director-General for UHC and healthier populations. Despite India’s Recent Expansion of Abortion Rights There Are Many Obstacles – Especially for Young Unmarried Women 29/11/2022 Megha Kaveri There are still many barriers to women getting abortions in India. Although India’s Supreme Court issued a landmark decision granting all women the right to an abortion up to 24 weeks of pregnancy in late September, many obstacles stand in the way of women getting abortions – including the conservative attitudes of health workers towards unmarried women. The Supreme Court decision erased the difference between married women and unmarried women, which had been enshrined in a 2021 amendment of India’s Medical Termination of Pregnancy (MTP) Act, passed in 1971. Under the 1971 law, abortion was technically allowed for all women up until 20 weeks – although in fact multiple cultural and practical obstacles existed for unmarried women. The 2021 amendment expanded abortion rights for certain categories of women, such as survivors of rape and incest, allowing them to obtain abortions until 24 weeks. It also allowed married women to terminate their pregnancies up to 24 weeks under certain circumstances, such as failure of contraception – but did not allow unmarried pregnant women the same right. Expansion of abortion rights aims to reduce deaths from botched procedures Inside a healthcare facility in India. The expansion of abortion access is aimed at protecting women’s health, as eight women a day are estimated to die in India as a result of botched abortions, according to the United Nations Population Fund, UNFPA. Over a quarter (27%) of all the abortions in India are performed by women themselves in their homes, according to National Family Health Survey (NFHS) – 5. Around 16% of women who had abortions reported complications, and 90% of these needed medical treatment. But while the ruling has been praised as a milestone for India and South East Asia, with respect to reproductive health rights, activists in India say that the situation on the ground remains unchanged in many respects. Women seeking access to abortion continue to face social stigmas and prejudices that are far from the liberal attitudes reflected in the court decision. Judgemental health workers Ground-breaking research conducted by the progressive Indian YP Foundation, has identified a range of barriers – from high costs of the procedure to judgemental health care workers. Many teenagers seeking abortion in India today contend with laws criminalising consensual sex, judgment & shaming by caregivers & pressure to make false rape complaints to break up interfaith & intercaste couples @Saumya_Kalia reports. 1/2https://t.co/cjYnnCL0uf — Article 14 (@Article14live) November 21, 2022 Service providers’ impose value judgements on premarital sex, as well as abortion, the research found, with some providers insisting that unmarried women obtain their parents’ consent for the procedure. The research fellows, who posed as patients at health facilities and conducted surveys amongst young people and in seven Indian states, also found confidentiality breaches in government facilities, caste prejudice and gender disparity in treatment, with those women who were accompanied by male partners getting a much better reception. Finally there are the arbitrary costs of abortion in public clinics, as well as providers’ reference to expensive private facilities even when lower-cost alternatives exist. Anecdotally, as well, the stories mount up, as well. One tweet by an Indian doctor stating that it was important for her to ask patients if they were married as this determined how she would treat them, opened a floodgate of responses from angry social media users, many of whom had bad experiences with doctors, especially gynaecologists. All these lovely 'woke' women tweeting about being offended by the question, "are you married," asked by their ObGyn, let me tell you something as a doctor. Martial status is imperative in the diagnosis and treatment of a patient, especially in OBG. (1/n) — dr_vee (@dr_vee95) June 28, 2022 There have been a number of reports of gynaecologists, even in India’s urban centres, refusing to perform a vaginal examination on an adult patient without the consent of their parent or partner. Years ago, Akshita* remembers visiting her gynaecologist in Hyderabad after she missed a period. “I was suspecting polycystic ovarian disorder (PCOD) and requested a diagnosis. I made it clear to the doctor that I was not sexually active,” she told Health Policy Watch. However, her doctor refused to believe her and then went on to suggest a diet plan without diagnosing her condition. The experience traumatised the 22-year-old Hyderabad-based young professional, who avoided going to a doctor for a long time after. “When I have gone for smaller, simpler things, they have traumatised me so thoroughly. I cannot imagine what it would be like to approach one for something like a birth control or abortion, which they would definitely be much more judgemental about and would straight up deny access to these services.” Informal networks pushing back on stigmas and prejudice Women queuing up in front of a pharmacy in India. Though ECPs are not illegal/banned in India, many pharmacies don’t stock them. The petition that pushed the Indian top court to issue its milestone pro-choice verdict in September was filed filed by a 25-year-old unmarried woman who was 22 weeks’ pregnant. In her petition, she said that her partner refused to marry her and she didn’t want to have the baby out of wedlock due to societal stigma. She also asserted that she could not afford to raise a child as she was unemployed and did not come from a wealthy family. In the southern Indian state of Tamil Nadu, Chennai activist Archanaa Sekar works with an informal network of women in the city who have been instrumental in helping such women to get abortions from non-judgemental gynaecologists. Her group also has organised with local government actors and pharmacies to ensure that emergency contraceptive pills (ECPs), which are not normally stocked, may be made available. While acknowledging that the September Supreme Court decision was groundbreaking, she added that it will still take a long time for new legal thinking to filter into health workers’ responses, and broader societal values. Meanwhile, advocacy and women’s support networks will play a critical role in expanding women’s access, little by little, on the ground. #IMPORTANT #UPDATE: #ECP’s in #TAMILNADU The Director of the Drugs Control Dept. will direct pharmacies to make emergency contraceptive pills available for OVER THE COUNTER purchase. The Dept. will clarify to all pharmacies that ECP’s are LEGAL/NOT BANNED, must be stocked & sold — Archanaa Seker (@Archytypes) November 13, 2020 “As a doctor, one is in a position of power of allowing a person access to abortion. Unfortunately, we are still not in a place where a professional comes into the table just as a professional. They bring their baggage and prejudices with them,” said Sekar, in an interview with Health Policy Watch. “With respect to abortion, there is a cultural, moral understanding that killing anything seems wrong and therefore you think abortion is illegal,” she said. “So, for you to come around to the fact that abortion is legal, it takes a while. In all of this, in case of something like pregnancies you are losing precious time.” “Unlike environmental laws where it is easy to expose people flouting the law, in cases of abortion it is difficult to speak out against someone who goes against the law and denies abortion,” Seker explained. “To a layperson it doesn’t matter whether the law exists or not. Because the law is not going to protect them,” she added. “People need to know their rights. If we are doing any kind of rights education, are we including a module also on laws such as the MTP Act and the Mental Healthcare Act?” Deeper issue remains attitudes towards sexuality But even deeper attitudes towards sex and sexuality, which remain taboo topics in much of Indian society, also come into play in the abortion access landscape, she says. Sex education continues to be banned in states like Gujarat, Karnataka and Maharashtra, for example. And even when sex education is included in the curriculum, students are taught to abstain. Most adolescents in India are not aware of contraception or how to use it, which leads to unsafe sex and unwanted pregnancies, she noted. “Until we take the shame out of sex, we are not going to take the stigma out of contraception or abortion access.” The Rosa Luxemburg Foundation provided support for this article. Image Credits: Srimathi Jayaprakash/ Unsplash, The White Ribbon Alliance/Flickr, Trinity Care Foundation/Flickr. How One Man With COPD Suffered Through COVID-19 29/11/2022 Editorial team A special project celebrating the fifth anniversary of “Our Views, Our Voices” | Learn more Jaime Barba Jaime Barba, from Mexico, developed Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease (COPD) after smoking for 32 years. When COVID-19 struck, the country converted the hospital at which Barba received treatment into a COVID facility, leaving him no place to be treated if his COPD worsened. Eventually, he and his wife both tested positive for the virus. “Although our symptoms were mild and my respiratory system did not affect me, I had other affectations, mainly kidneys and prostate that are still under treatment,” Barba wrote in his NCD Diary. “When we were positively diagnosed, it was distressing not to have guaranteed care in case it became complicated and hospitalization was necessary.” But the hardest part was the mental battle, he explained. “Since the COVID-19 pandemic began, we have been on the razor’s edge between remaining confined and trying to generate resources to survive,” wrote Barba. “I have suffered insomnia, sometimes even panic attacks with chest pain and shortness of breath, and gastritis and colitis are normal.” People with lung diseases are among the most likely to develop serious cases of COVID-19. Some of Barba’s ex-smoker friends or people with other NCDs died during the pandemic, some of them from COVID-19 and others due to lack of care and medicines for their chronic diseases. While the fear was high, he said the pandemic also brought him closer to other people with NCDs. They shared video calls and chats and served as a support network – emotionally and sometimes physically. “Someone needed an oxygen tank and another had an unused one, so lent it to them,” Barba gave as an example. “The need of some and the disposition of others leads us to get what is necessary and optimize the use of the available equipment and drugs that have risen in price or are out of stock. WhatsApp groups are the main channel for exchanging inputs and information quickly. We do video conferences and promote participation in some that seem relevant, we see each other there, we talk. Many times, they serve as therapy since we need to keep in touch and seeing each other through virtual channels is comforting.” He said there is one message that he still feels the need to get across, even as the pandemic has become less bold: “As people with non‑communicable diseases, we must say loudly: ENOUGH! No more! We want sufficient health care for all!” Read Jaime Barba’s full NCD Diary. Read previous Image Credits: Courtesy of NCD Alliance. How Palliative Care Made One Woman ‘Whole Again’ 29/11/2022 Editorial team A special project celebrating the fifth anniversary of “Our Views, Our Voices” | Learn more Ashla Rani Joining Pallium India in 2014 gave Ashla Rani back her life. Rani fell off a moving train and suffered a spinal cord injury that left her bed-bound and dependent on others for almost everything. She became depressed, asking herself, ‘Why bother to live’? Finally, friends suggested Pallium India, an NGO through which palliative care is provided and advocated for. “I was accepted into the fold, and moved to their headquarters in Thiruvananthapuram in 2014,” wrote Rani. “The impact my healthcare provider has had on my NCD journey is unbelievable; and nothing short of a fairy tale. I feel whole again, doing meaningful work, having a life purpose.” Pallium India became Rani’s home. She said the team listened and treated her and her mother with empathy and care. They also focused not only on treatment but on wellbeing and quality of life. “My medical needs were addressed on time, preventing secondary complications,” Rani wrote. She eventually took up a role in the facility. In her NCD Diary, Rani highlights other cases where Pallium India was able to help, such as a mother with type 1 diabetes who had a diabetic foot and was nearly blind. When she came to Pallium India, her sugar levels were out of control and she and her son were on the verge of starvation. “We got her a diabetologist, who adjusted her medicines to maintain her sugar levels, which saved her limb from amputation,” Rani recalled. “She’s now able to walk with special footwear. We brought her to an eye hospital to receive surgery that allowed her to see her son after four years. With community support, she’s rented a house, where she lives with her son. He receives education support from Pallium India.” Diverse challenges Rani said that people living with noncommunicable diseases face diverse challenges and often do not receive adequate care. It is especially challenging in India, where rehabilitation facilities can be expensive or far away, so many people end up lying in their beds at home and dying of secondary complications. “When there’s a person with some disability in a family, it’s not just that person who is suffering,” Rani added. “The family members around that person also suffer in different ways.” She shared her calls to action: Meaningfully involve people with disabilities in the NCD response in India and globally, ensuring equal representation in discussions and decisions. Create interdisciplinary teams at the community healthcare level to prevent and manage NCDs, including trained staff to counsel and encourage people living with NCDs to live their lives to the fullest and not hide in private spaces. Create support groups for each NCD as despite many shared priorities, different types have specific needs and issues to be addressed. Establish rehab centers and home-based care for NCDs. This should include home-based palliative care for mobility-challenged people living with NCDs. Read Ashla Rani full story. Read previous post. Image Credits: Courtesy of NCD Alliance. From Monkeypox to Mpox 29/11/2022 Kerry Cullinan Colorized transmission electron micrograph of monkeypox particles (purple) found within an infected cell (brown), cultured in the laboratory. Image captured and color-enhanced at the NIAID Integrated Research Facility (IRF) in Fort Detrick, Maryland. The term monkeypox will be replaced by mpox within the next year, according to the World Health Organization (WHO). This follows “racist and stigmatizing language” being used in relation to the large outbreak of mpox for the first time in Europe and the US. The WHO said it had been approached by a number of individuals and countries that had asked the WHO to propose a way forward to change the name. “Assigning names to new and, very exceptionally, to existing diseases is the responsibility of WHO under the International Classification of Diseases and the WHO Family of International Health Related Classifications through a consultative process which includes WHO member states,” the WHO said in a statement on Monday. After consultations to gather views from a range of experts, countries and the general public, who were invited to submit suggestions for new names, the WHO has recommended the name change. Considerations for the recommendations included rationale, scientific appropriateness, extent of current usage, pronounceability, usability in different languages, absence of geographical or zoological references, and the ease of retrieval of historical scientific information. Human monkeypox was given its name in 1970 after the virus that causes the disease was discovered in captive monkeys in 1958. This was way before the publication of WHO best practices in naming diseases, in 2015, which recommended that new disease names should minimize the unnecessary negative impact of names on trade, travel, tourism or animal welfare, and avoid causing offence to any cultural, social, national, regional, professional or ethnic groups. Image Credits: NIAID/Flickr. ‘Zero-COVID’ Protestors Win Concessions But Expert Urges China to Increase ‘Hybrid Immunity’ Before Abandoning Policy 28/11/2022 Kerry Cullinan University professors stand between protestors and police at Fudan University in China. Almost three years of harsh lockdowns, enforced quarantines in state facilities and daily testing have tried the patience of many Chinese people, who since Friday have taken to the streets from Shanghai and Nanjing in the east, to central Chengdu and Wuhan and Urumqi and Korla in the north and west. While scores of people have been arrested, protestors have also won some concessions. In Urumqi, where four million people have been in lockdown for over 100 days, officials announced on Monday that it would allow people to travel on buses to do errands and parcel deliveries would resume. Meanwhile, Beijing officials also announced on Sunday that lockdowns of residential areas would not be enforced for longer than 24 hours. These are small indications that Chinese leader Xi Jinping’s “zero-COVID” policy is becoming increasingly impossible to enforce in the face of people’s growing anger and desperation. Two weeks ago, China’s State Council cut compulsory quarantine in a state facility for international visitors and the close contacts of people with COVID from seven to five days, with a further three days at home. It also did away with restrictions on secondary contacts. But a surge in COVID cases in Beijing was followed swiftly by lockdowns, school and restaurant closures, dampening hopes that the country was quietly abandoning the zero-COVID approach. Journalist arrested, assaulted China is trying to both quell and downplay the protests. On Monday, there was increased military and police deployment at sites of weekend protests, and BBC reporter Ed Lawrence was arrested and reportedly assaulted in police custody in Shanghai while reporting on the protests. BBC Statement on Ed Lawrence pic.twitter.com/wedDetCtpF — BBC News Press Team (@BBCNewsPR) November 27, 2022 The weekend protests were sparked by the deaths of 10 people in a fire in an apartment building in Urumqi, the capital of Xinjiang, on Thursday. The screams of people trapped in the burning building last Thursday were captured on social media amid reports that apartment doors had been closed from the outside to enforce the city’s lockdown. Firefighters took more than three hours to stop the fire as cars blocked their path – many with flat batteries after months of not being driven. @renzhiqiang2 ♬ 原聲 – renzhiqiang2 Sealing the doors of COVID-19 contacts is reported to be a common occurrence in China as part of the country’s enforced lockdowns. 用木棍封门,显然还不够。建议官方用钢筋焊死,同时把门上通电,并请官方派两名军人在门外架上机枪。 生我九州者,虽远必封! pic.twitter.com/ajHSk7Jk7Z — 领导干部 (@808Penny) August 30, 2022 Outrage at the deaths in Urumqi led to vigils and protests being arranged in Shanghai, Xi’an, Chongqing and Nanjing, as well as various university campuses, and people turned up in their thousands at some of the protests. Amid chants of ‘Lift lockdown’, ‘No PCR test’ and “We want freedom’, anti-Xi and anti-Communist Party chanting could also be heard. Many people carried blank sheets of white paper to symbolise government censorship, but reports on the protests on Weibo, the Chinese social media platform, were short-lived. Chinese protestors hold blank papers to signify censorship. Back in May, WHO Secretary-General Dr Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus told a media briefing that China’s strategy was no longer sustainable in the face of the more infectious but less lethal Omicron. “When we talk about the zero-COVID strategy, we don’t think that it’s sustainable, considering the behaviour of the virus now and what we anticipate in the future,” said Tedros, prompting a rebuke from Chinese officials Aside from its zero-COVID policy, China’s vaccines, Sinopharm and Coronavac, are only about 60% effective against severe infection in comparison to over 90% protection offered by mRNA vaccines. China still to reckon with COVID infections However, it is possible that China will still have its reckoning with COVID as its weary citizens resist further controls and the highly infectious virus spreads through a population with little immunity. Global data analysis group Airfinity estimates that 1.3 and 2.1 million lives could be at risk if China lifts its zero-COVID policy “given low vaccination and booster rates as well as a lack of hybrid immunity”. It based its risk analysis on the cumulative peak cases and deaths from Hong Kong’s BA.1 wave as a proxy for mainland China. “Mainland China has very low levels of immunity across its population. Its citizens were vaccinated with domestically produced jabs Sinovac and Sinopharm which have been proven to have significantly lower efficacy and provide less protection against infection and death,” Airfinity said in a statement on Monday. “This vaccine-induced immunity has waned over time and with low booster uptake and no natural infections, the population is more susceptible to severe disease. China’s current booster uptake is 40%, whilst Hong Kong’s primary series uptake was 34% back in February 2022 when it saw a large spike in cases due to the BA.1 omicron variant,” said Airfinity. Dr Louise Blair, Airfinity’s head of vaccines and epidemiology, called on China to “ramp up vaccinations to raise immunity in order to lift its zero-COVID policy, especially given how large its elderly population is”. Blair said that China needs “hybrid immunity” from both vaccinations and infections to ensure “much less impactful and deadly COVID-19 waves”. Localised protests Prior to the national weekend protests, there have been intense local protests, particularly at the Foxconn facility in Zhengzhou, which makes 70% of the Apple’s iPhones. Workers work long shifts and usually stay in massive factory dormitories that can house up to 300,000 people. But after a small COVID outbreak in the city in October, Foxconn closed the dining halls and introduced “closed loop” production to cut workers’ contact with the outside world to meet production demands for the launch of the iPhone14. Tesla and other factories have used this approach during lockdowns in Shanghai in March. But Foxconn workers started to panic in fear of being forcibly quarantined there, and have clashed a number of times with police. Numerous reports of poor treatment and neglect at state quarantine facilities have also leaked out in public, alongside videos of small children removed from COVID-exposed parents being forced to fend for themselves in such facilities. 上海儿童集中营。 pic.twitter.com/BNTbOPXBLD — 方舟子 (@fangshimin) April 2, 2022 Image Credits: Twitter. Uganda Extends Lockdowns in Bid to End Ebola Outbreak 28/11/2022 Stefan Anderson 68 days and 52 deaths into Uganda’s Ebola outbreak, authorities are hopeful the spread of the virus has been contained. Uganda’s President Yoweri Museveni has extended quarantine measures in the two districts at the epicentre of the country’s Ebola epidemic for another 21 days, citing the need to protect gains in the fight against the virus. This marks the third renewal of lockdowns in Kassanda and Mubende, and authorities are hopeful it will be the last. Movement in and out of the districts was first restricted on 15 October, and renewed for another 21 days on 5 November. The measures include a curfew and the closure of social spaces like churches, bars and markets. “It may be too early to celebrate success, but overall, I have been briefed that the picture is good,” Museveni said in a televised address delivered by vice-president Jessica Alupo. While the situation is “still fragile”, Museveni said Ugandan health authorities are “very optimistic” that the outbreak will end “in the coming month.” The government’s optimism is buoyed by Uganda’s continued progress in stamping out the outbreak. Three districts have completed over 42 days since the last case of Ebola was detected, while six districts – including the epicentres of Kassanda and Mubende as well as the capital, Kampala – remain in “follow-up” protocols. The virus has so far claimed 56 lives, while another 22 probable Ebola deaths were registered before the government issued its official declaration of the outbreak on 20 September. “If we open now and a case appears, we will have destroyed all the gains we have made in this war,” Museveni said. “Our healthcare workers will continue to do all it takes to save lives and bring the epidemic to an end.” Full reopening if the 21-day mark is reached With numbers dropping, bed occupancy rates within the past 24 hours stood at just 27.9% in Mubende isolation units. The government’s decision to extend lockdowns by 21 days is based on the incubation period of Ebola. The three-week mark is a key indicator of whether transmission has been stopped. Mid-way through November, Mubende appeared to be in the clear. The district had gone 13 days without reporting a new case. But on day 14, a 23-year-old medical student with links to previous cases was diagnosed with the virus. “Without completing 21 days, as we saw with Mubende, a case can pop up anywhere,” the President said. “It is important that we complete the entire cycle.” Kassanda has now reached 15 days since reporting a new case, while Mubende has not registered a confirmed case for 14 days. If both districts hold on for another week, Uganda’s fifth deadly encounter with the Sudan strain of Ebola may come to a swift end. “We are relying on you to cooperate and bring this epidemic to an end,” the President told residents of Kassanda and Mubende, noting their commitment and sacrifice thus far. “If there is no case by the end of the 21-day period, we will re-open fully.” Threat of urban transmission avoided Ebola’s invasion of Uganda’s Gulu municipality and its slum-like camps for internally displaced persons in 2000 was the cause of the deadliest Ebola epidemic in the country’s history. When six school children were diagnosed with Ebola in Kampala in late October, fears of the virus embedding itself in the capital spiked. On paper, Ebola’s mortality rate of up to 90% makes the virus easy to contain. Museveni also noted that as a virus transferred through contact and bodily fluids, Ebola, despite its “devastating nature”, is far easier to control than airborne threats like COVID-19. But if allowed to embed itself in densely populated areas, things can quickly spiral out of control. “If we had allowed the escalation of the outbreak into Kampala, the consequences would have been bad, including possible exportation to our African brothers in neighbouring countries,” Museveni said. Despite calls from doctors and health advocates to lockdown the capital earlier this month, Museveni and Health Minister Jane Ruth Aceng elected not to bow to the pressure. So far, their decision appears to be validated. “The opportunity for immediate quarantine of contacts was lost for Mubende and Kassanda,” Museveni said, noting the first suspected cases were registered on 6 September, two weeks before authorities declared the outbreak. This was not the case for Kampala. Knowledge of the threat allowed health authorities to be on reactive footing, and respond quickly to isolate infected people and their contacts. Today, over 300 contacts remain under institutional quarantine overseen by the Ministry of Health. Vaccine Trials Are Underway WHO Africa Director Dr Matshidiso Moeti visited Kassanda and Mubende earlier this month to coordinate with Ugandan health authorities and other international partners in responding to the outbreak. There is currently no known vaccine for the Sudan strain of Ebola responsible for the Ugandan outbreak. But the outbreak presents a unique opportunity to bridge this treatment gap, and a series of trials have been set in motion with the aim of minimizing hospitalisations and deaths. A coalition of organizations including CEPI, Gavi, the World Health Organization and Ugandan health authorities are deploying three vaccine candidates to about 3,000 people who have been in contact with Ebola patients. “As we speak, the government of Uganda is finalizing the regulatory approvals,” Africa CDC Director Dr Ahmed Ogwell told CNN. If any of the candidates can succeed, authorities are hopeful this will be the last outbreak Uganda faces without medical defenses. “By embedding research at the heart of the outbreak response, we can achieve two goals,” the WHO said in a statement. “Evaluate potentially efficacious candidate vaccines, potentially contribute to end this outbreak, and protect populations at risk in the future.” Image Credits: WHO, WHO, WHO. Parliamentarians Seek to Address Post-COVID ‘Tsunami’ of Health System Problems 28/11/2022 Maayan Hoffman UNITE president Ricardo Leite (fourth from right) and MPs at the World Health Summit. “There is this tsunami that is happening after the earthquake that was COVID-19 that is now coming to shore and hitting health systems across the world,” said Ricardo Baptista Leite, president and founder of UNITE, a global network of parliamentarians committed to addressing global health challenges. “The pandemic also led to a huge economic crisis and even poor countries in the global South, who might have been less affected by the pandemic, are going to pay a very severe price due to economic consequences that will lead to challenges in responding to the health needs of those countries,” he said. A week before his organization brings together hundreds of parliamentarians from around the world to discuss the most pressing issues in public health at a global summit, the Portuguese MP, who collaborates closely with the World Health Organization (WHO), warned Health Policy Watch of the need to take swift and collective action before the next pandemic. “This is the moment when international institutions and governments need to step up their game and tackle the global health crisis,” Leite said. “We must double up our efforts to make sure we are better equipped in the future and can respond to health needs.” Leite is a long-time global health advocate. He is also a trained medical doctor in infectious diseases and heads the Public Health department at Católica University of Portugal. False sense of security He told Health Policy Watch that whenever the world has felt “capable of controlling infectious disease, we create a false sense of security that we can lower our guard. Whenever we lower our guard, infectious diseases come back with a vengeance.” This can be seen throughout history with multiple pandemics over the centuries, but also in this century with the emergence of antibiotics and the belief that with penicillin we could control infections – a belief now being called into question with the development of antibiotic-resistant bacteria. Antibiotic-resistant bacteria are responsible for the deaths of some 700,000 people each year – with scientists predicting that these infections could kill more people than cancer by 2050. The pandemic has set back the fight against many diseases by years. Take HIV/AIDS. In December 2020, UNAIDS released its 95-95-95 targets, calling for 95% of all people living with HIV to know their HIV status, 95% of all people with diagnosed HIV infection to receive sustained antiretroviral therapy and 95% of all people receiving antiretroviral therapy to have viral suppression by 2025. But during COVID-19, in many countries, measurement of these goals ceased altogether. Where tracking continued, in some cases, diagnoses were slower. “HIV is an interesting proxy for all infectious and communicable diseases out there,” Leite said. In addition, COVID-19 led to a rise in people being diagnosed with late-stage cancer, an increase in cases related to chronic diseases due to people being kept away from health systems, and a spike in mental illness globally. “Pandemics are a strong demonstration of the case that infectious diseases can undermine our efforts toward prosperity for all,” Leite said. He added that during his time as a medical volunteer in Ukraine he saw a huge rise in multi-resistant and extremely resistant tuberculosis in the region. Leite predicted that as the war continues, it will be almost impossible not to see the TB spillover into neighboring countries and then across the world. “There has to be a clear understanding from the world that dealing with infectious diseases is not only something recommended but is a prerequisite for economic and social development worldwide,” he said. The role of parliamentarians WHO parliamentarian session during the World Health Summit (UNITE) Part of the solution is getting parliamentarians around the table, according to Leite. In 2017, the United Nations passed a resolution on the nexus of global health and foreign policy, encouraging a multi-stakeholder approach to achieve universal health coverage. “The voice of parliamentarians was not part of the discussion,” Leite said. “One cannot expect to build a global health architecture or move forward science-based policy making if we do not keep those who write policy in the loop. We cannot make sure money gets where it needs to if we do not include those that make and approve budgets in parliaments.” While he admitted that UNITE is not a “silver bullet,” he said it is a valuable tool for bringing parliamentarians from more than 90 countries together to share experiences and learn how they can best bring their own country toward a more sustainable future. “The first step was to get the conversation going. The second was to develop regional leadership. We now have 10 regional chapters, each led by an MP or former MP. Then we developed policy hubs, specialized teams that focus on specific policy areas, so they can drill down on concrete policymaking in key areas,” Leite explained. “We empower policymakers to be leaders for change in their own countries.” UNITE’s three priorities At its founding, UNITE was focused solely on issues of infectious diseases, but COVID-19 led it to change its mandate over the summer of 2022 and the organization is now focused more generally on global health matters. “The pandemic has demonstrated that global health issues and infectious diseases go hand in hand,” Leite told Health Policy Watch. “We cannot solve many challenges related to infectious disease, which were the basis of our work in the first years, without addressing all the other global health challenges out there.” UNITE is now taking a three-priority approach, focusing on pandemic prevention preparedness and response; the future of health systems; and health as a human right. The group signed a memorandum of understanding recently with WHO to work together on these pillars and supply parliamentary feedback and insight to support WHO’s related efforts. Next week: UNITE Global Summit From 5-7 December, UNITE will host its global summit in Lisbon, bringing together its parliamentarians and leaders from the global health community to expand and forge new partnerships. Members of the lawmaking, civil society, medical and academic communities will meet to talk about what they feel are the most pressing issues on the global health agenda. Another priority that UNITE is bringing to the forefront of the parliamentarian agenda is the use of digital health to promote universal health coverage. “In the last few months with the creation of the digital health hub, parliamentarians were able to discuss with other stakeholders how to build the right frameworks and increase budgets to implement digital health transformation that can promote access to millions,” Leite said. Finally, Leite added that with its new direction in mind, UNITE members would try to answer three questions during the event: What progress have we made so far during the UN’s Sustainable Development Goals period? What have we learned to help us make even more progress by 2030? What is the role of parliamentarians in helping drive that progress? MPs and the pandemic treaty Session on the pandemic treaty at the World Health Summit. In the past, parliamentary involvement has helped achieve public health goals. In Portugal, Leite cited an example from 22 years ago when the parliament decided to decriminalize the use of drugs. “This was not making drug use legal, but now no one goes to jail for using drugs,” he explained. “We stopped looking at people who use drugs as criminals but instead as people who potentially had a health challenge that needed to be dealt with.” Instead of jail time, drug abusers receive harm reduction and other social and health services. When the legislation was passed, around 1% of the Portuguese population used heroin. Since then, Leite said, the numbers have dropped dramatically. Drug-related crime is down, and new HIV cases tied to drug use have fallen from as high as 60% to only 2%. “The fact that we provided harm reduction services and shifted from a criminal perspective to a health perspective was transformative in achieving better health outcomes and partially solving the drug problem in Portugal,” Leite said. A more recent example was the decision by the African Union to set up the African Medicines Agency, which will become a regulatory body for access to health technologies in the continent and creates a common standard of rules based on science to ensure the safety of citizens in the region. Leite equated the AMA to the European Medicines Agency. UNITE founder Ricardo Baptista Leite and Dr Tedros at signing of an MOU between the two organizations. Moving forward, UNITE Parliamentarians will play a key role in finalizing WHO’s pandemic treaty, aimed at guiding the global response to pandemics. “The regulations that were in place when COVID-19 hit were not sufficient or were not properly enforced,” Leite said. He added that “there is a lack of acknowledgement and awareness among most citizens and many parliamentarians around the world that these negotiations are taking place. We need parliamentarians involved early on. If governments agree on a document, parliaments must ratify it.” In an era of “polarized politics and fake news,” he said that if parliamentarians are not part of the process there is a risk that such a treaty would not be ratified, and the world would be left exactly where it was in December 2019. “Everyone is committed to finding a balanced approach to what we hope will create a toolkit from a policy perspective that can help the world be better prepared to detect outbreaks early and lock them down before they transform into pandemics,” Leite said. “It is not acceptable that 100 years after the Spanish flu we saw so many countries react to COVID-19 the same way as they did 100 years before,” he continued. “We have an obligation to be better prepared to constrain any risk, to keep as many people as possible safe. This is a prerequisite for economic and social development. “We need to keep peace and prosperity as our main goal,” Leite concluded. Image Credits: UNITE. There are a Wide Range of Treatments for Obesity, but Many People Cannot Afford Care 28/11/2022 Editorial team A special project celebrating the fifth anniversary of “Our Views, Our Voices” | Learn more Amber Huett-Garcia at her high and low weight from 2008 to 2021. Amber Huett-Garcia is trying to drive global change for affordable treatment, care and support for individuals suffering from obesity. A resident of the United States and born into a family suffering from generational obesity, she weighed 101 pounds by the time she was in kindergarten. As an adult, she lost 245 pounds and reduced her BMI from 69 to 24. She did it through a combination of treatments, including bariatric surgery, medication and mental health care. While Huett-Garcia is lucky to have a comprehensive employer-based healthcare plan, she recognizes that many people in the United States do not. And for those who are obese, the cost of care can be enormous. The cost of obesity Obesity costs the US healthcare system nearly $173 billion a year, according to the latest report by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Personal medical costs for people living with obesity are close to $1,500 more per year than those who do not suffer from the condition. For people living with obesity and who are on Medicare, few treatments are covered. For example, Medicare has zero anti-obesity medication coverage. Moreover, roughly 40% of the US population lacks coverage for bariatric surgery for obesity, which has been proven most effective. “Affordable healthcare is a human right,” Huett-Garcia said. Amber Huett-Garcia taking part in the “Stop Weight Bias” campaign. She has called for action to ensure that insurance plans pay for the treatment of a wider range of conditions, including obesity, by covering comprehensive science-based interventions. She has also asked that decision-makers within healthcare systems listen and amplify the voices of people with NCDs. “The lives of people living with NCDs depend on it,” she concluded. Read Amber Huett-Garcia’s full NCD Diary. Read previous post. Image Credits: Courtesy of NCD Alliance. Posts navigation Older postsNewer posts This site uses cookies to help give you the best experience on our website. Cookies enable us to collect information that helps us personalise your experience and improve the functionality and performance of our site. By continuing to read our website, we assume you agree to this, otherwise you can adjust your browser settings. Please read our cookie and Privacy Policy. Our Cookies and Privacy Policy Loading Comments... You must be logged in to post a comment.
Despite India’s Recent Expansion of Abortion Rights There Are Many Obstacles – Especially for Young Unmarried Women 29/11/2022 Megha Kaveri There are still many barriers to women getting abortions in India. Although India’s Supreme Court issued a landmark decision granting all women the right to an abortion up to 24 weeks of pregnancy in late September, many obstacles stand in the way of women getting abortions – including the conservative attitudes of health workers towards unmarried women. The Supreme Court decision erased the difference between married women and unmarried women, which had been enshrined in a 2021 amendment of India’s Medical Termination of Pregnancy (MTP) Act, passed in 1971. Under the 1971 law, abortion was technically allowed for all women up until 20 weeks – although in fact multiple cultural and practical obstacles existed for unmarried women. The 2021 amendment expanded abortion rights for certain categories of women, such as survivors of rape and incest, allowing them to obtain abortions until 24 weeks. It also allowed married women to terminate their pregnancies up to 24 weeks under certain circumstances, such as failure of contraception – but did not allow unmarried pregnant women the same right. Expansion of abortion rights aims to reduce deaths from botched procedures Inside a healthcare facility in India. The expansion of abortion access is aimed at protecting women’s health, as eight women a day are estimated to die in India as a result of botched abortions, according to the United Nations Population Fund, UNFPA. Over a quarter (27%) of all the abortions in India are performed by women themselves in their homes, according to National Family Health Survey (NFHS) – 5. Around 16% of women who had abortions reported complications, and 90% of these needed medical treatment. But while the ruling has been praised as a milestone for India and South East Asia, with respect to reproductive health rights, activists in India say that the situation on the ground remains unchanged in many respects. Women seeking access to abortion continue to face social stigmas and prejudices that are far from the liberal attitudes reflected in the court decision. Judgemental health workers Ground-breaking research conducted by the progressive Indian YP Foundation, has identified a range of barriers – from high costs of the procedure to judgemental health care workers. Many teenagers seeking abortion in India today contend with laws criminalising consensual sex, judgment & shaming by caregivers & pressure to make false rape complaints to break up interfaith & intercaste couples @Saumya_Kalia reports. 1/2https://t.co/cjYnnCL0uf — Article 14 (@Article14live) November 21, 2022 Service providers’ impose value judgements on premarital sex, as well as abortion, the research found, with some providers insisting that unmarried women obtain their parents’ consent for the procedure. The research fellows, who posed as patients at health facilities and conducted surveys amongst young people and in seven Indian states, also found confidentiality breaches in government facilities, caste prejudice and gender disparity in treatment, with those women who were accompanied by male partners getting a much better reception. Finally there are the arbitrary costs of abortion in public clinics, as well as providers’ reference to expensive private facilities even when lower-cost alternatives exist. Anecdotally, as well, the stories mount up, as well. One tweet by an Indian doctor stating that it was important for her to ask patients if they were married as this determined how she would treat them, opened a floodgate of responses from angry social media users, many of whom had bad experiences with doctors, especially gynaecologists. All these lovely 'woke' women tweeting about being offended by the question, "are you married," asked by their ObGyn, let me tell you something as a doctor. Martial status is imperative in the diagnosis and treatment of a patient, especially in OBG. (1/n) — dr_vee (@dr_vee95) June 28, 2022 There have been a number of reports of gynaecologists, even in India’s urban centres, refusing to perform a vaginal examination on an adult patient without the consent of their parent or partner. Years ago, Akshita* remembers visiting her gynaecologist in Hyderabad after she missed a period. “I was suspecting polycystic ovarian disorder (PCOD) and requested a diagnosis. I made it clear to the doctor that I was not sexually active,” she told Health Policy Watch. However, her doctor refused to believe her and then went on to suggest a diet plan without diagnosing her condition. The experience traumatised the 22-year-old Hyderabad-based young professional, who avoided going to a doctor for a long time after. “When I have gone for smaller, simpler things, they have traumatised me so thoroughly. I cannot imagine what it would be like to approach one for something like a birth control or abortion, which they would definitely be much more judgemental about and would straight up deny access to these services.” Informal networks pushing back on stigmas and prejudice Women queuing up in front of a pharmacy in India. Though ECPs are not illegal/banned in India, many pharmacies don’t stock them. The petition that pushed the Indian top court to issue its milestone pro-choice verdict in September was filed filed by a 25-year-old unmarried woman who was 22 weeks’ pregnant. In her petition, she said that her partner refused to marry her and she didn’t want to have the baby out of wedlock due to societal stigma. She also asserted that she could not afford to raise a child as she was unemployed and did not come from a wealthy family. In the southern Indian state of Tamil Nadu, Chennai activist Archanaa Sekar works with an informal network of women in the city who have been instrumental in helping such women to get abortions from non-judgemental gynaecologists. Her group also has organised with local government actors and pharmacies to ensure that emergency contraceptive pills (ECPs), which are not normally stocked, may be made available. While acknowledging that the September Supreme Court decision was groundbreaking, she added that it will still take a long time for new legal thinking to filter into health workers’ responses, and broader societal values. Meanwhile, advocacy and women’s support networks will play a critical role in expanding women’s access, little by little, on the ground. #IMPORTANT #UPDATE: #ECP’s in #TAMILNADU The Director of the Drugs Control Dept. will direct pharmacies to make emergency contraceptive pills available for OVER THE COUNTER purchase. The Dept. will clarify to all pharmacies that ECP’s are LEGAL/NOT BANNED, must be stocked & sold — Archanaa Seker (@Archytypes) November 13, 2020 “As a doctor, one is in a position of power of allowing a person access to abortion. Unfortunately, we are still not in a place where a professional comes into the table just as a professional. They bring their baggage and prejudices with them,” said Sekar, in an interview with Health Policy Watch. “With respect to abortion, there is a cultural, moral understanding that killing anything seems wrong and therefore you think abortion is illegal,” she said. “So, for you to come around to the fact that abortion is legal, it takes a while. In all of this, in case of something like pregnancies you are losing precious time.” “Unlike environmental laws where it is easy to expose people flouting the law, in cases of abortion it is difficult to speak out against someone who goes against the law and denies abortion,” Seker explained. “To a layperson it doesn’t matter whether the law exists or not. Because the law is not going to protect them,” she added. “People need to know their rights. If we are doing any kind of rights education, are we including a module also on laws such as the MTP Act and the Mental Healthcare Act?” Deeper issue remains attitudes towards sexuality But even deeper attitudes towards sex and sexuality, which remain taboo topics in much of Indian society, also come into play in the abortion access landscape, she says. Sex education continues to be banned in states like Gujarat, Karnataka and Maharashtra, for example. And even when sex education is included in the curriculum, students are taught to abstain. Most adolescents in India are not aware of contraception or how to use it, which leads to unsafe sex and unwanted pregnancies, she noted. “Until we take the shame out of sex, we are not going to take the stigma out of contraception or abortion access.” The Rosa Luxemburg Foundation provided support for this article. Image Credits: Srimathi Jayaprakash/ Unsplash, The White Ribbon Alliance/Flickr, Trinity Care Foundation/Flickr. How One Man With COPD Suffered Through COVID-19 29/11/2022 Editorial team A special project celebrating the fifth anniversary of “Our Views, Our Voices” | Learn more Jaime Barba Jaime Barba, from Mexico, developed Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease (COPD) after smoking for 32 years. When COVID-19 struck, the country converted the hospital at which Barba received treatment into a COVID facility, leaving him no place to be treated if his COPD worsened. Eventually, he and his wife both tested positive for the virus. “Although our symptoms were mild and my respiratory system did not affect me, I had other affectations, mainly kidneys and prostate that are still under treatment,” Barba wrote in his NCD Diary. “When we were positively diagnosed, it was distressing not to have guaranteed care in case it became complicated and hospitalization was necessary.” But the hardest part was the mental battle, he explained. “Since the COVID-19 pandemic began, we have been on the razor’s edge between remaining confined and trying to generate resources to survive,” wrote Barba. “I have suffered insomnia, sometimes even panic attacks with chest pain and shortness of breath, and gastritis and colitis are normal.” People with lung diseases are among the most likely to develop serious cases of COVID-19. Some of Barba’s ex-smoker friends or people with other NCDs died during the pandemic, some of them from COVID-19 and others due to lack of care and medicines for their chronic diseases. While the fear was high, he said the pandemic also brought him closer to other people with NCDs. They shared video calls and chats and served as a support network – emotionally and sometimes physically. “Someone needed an oxygen tank and another had an unused one, so lent it to them,” Barba gave as an example. “The need of some and the disposition of others leads us to get what is necessary and optimize the use of the available equipment and drugs that have risen in price or are out of stock. WhatsApp groups are the main channel for exchanging inputs and information quickly. We do video conferences and promote participation in some that seem relevant, we see each other there, we talk. Many times, they serve as therapy since we need to keep in touch and seeing each other through virtual channels is comforting.” He said there is one message that he still feels the need to get across, even as the pandemic has become less bold: “As people with non‑communicable diseases, we must say loudly: ENOUGH! No more! We want sufficient health care for all!” Read Jaime Barba’s full NCD Diary. Read previous Image Credits: Courtesy of NCD Alliance. How Palliative Care Made One Woman ‘Whole Again’ 29/11/2022 Editorial team A special project celebrating the fifth anniversary of “Our Views, Our Voices” | Learn more Ashla Rani Joining Pallium India in 2014 gave Ashla Rani back her life. Rani fell off a moving train and suffered a spinal cord injury that left her bed-bound and dependent on others for almost everything. She became depressed, asking herself, ‘Why bother to live’? Finally, friends suggested Pallium India, an NGO through which palliative care is provided and advocated for. “I was accepted into the fold, and moved to their headquarters in Thiruvananthapuram in 2014,” wrote Rani. “The impact my healthcare provider has had on my NCD journey is unbelievable; and nothing short of a fairy tale. I feel whole again, doing meaningful work, having a life purpose.” Pallium India became Rani’s home. She said the team listened and treated her and her mother with empathy and care. They also focused not only on treatment but on wellbeing and quality of life. “My medical needs were addressed on time, preventing secondary complications,” Rani wrote. She eventually took up a role in the facility. In her NCD Diary, Rani highlights other cases where Pallium India was able to help, such as a mother with type 1 diabetes who had a diabetic foot and was nearly blind. When she came to Pallium India, her sugar levels were out of control and she and her son were on the verge of starvation. “We got her a diabetologist, who adjusted her medicines to maintain her sugar levels, which saved her limb from amputation,” Rani recalled. “She’s now able to walk with special footwear. We brought her to an eye hospital to receive surgery that allowed her to see her son after four years. With community support, she’s rented a house, where she lives with her son. He receives education support from Pallium India.” Diverse challenges Rani said that people living with noncommunicable diseases face diverse challenges and often do not receive adequate care. It is especially challenging in India, where rehabilitation facilities can be expensive or far away, so many people end up lying in their beds at home and dying of secondary complications. “When there’s a person with some disability in a family, it’s not just that person who is suffering,” Rani added. “The family members around that person also suffer in different ways.” She shared her calls to action: Meaningfully involve people with disabilities in the NCD response in India and globally, ensuring equal representation in discussions and decisions. Create interdisciplinary teams at the community healthcare level to prevent and manage NCDs, including trained staff to counsel and encourage people living with NCDs to live their lives to the fullest and not hide in private spaces. Create support groups for each NCD as despite many shared priorities, different types have specific needs and issues to be addressed. Establish rehab centers and home-based care for NCDs. This should include home-based palliative care for mobility-challenged people living with NCDs. Read Ashla Rani full story. Read previous post. Image Credits: Courtesy of NCD Alliance. From Monkeypox to Mpox 29/11/2022 Kerry Cullinan Colorized transmission electron micrograph of monkeypox particles (purple) found within an infected cell (brown), cultured in the laboratory. Image captured and color-enhanced at the NIAID Integrated Research Facility (IRF) in Fort Detrick, Maryland. The term monkeypox will be replaced by mpox within the next year, according to the World Health Organization (WHO). This follows “racist and stigmatizing language” being used in relation to the large outbreak of mpox for the first time in Europe and the US. The WHO said it had been approached by a number of individuals and countries that had asked the WHO to propose a way forward to change the name. “Assigning names to new and, very exceptionally, to existing diseases is the responsibility of WHO under the International Classification of Diseases and the WHO Family of International Health Related Classifications through a consultative process which includes WHO member states,” the WHO said in a statement on Monday. After consultations to gather views from a range of experts, countries and the general public, who were invited to submit suggestions for new names, the WHO has recommended the name change. Considerations for the recommendations included rationale, scientific appropriateness, extent of current usage, pronounceability, usability in different languages, absence of geographical or zoological references, and the ease of retrieval of historical scientific information. Human monkeypox was given its name in 1970 after the virus that causes the disease was discovered in captive monkeys in 1958. This was way before the publication of WHO best practices in naming diseases, in 2015, which recommended that new disease names should minimize the unnecessary negative impact of names on trade, travel, tourism or animal welfare, and avoid causing offence to any cultural, social, national, regional, professional or ethnic groups. Image Credits: NIAID/Flickr. ‘Zero-COVID’ Protestors Win Concessions But Expert Urges China to Increase ‘Hybrid Immunity’ Before Abandoning Policy 28/11/2022 Kerry Cullinan University professors stand between protestors and police at Fudan University in China. Almost three years of harsh lockdowns, enforced quarantines in state facilities and daily testing have tried the patience of many Chinese people, who since Friday have taken to the streets from Shanghai and Nanjing in the east, to central Chengdu and Wuhan and Urumqi and Korla in the north and west. While scores of people have been arrested, protestors have also won some concessions. In Urumqi, where four million people have been in lockdown for over 100 days, officials announced on Monday that it would allow people to travel on buses to do errands and parcel deliveries would resume. Meanwhile, Beijing officials also announced on Sunday that lockdowns of residential areas would not be enforced for longer than 24 hours. These are small indications that Chinese leader Xi Jinping’s “zero-COVID” policy is becoming increasingly impossible to enforce in the face of people’s growing anger and desperation. Two weeks ago, China’s State Council cut compulsory quarantine in a state facility for international visitors and the close contacts of people with COVID from seven to five days, with a further three days at home. It also did away with restrictions on secondary contacts. But a surge in COVID cases in Beijing was followed swiftly by lockdowns, school and restaurant closures, dampening hopes that the country was quietly abandoning the zero-COVID approach. Journalist arrested, assaulted China is trying to both quell and downplay the protests. On Monday, there was increased military and police deployment at sites of weekend protests, and BBC reporter Ed Lawrence was arrested and reportedly assaulted in police custody in Shanghai while reporting on the protests. BBC Statement on Ed Lawrence pic.twitter.com/wedDetCtpF — BBC News Press Team (@BBCNewsPR) November 27, 2022 The weekend protests were sparked by the deaths of 10 people in a fire in an apartment building in Urumqi, the capital of Xinjiang, on Thursday. The screams of people trapped in the burning building last Thursday were captured on social media amid reports that apartment doors had been closed from the outside to enforce the city’s lockdown. Firefighters took more than three hours to stop the fire as cars blocked their path – many with flat batteries after months of not being driven. @renzhiqiang2 ♬ 原聲 – renzhiqiang2 Sealing the doors of COVID-19 contacts is reported to be a common occurrence in China as part of the country’s enforced lockdowns. 用木棍封门,显然还不够。建议官方用钢筋焊死,同时把门上通电,并请官方派两名军人在门外架上机枪。 生我九州者,虽远必封! pic.twitter.com/ajHSk7Jk7Z — 领导干部 (@808Penny) August 30, 2022 Outrage at the deaths in Urumqi led to vigils and protests being arranged in Shanghai, Xi’an, Chongqing and Nanjing, as well as various university campuses, and people turned up in their thousands at some of the protests. Amid chants of ‘Lift lockdown’, ‘No PCR test’ and “We want freedom’, anti-Xi and anti-Communist Party chanting could also be heard. Many people carried blank sheets of white paper to symbolise government censorship, but reports on the protests on Weibo, the Chinese social media platform, were short-lived. Chinese protestors hold blank papers to signify censorship. Back in May, WHO Secretary-General Dr Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus told a media briefing that China’s strategy was no longer sustainable in the face of the more infectious but less lethal Omicron. “When we talk about the zero-COVID strategy, we don’t think that it’s sustainable, considering the behaviour of the virus now and what we anticipate in the future,” said Tedros, prompting a rebuke from Chinese officials Aside from its zero-COVID policy, China’s vaccines, Sinopharm and Coronavac, are only about 60% effective against severe infection in comparison to over 90% protection offered by mRNA vaccines. China still to reckon with COVID infections However, it is possible that China will still have its reckoning with COVID as its weary citizens resist further controls and the highly infectious virus spreads through a population with little immunity. Global data analysis group Airfinity estimates that 1.3 and 2.1 million lives could be at risk if China lifts its zero-COVID policy “given low vaccination and booster rates as well as a lack of hybrid immunity”. It based its risk analysis on the cumulative peak cases and deaths from Hong Kong’s BA.1 wave as a proxy for mainland China. “Mainland China has very low levels of immunity across its population. Its citizens were vaccinated with domestically produced jabs Sinovac and Sinopharm which have been proven to have significantly lower efficacy and provide less protection against infection and death,” Airfinity said in a statement on Monday. “This vaccine-induced immunity has waned over time and with low booster uptake and no natural infections, the population is more susceptible to severe disease. China’s current booster uptake is 40%, whilst Hong Kong’s primary series uptake was 34% back in February 2022 when it saw a large spike in cases due to the BA.1 omicron variant,” said Airfinity. Dr Louise Blair, Airfinity’s head of vaccines and epidemiology, called on China to “ramp up vaccinations to raise immunity in order to lift its zero-COVID policy, especially given how large its elderly population is”. Blair said that China needs “hybrid immunity” from both vaccinations and infections to ensure “much less impactful and deadly COVID-19 waves”. Localised protests Prior to the national weekend protests, there have been intense local protests, particularly at the Foxconn facility in Zhengzhou, which makes 70% of the Apple’s iPhones. Workers work long shifts and usually stay in massive factory dormitories that can house up to 300,000 people. But after a small COVID outbreak in the city in October, Foxconn closed the dining halls and introduced “closed loop” production to cut workers’ contact with the outside world to meet production demands for the launch of the iPhone14. Tesla and other factories have used this approach during lockdowns in Shanghai in March. But Foxconn workers started to panic in fear of being forcibly quarantined there, and have clashed a number of times with police. Numerous reports of poor treatment and neglect at state quarantine facilities have also leaked out in public, alongside videos of small children removed from COVID-exposed parents being forced to fend for themselves in such facilities. 上海儿童集中营。 pic.twitter.com/BNTbOPXBLD — 方舟子 (@fangshimin) April 2, 2022 Image Credits: Twitter. Uganda Extends Lockdowns in Bid to End Ebola Outbreak 28/11/2022 Stefan Anderson 68 days and 52 deaths into Uganda’s Ebola outbreak, authorities are hopeful the spread of the virus has been contained. Uganda’s President Yoweri Museveni has extended quarantine measures in the two districts at the epicentre of the country’s Ebola epidemic for another 21 days, citing the need to protect gains in the fight against the virus. This marks the third renewal of lockdowns in Kassanda and Mubende, and authorities are hopeful it will be the last. Movement in and out of the districts was first restricted on 15 October, and renewed for another 21 days on 5 November. The measures include a curfew and the closure of social spaces like churches, bars and markets. “It may be too early to celebrate success, but overall, I have been briefed that the picture is good,” Museveni said in a televised address delivered by vice-president Jessica Alupo. While the situation is “still fragile”, Museveni said Ugandan health authorities are “very optimistic” that the outbreak will end “in the coming month.” The government’s optimism is buoyed by Uganda’s continued progress in stamping out the outbreak. Three districts have completed over 42 days since the last case of Ebola was detected, while six districts – including the epicentres of Kassanda and Mubende as well as the capital, Kampala – remain in “follow-up” protocols. The virus has so far claimed 56 lives, while another 22 probable Ebola deaths were registered before the government issued its official declaration of the outbreak on 20 September. “If we open now and a case appears, we will have destroyed all the gains we have made in this war,” Museveni said. “Our healthcare workers will continue to do all it takes to save lives and bring the epidemic to an end.” Full reopening if the 21-day mark is reached With numbers dropping, bed occupancy rates within the past 24 hours stood at just 27.9% in Mubende isolation units. The government’s decision to extend lockdowns by 21 days is based on the incubation period of Ebola. The three-week mark is a key indicator of whether transmission has been stopped. Mid-way through November, Mubende appeared to be in the clear. The district had gone 13 days without reporting a new case. But on day 14, a 23-year-old medical student with links to previous cases was diagnosed with the virus. “Without completing 21 days, as we saw with Mubende, a case can pop up anywhere,” the President said. “It is important that we complete the entire cycle.” Kassanda has now reached 15 days since reporting a new case, while Mubende has not registered a confirmed case for 14 days. If both districts hold on for another week, Uganda’s fifth deadly encounter with the Sudan strain of Ebola may come to a swift end. “We are relying on you to cooperate and bring this epidemic to an end,” the President told residents of Kassanda and Mubende, noting their commitment and sacrifice thus far. “If there is no case by the end of the 21-day period, we will re-open fully.” Threat of urban transmission avoided Ebola’s invasion of Uganda’s Gulu municipality and its slum-like camps for internally displaced persons in 2000 was the cause of the deadliest Ebola epidemic in the country’s history. When six school children were diagnosed with Ebola in Kampala in late October, fears of the virus embedding itself in the capital spiked. On paper, Ebola’s mortality rate of up to 90% makes the virus easy to contain. Museveni also noted that as a virus transferred through contact and bodily fluids, Ebola, despite its “devastating nature”, is far easier to control than airborne threats like COVID-19. But if allowed to embed itself in densely populated areas, things can quickly spiral out of control. “If we had allowed the escalation of the outbreak into Kampala, the consequences would have been bad, including possible exportation to our African brothers in neighbouring countries,” Museveni said. Despite calls from doctors and health advocates to lockdown the capital earlier this month, Museveni and Health Minister Jane Ruth Aceng elected not to bow to the pressure. So far, their decision appears to be validated. “The opportunity for immediate quarantine of contacts was lost for Mubende and Kassanda,” Museveni said, noting the first suspected cases were registered on 6 September, two weeks before authorities declared the outbreak. This was not the case for Kampala. Knowledge of the threat allowed health authorities to be on reactive footing, and respond quickly to isolate infected people and their contacts. Today, over 300 contacts remain under institutional quarantine overseen by the Ministry of Health. Vaccine Trials Are Underway WHO Africa Director Dr Matshidiso Moeti visited Kassanda and Mubende earlier this month to coordinate with Ugandan health authorities and other international partners in responding to the outbreak. There is currently no known vaccine for the Sudan strain of Ebola responsible for the Ugandan outbreak. But the outbreak presents a unique opportunity to bridge this treatment gap, and a series of trials have been set in motion with the aim of minimizing hospitalisations and deaths. A coalition of organizations including CEPI, Gavi, the World Health Organization and Ugandan health authorities are deploying three vaccine candidates to about 3,000 people who have been in contact with Ebola patients. “As we speak, the government of Uganda is finalizing the regulatory approvals,” Africa CDC Director Dr Ahmed Ogwell told CNN. If any of the candidates can succeed, authorities are hopeful this will be the last outbreak Uganda faces without medical defenses. “By embedding research at the heart of the outbreak response, we can achieve two goals,” the WHO said in a statement. “Evaluate potentially efficacious candidate vaccines, potentially contribute to end this outbreak, and protect populations at risk in the future.” Image Credits: WHO, WHO, WHO. Parliamentarians Seek to Address Post-COVID ‘Tsunami’ of Health System Problems 28/11/2022 Maayan Hoffman UNITE president Ricardo Leite (fourth from right) and MPs at the World Health Summit. “There is this tsunami that is happening after the earthquake that was COVID-19 that is now coming to shore and hitting health systems across the world,” said Ricardo Baptista Leite, president and founder of UNITE, a global network of parliamentarians committed to addressing global health challenges. “The pandemic also led to a huge economic crisis and even poor countries in the global South, who might have been less affected by the pandemic, are going to pay a very severe price due to economic consequences that will lead to challenges in responding to the health needs of those countries,” he said. A week before his organization brings together hundreds of parliamentarians from around the world to discuss the most pressing issues in public health at a global summit, the Portuguese MP, who collaborates closely with the World Health Organization (WHO), warned Health Policy Watch of the need to take swift and collective action before the next pandemic. “This is the moment when international institutions and governments need to step up their game and tackle the global health crisis,” Leite said. “We must double up our efforts to make sure we are better equipped in the future and can respond to health needs.” Leite is a long-time global health advocate. He is also a trained medical doctor in infectious diseases and heads the Public Health department at Católica University of Portugal. False sense of security He told Health Policy Watch that whenever the world has felt “capable of controlling infectious disease, we create a false sense of security that we can lower our guard. Whenever we lower our guard, infectious diseases come back with a vengeance.” This can be seen throughout history with multiple pandemics over the centuries, but also in this century with the emergence of antibiotics and the belief that with penicillin we could control infections – a belief now being called into question with the development of antibiotic-resistant bacteria. Antibiotic-resistant bacteria are responsible for the deaths of some 700,000 people each year – with scientists predicting that these infections could kill more people than cancer by 2050. The pandemic has set back the fight against many diseases by years. Take HIV/AIDS. In December 2020, UNAIDS released its 95-95-95 targets, calling for 95% of all people living with HIV to know their HIV status, 95% of all people with diagnosed HIV infection to receive sustained antiretroviral therapy and 95% of all people receiving antiretroviral therapy to have viral suppression by 2025. But during COVID-19, in many countries, measurement of these goals ceased altogether. Where tracking continued, in some cases, diagnoses were slower. “HIV is an interesting proxy for all infectious and communicable diseases out there,” Leite said. In addition, COVID-19 led to a rise in people being diagnosed with late-stage cancer, an increase in cases related to chronic diseases due to people being kept away from health systems, and a spike in mental illness globally. “Pandemics are a strong demonstration of the case that infectious diseases can undermine our efforts toward prosperity for all,” Leite said. He added that during his time as a medical volunteer in Ukraine he saw a huge rise in multi-resistant and extremely resistant tuberculosis in the region. Leite predicted that as the war continues, it will be almost impossible not to see the TB spillover into neighboring countries and then across the world. “There has to be a clear understanding from the world that dealing with infectious diseases is not only something recommended but is a prerequisite for economic and social development worldwide,” he said. The role of parliamentarians WHO parliamentarian session during the World Health Summit (UNITE) Part of the solution is getting parliamentarians around the table, according to Leite. In 2017, the United Nations passed a resolution on the nexus of global health and foreign policy, encouraging a multi-stakeholder approach to achieve universal health coverage. “The voice of parliamentarians was not part of the discussion,” Leite said. “One cannot expect to build a global health architecture or move forward science-based policy making if we do not keep those who write policy in the loop. We cannot make sure money gets where it needs to if we do not include those that make and approve budgets in parliaments.” While he admitted that UNITE is not a “silver bullet,” he said it is a valuable tool for bringing parliamentarians from more than 90 countries together to share experiences and learn how they can best bring their own country toward a more sustainable future. “The first step was to get the conversation going. The second was to develop regional leadership. We now have 10 regional chapters, each led by an MP or former MP. Then we developed policy hubs, specialized teams that focus on specific policy areas, so they can drill down on concrete policymaking in key areas,” Leite explained. “We empower policymakers to be leaders for change in their own countries.” UNITE’s three priorities At its founding, UNITE was focused solely on issues of infectious diseases, but COVID-19 led it to change its mandate over the summer of 2022 and the organization is now focused more generally on global health matters. “The pandemic has demonstrated that global health issues and infectious diseases go hand in hand,” Leite told Health Policy Watch. “We cannot solve many challenges related to infectious disease, which were the basis of our work in the first years, without addressing all the other global health challenges out there.” UNITE is now taking a three-priority approach, focusing on pandemic prevention preparedness and response; the future of health systems; and health as a human right. The group signed a memorandum of understanding recently with WHO to work together on these pillars and supply parliamentary feedback and insight to support WHO’s related efforts. Next week: UNITE Global Summit From 5-7 December, UNITE will host its global summit in Lisbon, bringing together its parliamentarians and leaders from the global health community to expand and forge new partnerships. Members of the lawmaking, civil society, medical and academic communities will meet to talk about what they feel are the most pressing issues on the global health agenda. Another priority that UNITE is bringing to the forefront of the parliamentarian agenda is the use of digital health to promote universal health coverage. “In the last few months with the creation of the digital health hub, parliamentarians were able to discuss with other stakeholders how to build the right frameworks and increase budgets to implement digital health transformation that can promote access to millions,” Leite said. Finally, Leite added that with its new direction in mind, UNITE members would try to answer three questions during the event: What progress have we made so far during the UN’s Sustainable Development Goals period? What have we learned to help us make even more progress by 2030? What is the role of parliamentarians in helping drive that progress? MPs and the pandemic treaty Session on the pandemic treaty at the World Health Summit. In the past, parliamentary involvement has helped achieve public health goals. In Portugal, Leite cited an example from 22 years ago when the parliament decided to decriminalize the use of drugs. “This was not making drug use legal, but now no one goes to jail for using drugs,” he explained. “We stopped looking at people who use drugs as criminals but instead as people who potentially had a health challenge that needed to be dealt with.” Instead of jail time, drug abusers receive harm reduction and other social and health services. When the legislation was passed, around 1% of the Portuguese population used heroin. Since then, Leite said, the numbers have dropped dramatically. Drug-related crime is down, and new HIV cases tied to drug use have fallen from as high as 60% to only 2%. “The fact that we provided harm reduction services and shifted from a criminal perspective to a health perspective was transformative in achieving better health outcomes and partially solving the drug problem in Portugal,” Leite said. A more recent example was the decision by the African Union to set up the African Medicines Agency, which will become a regulatory body for access to health technologies in the continent and creates a common standard of rules based on science to ensure the safety of citizens in the region. Leite equated the AMA to the European Medicines Agency. UNITE founder Ricardo Baptista Leite and Dr Tedros at signing of an MOU between the two organizations. Moving forward, UNITE Parliamentarians will play a key role in finalizing WHO’s pandemic treaty, aimed at guiding the global response to pandemics. “The regulations that were in place when COVID-19 hit were not sufficient or were not properly enforced,” Leite said. He added that “there is a lack of acknowledgement and awareness among most citizens and many parliamentarians around the world that these negotiations are taking place. We need parliamentarians involved early on. If governments agree on a document, parliaments must ratify it.” In an era of “polarized politics and fake news,” he said that if parliamentarians are not part of the process there is a risk that such a treaty would not be ratified, and the world would be left exactly where it was in December 2019. “Everyone is committed to finding a balanced approach to what we hope will create a toolkit from a policy perspective that can help the world be better prepared to detect outbreaks early and lock them down before they transform into pandemics,” Leite said. “It is not acceptable that 100 years after the Spanish flu we saw so many countries react to COVID-19 the same way as they did 100 years before,” he continued. “We have an obligation to be better prepared to constrain any risk, to keep as many people as possible safe. This is a prerequisite for economic and social development. “We need to keep peace and prosperity as our main goal,” Leite concluded. Image Credits: UNITE. There are a Wide Range of Treatments for Obesity, but Many People Cannot Afford Care 28/11/2022 Editorial team A special project celebrating the fifth anniversary of “Our Views, Our Voices” | Learn more Amber Huett-Garcia at her high and low weight from 2008 to 2021. Amber Huett-Garcia is trying to drive global change for affordable treatment, care and support for individuals suffering from obesity. A resident of the United States and born into a family suffering from generational obesity, she weighed 101 pounds by the time she was in kindergarten. As an adult, she lost 245 pounds and reduced her BMI from 69 to 24. She did it through a combination of treatments, including bariatric surgery, medication and mental health care. While Huett-Garcia is lucky to have a comprehensive employer-based healthcare plan, she recognizes that many people in the United States do not. And for those who are obese, the cost of care can be enormous. The cost of obesity Obesity costs the US healthcare system nearly $173 billion a year, according to the latest report by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Personal medical costs for people living with obesity are close to $1,500 more per year than those who do not suffer from the condition. For people living with obesity and who are on Medicare, few treatments are covered. For example, Medicare has zero anti-obesity medication coverage. Moreover, roughly 40% of the US population lacks coverage for bariatric surgery for obesity, which has been proven most effective. “Affordable healthcare is a human right,” Huett-Garcia said. Amber Huett-Garcia taking part in the “Stop Weight Bias” campaign. She has called for action to ensure that insurance plans pay for the treatment of a wider range of conditions, including obesity, by covering comprehensive science-based interventions. She has also asked that decision-makers within healthcare systems listen and amplify the voices of people with NCDs. “The lives of people living with NCDs depend on it,” she concluded. Read Amber Huett-Garcia’s full NCD Diary. Read previous post. Image Credits: Courtesy of NCD Alliance. Posts navigation Older postsNewer posts This site uses cookies to help give you the best experience on our website. Cookies enable us to collect information that helps us personalise your experience and improve the functionality and performance of our site. By continuing to read our website, we assume you agree to this, otherwise you can adjust your browser settings. Please read our cookie and Privacy Policy. Our Cookies and Privacy Policy Loading Comments... You must be logged in to post a comment.
How One Man With COPD Suffered Through COVID-19 29/11/2022 Editorial team A special project celebrating the fifth anniversary of “Our Views, Our Voices” | Learn more Jaime Barba Jaime Barba, from Mexico, developed Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease (COPD) after smoking for 32 years. When COVID-19 struck, the country converted the hospital at which Barba received treatment into a COVID facility, leaving him no place to be treated if his COPD worsened. Eventually, he and his wife both tested positive for the virus. “Although our symptoms were mild and my respiratory system did not affect me, I had other affectations, mainly kidneys and prostate that are still under treatment,” Barba wrote in his NCD Diary. “When we were positively diagnosed, it was distressing not to have guaranteed care in case it became complicated and hospitalization was necessary.” But the hardest part was the mental battle, he explained. “Since the COVID-19 pandemic began, we have been on the razor’s edge between remaining confined and trying to generate resources to survive,” wrote Barba. “I have suffered insomnia, sometimes even panic attacks with chest pain and shortness of breath, and gastritis and colitis are normal.” People with lung diseases are among the most likely to develop serious cases of COVID-19. Some of Barba’s ex-smoker friends or people with other NCDs died during the pandemic, some of them from COVID-19 and others due to lack of care and medicines for their chronic diseases. While the fear was high, he said the pandemic also brought him closer to other people with NCDs. They shared video calls and chats and served as a support network – emotionally and sometimes physically. “Someone needed an oxygen tank and another had an unused one, so lent it to them,” Barba gave as an example. “The need of some and the disposition of others leads us to get what is necessary and optimize the use of the available equipment and drugs that have risen in price or are out of stock. WhatsApp groups are the main channel for exchanging inputs and information quickly. We do video conferences and promote participation in some that seem relevant, we see each other there, we talk. Many times, they serve as therapy since we need to keep in touch and seeing each other through virtual channels is comforting.” He said there is one message that he still feels the need to get across, even as the pandemic has become less bold: “As people with non‑communicable diseases, we must say loudly: ENOUGH! No more! We want sufficient health care for all!” Read Jaime Barba’s full NCD Diary. Read previous Image Credits: Courtesy of NCD Alliance. How Palliative Care Made One Woman ‘Whole Again’ 29/11/2022 Editorial team A special project celebrating the fifth anniversary of “Our Views, Our Voices” | Learn more Ashla Rani Joining Pallium India in 2014 gave Ashla Rani back her life. Rani fell off a moving train and suffered a spinal cord injury that left her bed-bound and dependent on others for almost everything. She became depressed, asking herself, ‘Why bother to live’? Finally, friends suggested Pallium India, an NGO through which palliative care is provided and advocated for. “I was accepted into the fold, and moved to their headquarters in Thiruvananthapuram in 2014,” wrote Rani. “The impact my healthcare provider has had on my NCD journey is unbelievable; and nothing short of a fairy tale. I feel whole again, doing meaningful work, having a life purpose.” Pallium India became Rani’s home. She said the team listened and treated her and her mother with empathy and care. They also focused not only on treatment but on wellbeing and quality of life. “My medical needs were addressed on time, preventing secondary complications,” Rani wrote. She eventually took up a role in the facility. In her NCD Diary, Rani highlights other cases where Pallium India was able to help, such as a mother with type 1 diabetes who had a diabetic foot and was nearly blind. When she came to Pallium India, her sugar levels were out of control and she and her son were on the verge of starvation. “We got her a diabetologist, who adjusted her medicines to maintain her sugar levels, which saved her limb from amputation,” Rani recalled. “She’s now able to walk with special footwear. We brought her to an eye hospital to receive surgery that allowed her to see her son after four years. With community support, she’s rented a house, where she lives with her son. He receives education support from Pallium India.” Diverse challenges Rani said that people living with noncommunicable diseases face diverse challenges and often do not receive adequate care. It is especially challenging in India, where rehabilitation facilities can be expensive or far away, so many people end up lying in their beds at home and dying of secondary complications. “When there’s a person with some disability in a family, it’s not just that person who is suffering,” Rani added. “The family members around that person also suffer in different ways.” She shared her calls to action: Meaningfully involve people with disabilities in the NCD response in India and globally, ensuring equal representation in discussions and decisions. Create interdisciplinary teams at the community healthcare level to prevent and manage NCDs, including trained staff to counsel and encourage people living with NCDs to live their lives to the fullest and not hide in private spaces. Create support groups for each NCD as despite many shared priorities, different types have specific needs and issues to be addressed. Establish rehab centers and home-based care for NCDs. This should include home-based palliative care for mobility-challenged people living with NCDs. Read Ashla Rani full story. Read previous post. Image Credits: Courtesy of NCD Alliance. From Monkeypox to Mpox 29/11/2022 Kerry Cullinan Colorized transmission electron micrograph of monkeypox particles (purple) found within an infected cell (brown), cultured in the laboratory. Image captured and color-enhanced at the NIAID Integrated Research Facility (IRF) in Fort Detrick, Maryland. The term monkeypox will be replaced by mpox within the next year, according to the World Health Organization (WHO). This follows “racist and stigmatizing language” being used in relation to the large outbreak of mpox for the first time in Europe and the US. The WHO said it had been approached by a number of individuals and countries that had asked the WHO to propose a way forward to change the name. “Assigning names to new and, very exceptionally, to existing diseases is the responsibility of WHO under the International Classification of Diseases and the WHO Family of International Health Related Classifications through a consultative process which includes WHO member states,” the WHO said in a statement on Monday. After consultations to gather views from a range of experts, countries and the general public, who were invited to submit suggestions for new names, the WHO has recommended the name change. Considerations for the recommendations included rationale, scientific appropriateness, extent of current usage, pronounceability, usability in different languages, absence of geographical or zoological references, and the ease of retrieval of historical scientific information. Human monkeypox was given its name in 1970 after the virus that causes the disease was discovered in captive monkeys in 1958. This was way before the publication of WHO best practices in naming diseases, in 2015, which recommended that new disease names should minimize the unnecessary negative impact of names on trade, travel, tourism or animal welfare, and avoid causing offence to any cultural, social, national, regional, professional or ethnic groups. Image Credits: NIAID/Flickr. ‘Zero-COVID’ Protestors Win Concessions But Expert Urges China to Increase ‘Hybrid Immunity’ Before Abandoning Policy 28/11/2022 Kerry Cullinan University professors stand between protestors and police at Fudan University in China. Almost three years of harsh lockdowns, enforced quarantines in state facilities and daily testing have tried the patience of many Chinese people, who since Friday have taken to the streets from Shanghai and Nanjing in the east, to central Chengdu and Wuhan and Urumqi and Korla in the north and west. While scores of people have been arrested, protestors have also won some concessions. In Urumqi, where four million people have been in lockdown for over 100 days, officials announced on Monday that it would allow people to travel on buses to do errands and parcel deliveries would resume. Meanwhile, Beijing officials also announced on Sunday that lockdowns of residential areas would not be enforced for longer than 24 hours. These are small indications that Chinese leader Xi Jinping’s “zero-COVID” policy is becoming increasingly impossible to enforce in the face of people’s growing anger and desperation. Two weeks ago, China’s State Council cut compulsory quarantine in a state facility for international visitors and the close contacts of people with COVID from seven to five days, with a further three days at home. It also did away with restrictions on secondary contacts. But a surge in COVID cases in Beijing was followed swiftly by lockdowns, school and restaurant closures, dampening hopes that the country was quietly abandoning the zero-COVID approach. Journalist arrested, assaulted China is trying to both quell and downplay the protests. On Monday, there was increased military and police deployment at sites of weekend protests, and BBC reporter Ed Lawrence was arrested and reportedly assaulted in police custody in Shanghai while reporting on the protests. BBC Statement on Ed Lawrence pic.twitter.com/wedDetCtpF — BBC News Press Team (@BBCNewsPR) November 27, 2022 The weekend protests were sparked by the deaths of 10 people in a fire in an apartment building in Urumqi, the capital of Xinjiang, on Thursday. The screams of people trapped in the burning building last Thursday were captured on social media amid reports that apartment doors had been closed from the outside to enforce the city’s lockdown. Firefighters took more than three hours to stop the fire as cars blocked their path – many with flat batteries after months of not being driven. @renzhiqiang2 ♬ 原聲 – renzhiqiang2 Sealing the doors of COVID-19 contacts is reported to be a common occurrence in China as part of the country’s enforced lockdowns. 用木棍封门,显然还不够。建议官方用钢筋焊死,同时把门上通电,并请官方派两名军人在门外架上机枪。 生我九州者,虽远必封! pic.twitter.com/ajHSk7Jk7Z — 领导干部 (@808Penny) August 30, 2022 Outrage at the deaths in Urumqi led to vigils and protests being arranged in Shanghai, Xi’an, Chongqing and Nanjing, as well as various university campuses, and people turned up in their thousands at some of the protests. Amid chants of ‘Lift lockdown’, ‘No PCR test’ and “We want freedom’, anti-Xi and anti-Communist Party chanting could also be heard. Many people carried blank sheets of white paper to symbolise government censorship, but reports on the protests on Weibo, the Chinese social media platform, were short-lived. Chinese protestors hold blank papers to signify censorship. Back in May, WHO Secretary-General Dr Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus told a media briefing that China’s strategy was no longer sustainable in the face of the more infectious but less lethal Omicron. “When we talk about the zero-COVID strategy, we don’t think that it’s sustainable, considering the behaviour of the virus now and what we anticipate in the future,” said Tedros, prompting a rebuke from Chinese officials Aside from its zero-COVID policy, China’s vaccines, Sinopharm and Coronavac, are only about 60% effective against severe infection in comparison to over 90% protection offered by mRNA vaccines. China still to reckon with COVID infections However, it is possible that China will still have its reckoning with COVID as its weary citizens resist further controls and the highly infectious virus spreads through a population with little immunity. Global data analysis group Airfinity estimates that 1.3 and 2.1 million lives could be at risk if China lifts its zero-COVID policy “given low vaccination and booster rates as well as a lack of hybrid immunity”. It based its risk analysis on the cumulative peak cases and deaths from Hong Kong’s BA.1 wave as a proxy for mainland China. “Mainland China has very low levels of immunity across its population. Its citizens were vaccinated with domestically produced jabs Sinovac and Sinopharm which have been proven to have significantly lower efficacy and provide less protection against infection and death,” Airfinity said in a statement on Monday. “This vaccine-induced immunity has waned over time and with low booster uptake and no natural infections, the population is more susceptible to severe disease. China’s current booster uptake is 40%, whilst Hong Kong’s primary series uptake was 34% back in February 2022 when it saw a large spike in cases due to the BA.1 omicron variant,” said Airfinity. Dr Louise Blair, Airfinity’s head of vaccines and epidemiology, called on China to “ramp up vaccinations to raise immunity in order to lift its zero-COVID policy, especially given how large its elderly population is”. Blair said that China needs “hybrid immunity” from both vaccinations and infections to ensure “much less impactful and deadly COVID-19 waves”. Localised protests Prior to the national weekend protests, there have been intense local protests, particularly at the Foxconn facility in Zhengzhou, which makes 70% of the Apple’s iPhones. Workers work long shifts and usually stay in massive factory dormitories that can house up to 300,000 people. But after a small COVID outbreak in the city in October, Foxconn closed the dining halls and introduced “closed loop” production to cut workers’ contact with the outside world to meet production demands for the launch of the iPhone14. Tesla and other factories have used this approach during lockdowns in Shanghai in March. But Foxconn workers started to panic in fear of being forcibly quarantined there, and have clashed a number of times with police. Numerous reports of poor treatment and neglect at state quarantine facilities have also leaked out in public, alongside videos of small children removed from COVID-exposed parents being forced to fend for themselves in such facilities. 上海儿童集中营。 pic.twitter.com/BNTbOPXBLD — 方舟子 (@fangshimin) April 2, 2022 Image Credits: Twitter. Uganda Extends Lockdowns in Bid to End Ebola Outbreak 28/11/2022 Stefan Anderson 68 days and 52 deaths into Uganda’s Ebola outbreak, authorities are hopeful the spread of the virus has been contained. Uganda’s President Yoweri Museveni has extended quarantine measures in the two districts at the epicentre of the country’s Ebola epidemic for another 21 days, citing the need to protect gains in the fight against the virus. This marks the third renewal of lockdowns in Kassanda and Mubende, and authorities are hopeful it will be the last. Movement in and out of the districts was first restricted on 15 October, and renewed for another 21 days on 5 November. The measures include a curfew and the closure of social spaces like churches, bars and markets. “It may be too early to celebrate success, but overall, I have been briefed that the picture is good,” Museveni said in a televised address delivered by vice-president Jessica Alupo. While the situation is “still fragile”, Museveni said Ugandan health authorities are “very optimistic” that the outbreak will end “in the coming month.” The government’s optimism is buoyed by Uganda’s continued progress in stamping out the outbreak. Three districts have completed over 42 days since the last case of Ebola was detected, while six districts – including the epicentres of Kassanda and Mubende as well as the capital, Kampala – remain in “follow-up” protocols. The virus has so far claimed 56 lives, while another 22 probable Ebola deaths were registered before the government issued its official declaration of the outbreak on 20 September. “If we open now and a case appears, we will have destroyed all the gains we have made in this war,” Museveni said. “Our healthcare workers will continue to do all it takes to save lives and bring the epidemic to an end.” Full reopening if the 21-day mark is reached With numbers dropping, bed occupancy rates within the past 24 hours stood at just 27.9% in Mubende isolation units. The government’s decision to extend lockdowns by 21 days is based on the incubation period of Ebola. The three-week mark is a key indicator of whether transmission has been stopped. Mid-way through November, Mubende appeared to be in the clear. The district had gone 13 days without reporting a new case. But on day 14, a 23-year-old medical student with links to previous cases was diagnosed with the virus. “Without completing 21 days, as we saw with Mubende, a case can pop up anywhere,” the President said. “It is important that we complete the entire cycle.” Kassanda has now reached 15 days since reporting a new case, while Mubende has not registered a confirmed case for 14 days. If both districts hold on for another week, Uganda’s fifth deadly encounter with the Sudan strain of Ebola may come to a swift end. “We are relying on you to cooperate and bring this epidemic to an end,” the President told residents of Kassanda and Mubende, noting their commitment and sacrifice thus far. “If there is no case by the end of the 21-day period, we will re-open fully.” Threat of urban transmission avoided Ebola’s invasion of Uganda’s Gulu municipality and its slum-like camps for internally displaced persons in 2000 was the cause of the deadliest Ebola epidemic in the country’s history. When six school children were diagnosed with Ebola in Kampala in late October, fears of the virus embedding itself in the capital spiked. On paper, Ebola’s mortality rate of up to 90% makes the virus easy to contain. Museveni also noted that as a virus transferred through contact and bodily fluids, Ebola, despite its “devastating nature”, is far easier to control than airborne threats like COVID-19. But if allowed to embed itself in densely populated areas, things can quickly spiral out of control. “If we had allowed the escalation of the outbreak into Kampala, the consequences would have been bad, including possible exportation to our African brothers in neighbouring countries,” Museveni said. Despite calls from doctors and health advocates to lockdown the capital earlier this month, Museveni and Health Minister Jane Ruth Aceng elected not to bow to the pressure. So far, their decision appears to be validated. “The opportunity for immediate quarantine of contacts was lost for Mubende and Kassanda,” Museveni said, noting the first suspected cases were registered on 6 September, two weeks before authorities declared the outbreak. This was not the case for Kampala. Knowledge of the threat allowed health authorities to be on reactive footing, and respond quickly to isolate infected people and their contacts. Today, over 300 contacts remain under institutional quarantine overseen by the Ministry of Health. Vaccine Trials Are Underway WHO Africa Director Dr Matshidiso Moeti visited Kassanda and Mubende earlier this month to coordinate with Ugandan health authorities and other international partners in responding to the outbreak. There is currently no known vaccine for the Sudan strain of Ebola responsible for the Ugandan outbreak. But the outbreak presents a unique opportunity to bridge this treatment gap, and a series of trials have been set in motion with the aim of minimizing hospitalisations and deaths. A coalition of organizations including CEPI, Gavi, the World Health Organization and Ugandan health authorities are deploying three vaccine candidates to about 3,000 people who have been in contact with Ebola patients. “As we speak, the government of Uganda is finalizing the regulatory approvals,” Africa CDC Director Dr Ahmed Ogwell told CNN. If any of the candidates can succeed, authorities are hopeful this will be the last outbreak Uganda faces without medical defenses. “By embedding research at the heart of the outbreak response, we can achieve two goals,” the WHO said in a statement. “Evaluate potentially efficacious candidate vaccines, potentially contribute to end this outbreak, and protect populations at risk in the future.” Image Credits: WHO, WHO, WHO. Parliamentarians Seek to Address Post-COVID ‘Tsunami’ of Health System Problems 28/11/2022 Maayan Hoffman UNITE president Ricardo Leite (fourth from right) and MPs at the World Health Summit. “There is this tsunami that is happening after the earthquake that was COVID-19 that is now coming to shore and hitting health systems across the world,” said Ricardo Baptista Leite, president and founder of UNITE, a global network of parliamentarians committed to addressing global health challenges. “The pandemic also led to a huge economic crisis and even poor countries in the global South, who might have been less affected by the pandemic, are going to pay a very severe price due to economic consequences that will lead to challenges in responding to the health needs of those countries,” he said. A week before his organization brings together hundreds of parliamentarians from around the world to discuss the most pressing issues in public health at a global summit, the Portuguese MP, who collaborates closely with the World Health Organization (WHO), warned Health Policy Watch of the need to take swift and collective action before the next pandemic. “This is the moment when international institutions and governments need to step up their game and tackle the global health crisis,” Leite said. “We must double up our efforts to make sure we are better equipped in the future and can respond to health needs.” Leite is a long-time global health advocate. He is also a trained medical doctor in infectious diseases and heads the Public Health department at Católica University of Portugal. False sense of security He told Health Policy Watch that whenever the world has felt “capable of controlling infectious disease, we create a false sense of security that we can lower our guard. Whenever we lower our guard, infectious diseases come back with a vengeance.” This can be seen throughout history with multiple pandemics over the centuries, but also in this century with the emergence of antibiotics and the belief that with penicillin we could control infections – a belief now being called into question with the development of antibiotic-resistant bacteria. Antibiotic-resistant bacteria are responsible for the deaths of some 700,000 people each year – with scientists predicting that these infections could kill more people than cancer by 2050. The pandemic has set back the fight against many diseases by years. Take HIV/AIDS. In December 2020, UNAIDS released its 95-95-95 targets, calling for 95% of all people living with HIV to know their HIV status, 95% of all people with diagnosed HIV infection to receive sustained antiretroviral therapy and 95% of all people receiving antiretroviral therapy to have viral suppression by 2025. But during COVID-19, in many countries, measurement of these goals ceased altogether. Where tracking continued, in some cases, diagnoses were slower. “HIV is an interesting proxy for all infectious and communicable diseases out there,” Leite said. In addition, COVID-19 led to a rise in people being diagnosed with late-stage cancer, an increase in cases related to chronic diseases due to people being kept away from health systems, and a spike in mental illness globally. “Pandemics are a strong demonstration of the case that infectious diseases can undermine our efforts toward prosperity for all,” Leite said. He added that during his time as a medical volunteer in Ukraine he saw a huge rise in multi-resistant and extremely resistant tuberculosis in the region. Leite predicted that as the war continues, it will be almost impossible not to see the TB spillover into neighboring countries and then across the world. “There has to be a clear understanding from the world that dealing with infectious diseases is not only something recommended but is a prerequisite for economic and social development worldwide,” he said. The role of parliamentarians WHO parliamentarian session during the World Health Summit (UNITE) Part of the solution is getting parliamentarians around the table, according to Leite. In 2017, the United Nations passed a resolution on the nexus of global health and foreign policy, encouraging a multi-stakeholder approach to achieve universal health coverage. “The voice of parliamentarians was not part of the discussion,” Leite said. “One cannot expect to build a global health architecture or move forward science-based policy making if we do not keep those who write policy in the loop. We cannot make sure money gets where it needs to if we do not include those that make and approve budgets in parliaments.” While he admitted that UNITE is not a “silver bullet,” he said it is a valuable tool for bringing parliamentarians from more than 90 countries together to share experiences and learn how they can best bring their own country toward a more sustainable future. “The first step was to get the conversation going. The second was to develop regional leadership. We now have 10 regional chapters, each led by an MP or former MP. Then we developed policy hubs, specialized teams that focus on specific policy areas, so they can drill down on concrete policymaking in key areas,” Leite explained. “We empower policymakers to be leaders for change in their own countries.” UNITE’s three priorities At its founding, UNITE was focused solely on issues of infectious diseases, but COVID-19 led it to change its mandate over the summer of 2022 and the organization is now focused more generally on global health matters. “The pandemic has demonstrated that global health issues and infectious diseases go hand in hand,” Leite told Health Policy Watch. “We cannot solve many challenges related to infectious disease, which were the basis of our work in the first years, without addressing all the other global health challenges out there.” UNITE is now taking a three-priority approach, focusing on pandemic prevention preparedness and response; the future of health systems; and health as a human right. The group signed a memorandum of understanding recently with WHO to work together on these pillars and supply parliamentary feedback and insight to support WHO’s related efforts. Next week: UNITE Global Summit From 5-7 December, UNITE will host its global summit in Lisbon, bringing together its parliamentarians and leaders from the global health community to expand and forge new partnerships. Members of the lawmaking, civil society, medical and academic communities will meet to talk about what they feel are the most pressing issues on the global health agenda. Another priority that UNITE is bringing to the forefront of the parliamentarian agenda is the use of digital health to promote universal health coverage. “In the last few months with the creation of the digital health hub, parliamentarians were able to discuss with other stakeholders how to build the right frameworks and increase budgets to implement digital health transformation that can promote access to millions,” Leite said. Finally, Leite added that with its new direction in mind, UNITE members would try to answer three questions during the event: What progress have we made so far during the UN’s Sustainable Development Goals period? What have we learned to help us make even more progress by 2030? What is the role of parliamentarians in helping drive that progress? MPs and the pandemic treaty Session on the pandemic treaty at the World Health Summit. In the past, parliamentary involvement has helped achieve public health goals. In Portugal, Leite cited an example from 22 years ago when the parliament decided to decriminalize the use of drugs. “This was not making drug use legal, but now no one goes to jail for using drugs,” he explained. “We stopped looking at people who use drugs as criminals but instead as people who potentially had a health challenge that needed to be dealt with.” Instead of jail time, drug abusers receive harm reduction and other social and health services. When the legislation was passed, around 1% of the Portuguese population used heroin. Since then, Leite said, the numbers have dropped dramatically. Drug-related crime is down, and new HIV cases tied to drug use have fallen from as high as 60% to only 2%. “The fact that we provided harm reduction services and shifted from a criminal perspective to a health perspective was transformative in achieving better health outcomes and partially solving the drug problem in Portugal,” Leite said. A more recent example was the decision by the African Union to set up the African Medicines Agency, which will become a regulatory body for access to health technologies in the continent and creates a common standard of rules based on science to ensure the safety of citizens in the region. Leite equated the AMA to the European Medicines Agency. UNITE founder Ricardo Baptista Leite and Dr Tedros at signing of an MOU between the two organizations. Moving forward, UNITE Parliamentarians will play a key role in finalizing WHO’s pandemic treaty, aimed at guiding the global response to pandemics. “The regulations that were in place when COVID-19 hit were not sufficient or were not properly enforced,” Leite said. He added that “there is a lack of acknowledgement and awareness among most citizens and many parliamentarians around the world that these negotiations are taking place. We need parliamentarians involved early on. If governments agree on a document, parliaments must ratify it.” In an era of “polarized politics and fake news,” he said that if parliamentarians are not part of the process there is a risk that such a treaty would not be ratified, and the world would be left exactly where it was in December 2019. “Everyone is committed to finding a balanced approach to what we hope will create a toolkit from a policy perspective that can help the world be better prepared to detect outbreaks early and lock them down before they transform into pandemics,” Leite said. “It is not acceptable that 100 years after the Spanish flu we saw so many countries react to COVID-19 the same way as they did 100 years before,” he continued. “We have an obligation to be better prepared to constrain any risk, to keep as many people as possible safe. This is a prerequisite for economic and social development. “We need to keep peace and prosperity as our main goal,” Leite concluded. Image Credits: UNITE. There are a Wide Range of Treatments for Obesity, but Many People Cannot Afford Care 28/11/2022 Editorial team A special project celebrating the fifth anniversary of “Our Views, Our Voices” | Learn more Amber Huett-Garcia at her high and low weight from 2008 to 2021. Amber Huett-Garcia is trying to drive global change for affordable treatment, care and support for individuals suffering from obesity. A resident of the United States and born into a family suffering from generational obesity, she weighed 101 pounds by the time she was in kindergarten. As an adult, she lost 245 pounds and reduced her BMI from 69 to 24. She did it through a combination of treatments, including bariatric surgery, medication and mental health care. While Huett-Garcia is lucky to have a comprehensive employer-based healthcare plan, she recognizes that many people in the United States do not. And for those who are obese, the cost of care can be enormous. The cost of obesity Obesity costs the US healthcare system nearly $173 billion a year, according to the latest report by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Personal medical costs for people living with obesity are close to $1,500 more per year than those who do not suffer from the condition. For people living with obesity and who are on Medicare, few treatments are covered. For example, Medicare has zero anti-obesity medication coverage. Moreover, roughly 40% of the US population lacks coverage for bariatric surgery for obesity, which has been proven most effective. “Affordable healthcare is a human right,” Huett-Garcia said. Amber Huett-Garcia taking part in the “Stop Weight Bias” campaign. She has called for action to ensure that insurance plans pay for the treatment of a wider range of conditions, including obesity, by covering comprehensive science-based interventions. She has also asked that decision-makers within healthcare systems listen and amplify the voices of people with NCDs. “The lives of people living with NCDs depend on it,” she concluded. Read Amber Huett-Garcia’s full NCD Diary. Read previous post. Image Credits: Courtesy of NCD Alliance. Posts navigation Older postsNewer posts This site uses cookies to help give you the best experience on our website. Cookies enable us to collect information that helps us personalise your experience and improve the functionality and performance of our site. By continuing to read our website, we assume you agree to this, otherwise you can adjust your browser settings. Please read our cookie and Privacy Policy. Our Cookies and Privacy Policy Loading Comments... You must be logged in to post a comment.
How Palliative Care Made One Woman ‘Whole Again’ 29/11/2022 Editorial team A special project celebrating the fifth anniversary of “Our Views, Our Voices” | Learn more Ashla Rani Joining Pallium India in 2014 gave Ashla Rani back her life. Rani fell off a moving train and suffered a spinal cord injury that left her bed-bound and dependent on others for almost everything. She became depressed, asking herself, ‘Why bother to live’? Finally, friends suggested Pallium India, an NGO through which palliative care is provided and advocated for. “I was accepted into the fold, and moved to their headquarters in Thiruvananthapuram in 2014,” wrote Rani. “The impact my healthcare provider has had on my NCD journey is unbelievable; and nothing short of a fairy tale. I feel whole again, doing meaningful work, having a life purpose.” Pallium India became Rani’s home. She said the team listened and treated her and her mother with empathy and care. They also focused not only on treatment but on wellbeing and quality of life. “My medical needs were addressed on time, preventing secondary complications,” Rani wrote. She eventually took up a role in the facility. In her NCD Diary, Rani highlights other cases where Pallium India was able to help, such as a mother with type 1 diabetes who had a diabetic foot and was nearly blind. When she came to Pallium India, her sugar levels were out of control and she and her son were on the verge of starvation. “We got her a diabetologist, who adjusted her medicines to maintain her sugar levels, which saved her limb from amputation,” Rani recalled. “She’s now able to walk with special footwear. We brought her to an eye hospital to receive surgery that allowed her to see her son after four years. With community support, she’s rented a house, where she lives with her son. He receives education support from Pallium India.” Diverse challenges Rani said that people living with noncommunicable diseases face diverse challenges and often do not receive adequate care. It is especially challenging in India, where rehabilitation facilities can be expensive or far away, so many people end up lying in their beds at home and dying of secondary complications. “When there’s a person with some disability in a family, it’s not just that person who is suffering,” Rani added. “The family members around that person also suffer in different ways.” She shared her calls to action: Meaningfully involve people with disabilities in the NCD response in India and globally, ensuring equal representation in discussions and decisions. Create interdisciplinary teams at the community healthcare level to prevent and manage NCDs, including trained staff to counsel and encourage people living with NCDs to live their lives to the fullest and not hide in private spaces. Create support groups for each NCD as despite many shared priorities, different types have specific needs and issues to be addressed. Establish rehab centers and home-based care for NCDs. This should include home-based palliative care for mobility-challenged people living with NCDs. Read Ashla Rani full story. Read previous post. Image Credits: Courtesy of NCD Alliance. From Monkeypox to Mpox 29/11/2022 Kerry Cullinan Colorized transmission electron micrograph of monkeypox particles (purple) found within an infected cell (brown), cultured in the laboratory. Image captured and color-enhanced at the NIAID Integrated Research Facility (IRF) in Fort Detrick, Maryland. The term monkeypox will be replaced by mpox within the next year, according to the World Health Organization (WHO). This follows “racist and stigmatizing language” being used in relation to the large outbreak of mpox for the first time in Europe and the US. The WHO said it had been approached by a number of individuals and countries that had asked the WHO to propose a way forward to change the name. “Assigning names to new and, very exceptionally, to existing diseases is the responsibility of WHO under the International Classification of Diseases and the WHO Family of International Health Related Classifications through a consultative process which includes WHO member states,” the WHO said in a statement on Monday. After consultations to gather views from a range of experts, countries and the general public, who were invited to submit suggestions for new names, the WHO has recommended the name change. Considerations for the recommendations included rationale, scientific appropriateness, extent of current usage, pronounceability, usability in different languages, absence of geographical or zoological references, and the ease of retrieval of historical scientific information. Human monkeypox was given its name in 1970 after the virus that causes the disease was discovered in captive monkeys in 1958. This was way before the publication of WHO best practices in naming diseases, in 2015, which recommended that new disease names should minimize the unnecessary negative impact of names on trade, travel, tourism or animal welfare, and avoid causing offence to any cultural, social, national, regional, professional or ethnic groups. Image Credits: NIAID/Flickr. ‘Zero-COVID’ Protestors Win Concessions But Expert Urges China to Increase ‘Hybrid Immunity’ Before Abandoning Policy 28/11/2022 Kerry Cullinan University professors stand between protestors and police at Fudan University in China. Almost three years of harsh lockdowns, enforced quarantines in state facilities and daily testing have tried the patience of many Chinese people, who since Friday have taken to the streets from Shanghai and Nanjing in the east, to central Chengdu and Wuhan and Urumqi and Korla in the north and west. While scores of people have been arrested, protestors have also won some concessions. In Urumqi, where four million people have been in lockdown for over 100 days, officials announced on Monday that it would allow people to travel on buses to do errands and parcel deliveries would resume. Meanwhile, Beijing officials also announced on Sunday that lockdowns of residential areas would not be enforced for longer than 24 hours. These are small indications that Chinese leader Xi Jinping’s “zero-COVID” policy is becoming increasingly impossible to enforce in the face of people’s growing anger and desperation. Two weeks ago, China’s State Council cut compulsory quarantine in a state facility for international visitors and the close contacts of people with COVID from seven to five days, with a further three days at home. It also did away with restrictions on secondary contacts. But a surge in COVID cases in Beijing was followed swiftly by lockdowns, school and restaurant closures, dampening hopes that the country was quietly abandoning the zero-COVID approach. Journalist arrested, assaulted China is trying to both quell and downplay the protests. On Monday, there was increased military and police deployment at sites of weekend protests, and BBC reporter Ed Lawrence was arrested and reportedly assaulted in police custody in Shanghai while reporting on the protests. BBC Statement on Ed Lawrence pic.twitter.com/wedDetCtpF — BBC News Press Team (@BBCNewsPR) November 27, 2022 The weekend protests were sparked by the deaths of 10 people in a fire in an apartment building in Urumqi, the capital of Xinjiang, on Thursday. The screams of people trapped in the burning building last Thursday were captured on social media amid reports that apartment doors had been closed from the outside to enforce the city’s lockdown. Firefighters took more than three hours to stop the fire as cars blocked their path – many with flat batteries after months of not being driven. @renzhiqiang2 ♬ 原聲 – renzhiqiang2 Sealing the doors of COVID-19 contacts is reported to be a common occurrence in China as part of the country’s enforced lockdowns. 用木棍封门,显然还不够。建议官方用钢筋焊死,同时把门上通电,并请官方派两名军人在门外架上机枪。 生我九州者,虽远必封! pic.twitter.com/ajHSk7Jk7Z — 领导干部 (@808Penny) August 30, 2022 Outrage at the deaths in Urumqi led to vigils and protests being arranged in Shanghai, Xi’an, Chongqing and Nanjing, as well as various university campuses, and people turned up in their thousands at some of the protests. Amid chants of ‘Lift lockdown’, ‘No PCR test’ and “We want freedom’, anti-Xi and anti-Communist Party chanting could also be heard. Many people carried blank sheets of white paper to symbolise government censorship, but reports on the protests on Weibo, the Chinese social media platform, were short-lived. Chinese protestors hold blank papers to signify censorship. Back in May, WHO Secretary-General Dr Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus told a media briefing that China’s strategy was no longer sustainable in the face of the more infectious but less lethal Omicron. “When we talk about the zero-COVID strategy, we don’t think that it’s sustainable, considering the behaviour of the virus now and what we anticipate in the future,” said Tedros, prompting a rebuke from Chinese officials Aside from its zero-COVID policy, China’s vaccines, Sinopharm and Coronavac, are only about 60% effective against severe infection in comparison to over 90% protection offered by mRNA vaccines. China still to reckon with COVID infections However, it is possible that China will still have its reckoning with COVID as its weary citizens resist further controls and the highly infectious virus spreads through a population with little immunity. Global data analysis group Airfinity estimates that 1.3 and 2.1 million lives could be at risk if China lifts its zero-COVID policy “given low vaccination and booster rates as well as a lack of hybrid immunity”. It based its risk analysis on the cumulative peak cases and deaths from Hong Kong’s BA.1 wave as a proxy for mainland China. “Mainland China has very low levels of immunity across its population. Its citizens were vaccinated with domestically produced jabs Sinovac and Sinopharm which have been proven to have significantly lower efficacy and provide less protection against infection and death,” Airfinity said in a statement on Monday. “This vaccine-induced immunity has waned over time and with low booster uptake and no natural infections, the population is more susceptible to severe disease. China’s current booster uptake is 40%, whilst Hong Kong’s primary series uptake was 34% back in February 2022 when it saw a large spike in cases due to the BA.1 omicron variant,” said Airfinity. Dr Louise Blair, Airfinity’s head of vaccines and epidemiology, called on China to “ramp up vaccinations to raise immunity in order to lift its zero-COVID policy, especially given how large its elderly population is”. Blair said that China needs “hybrid immunity” from both vaccinations and infections to ensure “much less impactful and deadly COVID-19 waves”. Localised protests Prior to the national weekend protests, there have been intense local protests, particularly at the Foxconn facility in Zhengzhou, which makes 70% of the Apple’s iPhones. Workers work long shifts and usually stay in massive factory dormitories that can house up to 300,000 people. But after a small COVID outbreak in the city in October, Foxconn closed the dining halls and introduced “closed loop” production to cut workers’ contact with the outside world to meet production demands for the launch of the iPhone14. Tesla and other factories have used this approach during lockdowns in Shanghai in March. But Foxconn workers started to panic in fear of being forcibly quarantined there, and have clashed a number of times with police. Numerous reports of poor treatment and neglect at state quarantine facilities have also leaked out in public, alongside videos of small children removed from COVID-exposed parents being forced to fend for themselves in such facilities. 上海儿童集中营。 pic.twitter.com/BNTbOPXBLD — 方舟子 (@fangshimin) April 2, 2022 Image Credits: Twitter. Uganda Extends Lockdowns in Bid to End Ebola Outbreak 28/11/2022 Stefan Anderson 68 days and 52 deaths into Uganda’s Ebola outbreak, authorities are hopeful the spread of the virus has been contained. Uganda’s President Yoweri Museveni has extended quarantine measures in the two districts at the epicentre of the country’s Ebola epidemic for another 21 days, citing the need to protect gains in the fight against the virus. This marks the third renewal of lockdowns in Kassanda and Mubende, and authorities are hopeful it will be the last. Movement in and out of the districts was first restricted on 15 October, and renewed for another 21 days on 5 November. The measures include a curfew and the closure of social spaces like churches, bars and markets. “It may be too early to celebrate success, but overall, I have been briefed that the picture is good,” Museveni said in a televised address delivered by vice-president Jessica Alupo. While the situation is “still fragile”, Museveni said Ugandan health authorities are “very optimistic” that the outbreak will end “in the coming month.” The government’s optimism is buoyed by Uganda’s continued progress in stamping out the outbreak. Three districts have completed over 42 days since the last case of Ebola was detected, while six districts – including the epicentres of Kassanda and Mubende as well as the capital, Kampala – remain in “follow-up” protocols. The virus has so far claimed 56 lives, while another 22 probable Ebola deaths were registered before the government issued its official declaration of the outbreak on 20 September. “If we open now and a case appears, we will have destroyed all the gains we have made in this war,” Museveni said. “Our healthcare workers will continue to do all it takes to save lives and bring the epidemic to an end.” Full reopening if the 21-day mark is reached With numbers dropping, bed occupancy rates within the past 24 hours stood at just 27.9% in Mubende isolation units. The government’s decision to extend lockdowns by 21 days is based on the incubation period of Ebola. The three-week mark is a key indicator of whether transmission has been stopped. Mid-way through November, Mubende appeared to be in the clear. The district had gone 13 days without reporting a new case. But on day 14, a 23-year-old medical student with links to previous cases was diagnosed with the virus. “Without completing 21 days, as we saw with Mubende, a case can pop up anywhere,” the President said. “It is important that we complete the entire cycle.” Kassanda has now reached 15 days since reporting a new case, while Mubende has not registered a confirmed case for 14 days. If both districts hold on for another week, Uganda’s fifth deadly encounter with the Sudan strain of Ebola may come to a swift end. “We are relying on you to cooperate and bring this epidemic to an end,” the President told residents of Kassanda and Mubende, noting their commitment and sacrifice thus far. “If there is no case by the end of the 21-day period, we will re-open fully.” Threat of urban transmission avoided Ebola’s invasion of Uganda’s Gulu municipality and its slum-like camps for internally displaced persons in 2000 was the cause of the deadliest Ebola epidemic in the country’s history. When six school children were diagnosed with Ebola in Kampala in late October, fears of the virus embedding itself in the capital spiked. On paper, Ebola’s mortality rate of up to 90% makes the virus easy to contain. Museveni also noted that as a virus transferred through contact and bodily fluids, Ebola, despite its “devastating nature”, is far easier to control than airborne threats like COVID-19. But if allowed to embed itself in densely populated areas, things can quickly spiral out of control. “If we had allowed the escalation of the outbreak into Kampala, the consequences would have been bad, including possible exportation to our African brothers in neighbouring countries,” Museveni said. Despite calls from doctors and health advocates to lockdown the capital earlier this month, Museveni and Health Minister Jane Ruth Aceng elected not to bow to the pressure. So far, their decision appears to be validated. “The opportunity for immediate quarantine of contacts was lost for Mubende and Kassanda,” Museveni said, noting the first suspected cases were registered on 6 September, two weeks before authorities declared the outbreak. This was not the case for Kampala. Knowledge of the threat allowed health authorities to be on reactive footing, and respond quickly to isolate infected people and their contacts. Today, over 300 contacts remain under institutional quarantine overseen by the Ministry of Health. Vaccine Trials Are Underway WHO Africa Director Dr Matshidiso Moeti visited Kassanda and Mubende earlier this month to coordinate with Ugandan health authorities and other international partners in responding to the outbreak. There is currently no known vaccine for the Sudan strain of Ebola responsible for the Ugandan outbreak. But the outbreak presents a unique opportunity to bridge this treatment gap, and a series of trials have been set in motion with the aim of minimizing hospitalisations and deaths. A coalition of organizations including CEPI, Gavi, the World Health Organization and Ugandan health authorities are deploying three vaccine candidates to about 3,000 people who have been in contact with Ebola patients. “As we speak, the government of Uganda is finalizing the regulatory approvals,” Africa CDC Director Dr Ahmed Ogwell told CNN. If any of the candidates can succeed, authorities are hopeful this will be the last outbreak Uganda faces without medical defenses. “By embedding research at the heart of the outbreak response, we can achieve two goals,” the WHO said in a statement. “Evaluate potentially efficacious candidate vaccines, potentially contribute to end this outbreak, and protect populations at risk in the future.” Image Credits: WHO, WHO, WHO. Parliamentarians Seek to Address Post-COVID ‘Tsunami’ of Health System Problems 28/11/2022 Maayan Hoffman UNITE president Ricardo Leite (fourth from right) and MPs at the World Health Summit. “There is this tsunami that is happening after the earthquake that was COVID-19 that is now coming to shore and hitting health systems across the world,” said Ricardo Baptista Leite, president and founder of UNITE, a global network of parliamentarians committed to addressing global health challenges. “The pandemic also led to a huge economic crisis and even poor countries in the global South, who might have been less affected by the pandemic, are going to pay a very severe price due to economic consequences that will lead to challenges in responding to the health needs of those countries,” he said. A week before his organization brings together hundreds of parliamentarians from around the world to discuss the most pressing issues in public health at a global summit, the Portuguese MP, who collaborates closely with the World Health Organization (WHO), warned Health Policy Watch of the need to take swift and collective action before the next pandemic. “This is the moment when international institutions and governments need to step up their game and tackle the global health crisis,” Leite said. “We must double up our efforts to make sure we are better equipped in the future and can respond to health needs.” Leite is a long-time global health advocate. He is also a trained medical doctor in infectious diseases and heads the Public Health department at Católica University of Portugal. False sense of security He told Health Policy Watch that whenever the world has felt “capable of controlling infectious disease, we create a false sense of security that we can lower our guard. Whenever we lower our guard, infectious diseases come back with a vengeance.” This can be seen throughout history with multiple pandemics over the centuries, but also in this century with the emergence of antibiotics and the belief that with penicillin we could control infections – a belief now being called into question with the development of antibiotic-resistant bacteria. Antibiotic-resistant bacteria are responsible for the deaths of some 700,000 people each year – with scientists predicting that these infections could kill more people than cancer by 2050. The pandemic has set back the fight against many diseases by years. Take HIV/AIDS. In December 2020, UNAIDS released its 95-95-95 targets, calling for 95% of all people living with HIV to know their HIV status, 95% of all people with diagnosed HIV infection to receive sustained antiretroviral therapy and 95% of all people receiving antiretroviral therapy to have viral suppression by 2025. But during COVID-19, in many countries, measurement of these goals ceased altogether. Where tracking continued, in some cases, diagnoses were slower. “HIV is an interesting proxy for all infectious and communicable diseases out there,” Leite said. In addition, COVID-19 led to a rise in people being diagnosed with late-stage cancer, an increase in cases related to chronic diseases due to people being kept away from health systems, and a spike in mental illness globally. “Pandemics are a strong demonstration of the case that infectious diseases can undermine our efforts toward prosperity for all,” Leite said. He added that during his time as a medical volunteer in Ukraine he saw a huge rise in multi-resistant and extremely resistant tuberculosis in the region. Leite predicted that as the war continues, it will be almost impossible not to see the TB spillover into neighboring countries and then across the world. “There has to be a clear understanding from the world that dealing with infectious diseases is not only something recommended but is a prerequisite for economic and social development worldwide,” he said. The role of parliamentarians WHO parliamentarian session during the World Health Summit (UNITE) Part of the solution is getting parliamentarians around the table, according to Leite. In 2017, the United Nations passed a resolution on the nexus of global health and foreign policy, encouraging a multi-stakeholder approach to achieve universal health coverage. “The voice of parliamentarians was not part of the discussion,” Leite said. “One cannot expect to build a global health architecture or move forward science-based policy making if we do not keep those who write policy in the loop. We cannot make sure money gets where it needs to if we do not include those that make and approve budgets in parliaments.” While he admitted that UNITE is not a “silver bullet,” he said it is a valuable tool for bringing parliamentarians from more than 90 countries together to share experiences and learn how they can best bring their own country toward a more sustainable future. “The first step was to get the conversation going. The second was to develop regional leadership. We now have 10 regional chapters, each led by an MP or former MP. Then we developed policy hubs, specialized teams that focus on specific policy areas, so they can drill down on concrete policymaking in key areas,” Leite explained. “We empower policymakers to be leaders for change in their own countries.” UNITE’s three priorities At its founding, UNITE was focused solely on issues of infectious diseases, but COVID-19 led it to change its mandate over the summer of 2022 and the organization is now focused more generally on global health matters. “The pandemic has demonstrated that global health issues and infectious diseases go hand in hand,” Leite told Health Policy Watch. “We cannot solve many challenges related to infectious disease, which were the basis of our work in the first years, without addressing all the other global health challenges out there.” UNITE is now taking a three-priority approach, focusing on pandemic prevention preparedness and response; the future of health systems; and health as a human right. The group signed a memorandum of understanding recently with WHO to work together on these pillars and supply parliamentary feedback and insight to support WHO’s related efforts. Next week: UNITE Global Summit From 5-7 December, UNITE will host its global summit in Lisbon, bringing together its parliamentarians and leaders from the global health community to expand and forge new partnerships. Members of the lawmaking, civil society, medical and academic communities will meet to talk about what they feel are the most pressing issues on the global health agenda. Another priority that UNITE is bringing to the forefront of the parliamentarian agenda is the use of digital health to promote universal health coverage. “In the last few months with the creation of the digital health hub, parliamentarians were able to discuss with other stakeholders how to build the right frameworks and increase budgets to implement digital health transformation that can promote access to millions,” Leite said. Finally, Leite added that with its new direction in mind, UNITE members would try to answer three questions during the event: What progress have we made so far during the UN’s Sustainable Development Goals period? What have we learned to help us make even more progress by 2030? What is the role of parliamentarians in helping drive that progress? MPs and the pandemic treaty Session on the pandemic treaty at the World Health Summit. In the past, parliamentary involvement has helped achieve public health goals. In Portugal, Leite cited an example from 22 years ago when the parliament decided to decriminalize the use of drugs. “This was not making drug use legal, but now no one goes to jail for using drugs,” he explained. “We stopped looking at people who use drugs as criminals but instead as people who potentially had a health challenge that needed to be dealt with.” Instead of jail time, drug abusers receive harm reduction and other social and health services. When the legislation was passed, around 1% of the Portuguese population used heroin. Since then, Leite said, the numbers have dropped dramatically. Drug-related crime is down, and new HIV cases tied to drug use have fallen from as high as 60% to only 2%. “The fact that we provided harm reduction services and shifted from a criminal perspective to a health perspective was transformative in achieving better health outcomes and partially solving the drug problem in Portugal,” Leite said. A more recent example was the decision by the African Union to set up the African Medicines Agency, which will become a regulatory body for access to health technologies in the continent and creates a common standard of rules based on science to ensure the safety of citizens in the region. Leite equated the AMA to the European Medicines Agency. UNITE founder Ricardo Baptista Leite and Dr Tedros at signing of an MOU between the two organizations. Moving forward, UNITE Parliamentarians will play a key role in finalizing WHO’s pandemic treaty, aimed at guiding the global response to pandemics. “The regulations that were in place when COVID-19 hit were not sufficient or were not properly enforced,” Leite said. He added that “there is a lack of acknowledgement and awareness among most citizens and many parliamentarians around the world that these negotiations are taking place. We need parliamentarians involved early on. If governments agree on a document, parliaments must ratify it.” In an era of “polarized politics and fake news,” he said that if parliamentarians are not part of the process there is a risk that such a treaty would not be ratified, and the world would be left exactly where it was in December 2019. “Everyone is committed to finding a balanced approach to what we hope will create a toolkit from a policy perspective that can help the world be better prepared to detect outbreaks early and lock them down before they transform into pandemics,” Leite said. “It is not acceptable that 100 years after the Spanish flu we saw so many countries react to COVID-19 the same way as they did 100 years before,” he continued. “We have an obligation to be better prepared to constrain any risk, to keep as many people as possible safe. This is a prerequisite for economic and social development. “We need to keep peace and prosperity as our main goal,” Leite concluded. Image Credits: UNITE. There are a Wide Range of Treatments for Obesity, but Many People Cannot Afford Care 28/11/2022 Editorial team A special project celebrating the fifth anniversary of “Our Views, Our Voices” | Learn more Amber Huett-Garcia at her high and low weight from 2008 to 2021. Amber Huett-Garcia is trying to drive global change for affordable treatment, care and support for individuals suffering from obesity. A resident of the United States and born into a family suffering from generational obesity, she weighed 101 pounds by the time she was in kindergarten. As an adult, she lost 245 pounds and reduced her BMI from 69 to 24. She did it through a combination of treatments, including bariatric surgery, medication and mental health care. While Huett-Garcia is lucky to have a comprehensive employer-based healthcare plan, she recognizes that many people in the United States do not. And for those who are obese, the cost of care can be enormous. The cost of obesity Obesity costs the US healthcare system nearly $173 billion a year, according to the latest report by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Personal medical costs for people living with obesity are close to $1,500 more per year than those who do not suffer from the condition. For people living with obesity and who are on Medicare, few treatments are covered. For example, Medicare has zero anti-obesity medication coverage. Moreover, roughly 40% of the US population lacks coverage for bariatric surgery for obesity, which has been proven most effective. “Affordable healthcare is a human right,” Huett-Garcia said. Amber Huett-Garcia taking part in the “Stop Weight Bias” campaign. She has called for action to ensure that insurance plans pay for the treatment of a wider range of conditions, including obesity, by covering comprehensive science-based interventions. She has also asked that decision-makers within healthcare systems listen and amplify the voices of people with NCDs. “The lives of people living with NCDs depend on it,” she concluded. Read Amber Huett-Garcia’s full NCD Diary. Read previous post. Image Credits: Courtesy of NCD Alliance. Posts navigation Older postsNewer posts This site uses cookies to help give you the best experience on our website. Cookies enable us to collect information that helps us personalise your experience and improve the functionality and performance of our site. By continuing to read our website, we assume you agree to this, otherwise you can adjust your browser settings. Please read our cookie and Privacy Policy. Our Cookies and Privacy Policy Loading Comments... You must be logged in to post a comment.
From Monkeypox to Mpox 29/11/2022 Kerry Cullinan Colorized transmission electron micrograph of monkeypox particles (purple) found within an infected cell (brown), cultured in the laboratory. Image captured and color-enhanced at the NIAID Integrated Research Facility (IRF) in Fort Detrick, Maryland. The term monkeypox will be replaced by mpox within the next year, according to the World Health Organization (WHO). This follows “racist and stigmatizing language” being used in relation to the large outbreak of mpox for the first time in Europe and the US. The WHO said it had been approached by a number of individuals and countries that had asked the WHO to propose a way forward to change the name. “Assigning names to new and, very exceptionally, to existing diseases is the responsibility of WHO under the International Classification of Diseases and the WHO Family of International Health Related Classifications through a consultative process which includes WHO member states,” the WHO said in a statement on Monday. After consultations to gather views from a range of experts, countries and the general public, who were invited to submit suggestions for new names, the WHO has recommended the name change. Considerations for the recommendations included rationale, scientific appropriateness, extent of current usage, pronounceability, usability in different languages, absence of geographical or zoological references, and the ease of retrieval of historical scientific information. Human monkeypox was given its name in 1970 after the virus that causes the disease was discovered in captive monkeys in 1958. This was way before the publication of WHO best practices in naming diseases, in 2015, which recommended that new disease names should minimize the unnecessary negative impact of names on trade, travel, tourism or animal welfare, and avoid causing offence to any cultural, social, national, regional, professional or ethnic groups. Image Credits: NIAID/Flickr. ‘Zero-COVID’ Protestors Win Concessions But Expert Urges China to Increase ‘Hybrid Immunity’ Before Abandoning Policy 28/11/2022 Kerry Cullinan University professors stand between protestors and police at Fudan University in China. Almost three years of harsh lockdowns, enforced quarantines in state facilities and daily testing have tried the patience of many Chinese people, who since Friday have taken to the streets from Shanghai and Nanjing in the east, to central Chengdu and Wuhan and Urumqi and Korla in the north and west. While scores of people have been arrested, protestors have also won some concessions. In Urumqi, where four million people have been in lockdown for over 100 days, officials announced on Monday that it would allow people to travel on buses to do errands and parcel deliveries would resume. Meanwhile, Beijing officials also announced on Sunday that lockdowns of residential areas would not be enforced for longer than 24 hours. These are small indications that Chinese leader Xi Jinping’s “zero-COVID” policy is becoming increasingly impossible to enforce in the face of people’s growing anger and desperation. Two weeks ago, China’s State Council cut compulsory quarantine in a state facility for international visitors and the close contacts of people with COVID from seven to five days, with a further three days at home. It also did away with restrictions on secondary contacts. But a surge in COVID cases in Beijing was followed swiftly by lockdowns, school and restaurant closures, dampening hopes that the country was quietly abandoning the zero-COVID approach. Journalist arrested, assaulted China is trying to both quell and downplay the protests. On Monday, there was increased military and police deployment at sites of weekend protests, and BBC reporter Ed Lawrence was arrested and reportedly assaulted in police custody in Shanghai while reporting on the protests. BBC Statement on Ed Lawrence pic.twitter.com/wedDetCtpF — BBC News Press Team (@BBCNewsPR) November 27, 2022 The weekend protests were sparked by the deaths of 10 people in a fire in an apartment building in Urumqi, the capital of Xinjiang, on Thursday. The screams of people trapped in the burning building last Thursday were captured on social media amid reports that apartment doors had been closed from the outside to enforce the city’s lockdown. Firefighters took more than three hours to stop the fire as cars blocked their path – many with flat batteries after months of not being driven. @renzhiqiang2 ♬ 原聲 – renzhiqiang2 Sealing the doors of COVID-19 contacts is reported to be a common occurrence in China as part of the country’s enforced lockdowns. 用木棍封门,显然还不够。建议官方用钢筋焊死,同时把门上通电,并请官方派两名军人在门外架上机枪。 生我九州者,虽远必封! pic.twitter.com/ajHSk7Jk7Z — 领导干部 (@808Penny) August 30, 2022 Outrage at the deaths in Urumqi led to vigils and protests being arranged in Shanghai, Xi’an, Chongqing and Nanjing, as well as various university campuses, and people turned up in their thousands at some of the protests. Amid chants of ‘Lift lockdown’, ‘No PCR test’ and “We want freedom’, anti-Xi and anti-Communist Party chanting could also be heard. Many people carried blank sheets of white paper to symbolise government censorship, but reports on the protests on Weibo, the Chinese social media platform, were short-lived. Chinese protestors hold blank papers to signify censorship. Back in May, WHO Secretary-General Dr Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus told a media briefing that China’s strategy was no longer sustainable in the face of the more infectious but less lethal Omicron. “When we talk about the zero-COVID strategy, we don’t think that it’s sustainable, considering the behaviour of the virus now and what we anticipate in the future,” said Tedros, prompting a rebuke from Chinese officials Aside from its zero-COVID policy, China’s vaccines, Sinopharm and Coronavac, are only about 60% effective against severe infection in comparison to over 90% protection offered by mRNA vaccines. China still to reckon with COVID infections However, it is possible that China will still have its reckoning with COVID as its weary citizens resist further controls and the highly infectious virus spreads through a population with little immunity. Global data analysis group Airfinity estimates that 1.3 and 2.1 million lives could be at risk if China lifts its zero-COVID policy “given low vaccination and booster rates as well as a lack of hybrid immunity”. It based its risk analysis on the cumulative peak cases and deaths from Hong Kong’s BA.1 wave as a proxy for mainland China. “Mainland China has very low levels of immunity across its population. Its citizens were vaccinated with domestically produced jabs Sinovac and Sinopharm which have been proven to have significantly lower efficacy and provide less protection against infection and death,” Airfinity said in a statement on Monday. “This vaccine-induced immunity has waned over time and with low booster uptake and no natural infections, the population is more susceptible to severe disease. China’s current booster uptake is 40%, whilst Hong Kong’s primary series uptake was 34% back in February 2022 when it saw a large spike in cases due to the BA.1 omicron variant,” said Airfinity. Dr Louise Blair, Airfinity’s head of vaccines and epidemiology, called on China to “ramp up vaccinations to raise immunity in order to lift its zero-COVID policy, especially given how large its elderly population is”. Blair said that China needs “hybrid immunity” from both vaccinations and infections to ensure “much less impactful and deadly COVID-19 waves”. Localised protests Prior to the national weekend protests, there have been intense local protests, particularly at the Foxconn facility in Zhengzhou, which makes 70% of the Apple’s iPhones. Workers work long shifts and usually stay in massive factory dormitories that can house up to 300,000 people. But after a small COVID outbreak in the city in October, Foxconn closed the dining halls and introduced “closed loop” production to cut workers’ contact with the outside world to meet production demands for the launch of the iPhone14. Tesla and other factories have used this approach during lockdowns in Shanghai in March. But Foxconn workers started to panic in fear of being forcibly quarantined there, and have clashed a number of times with police. Numerous reports of poor treatment and neglect at state quarantine facilities have also leaked out in public, alongside videos of small children removed from COVID-exposed parents being forced to fend for themselves in such facilities. 上海儿童集中营。 pic.twitter.com/BNTbOPXBLD — 方舟子 (@fangshimin) April 2, 2022 Image Credits: Twitter. Uganda Extends Lockdowns in Bid to End Ebola Outbreak 28/11/2022 Stefan Anderson 68 days and 52 deaths into Uganda’s Ebola outbreak, authorities are hopeful the spread of the virus has been contained. Uganda’s President Yoweri Museveni has extended quarantine measures in the two districts at the epicentre of the country’s Ebola epidemic for another 21 days, citing the need to protect gains in the fight against the virus. This marks the third renewal of lockdowns in Kassanda and Mubende, and authorities are hopeful it will be the last. Movement in and out of the districts was first restricted on 15 October, and renewed for another 21 days on 5 November. The measures include a curfew and the closure of social spaces like churches, bars and markets. “It may be too early to celebrate success, but overall, I have been briefed that the picture is good,” Museveni said in a televised address delivered by vice-president Jessica Alupo. While the situation is “still fragile”, Museveni said Ugandan health authorities are “very optimistic” that the outbreak will end “in the coming month.” The government’s optimism is buoyed by Uganda’s continued progress in stamping out the outbreak. Three districts have completed over 42 days since the last case of Ebola was detected, while six districts – including the epicentres of Kassanda and Mubende as well as the capital, Kampala – remain in “follow-up” protocols. The virus has so far claimed 56 lives, while another 22 probable Ebola deaths were registered before the government issued its official declaration of the outbreak on 20 September. “If we open now and a case appears, we will have destroyed all the gains we have made in this war,” Museveni said. “Our healthcare workers will continue to do all it takes to save lives and bring the epidemic to an end.” Full reopening if the 21-day mark is reached With numbers dropping, bed occupancy rates within the past 24 hours stood at just 27.9% in Mubende isolation units. The government’s decision to extend lockdowns by 21 days is based on the incubation period of Ebola. The three-week mark is a key indicator of whether transmission has been stopped. Mid-way through November, Mubende appeared to be in the clear. The district had gone 13 days without reporting a new case. But on day 14, a 23-year-old medical student with links to previous cases was diagnosed with the virus. “Without completing 21 days, as we saw with Mubende, a case can pop up anywhere,” the President said. “It is important that we complete the entire cycle.” Kassanda has now reached 15 days since reporting a new case, while Mubende has not registered a confirmed case for 14 days. If both districts hold on for another week, Uganda’s fifth deadly encounter with the Sudan strain of Ebola may come to a swift end. “We are relying on you to cooperate and bring this epidemic to an end,” the President told residents of Kassanda and Mubende, noting their commitment and sacrifice thus far. “If there is no case by the end of the 21-day period, we will re-open fully.” Threat of urban transmission avoided Ebola’s invasion of Uganda’s Gulu municipality and its slum-like camps for internally displaced persons in 2000 was the cause of the deadliest Ebola epidemic in the country’s history. When six school children were diagnosed with Ebola in Kampala in late October, fears of the virus embedding itself in the capital spiked. On paper, Ebola’s mortality rate of up to 90% makes the virus easy to contain. Museveni also noted that as a virus transferred through contact and bodily fluids, Ebola, despite its “devastating nature”, is far easier to control than airborne threats like COVID-19. But if allowed to embed itself in densely populated areas, things can quickly spiral out of control. “If we had allowed the escalation of the outbreak into Kampala, the consequences would have been bad, including possible exportation to our African brothers in neighbouring countries,” Museveni said. Despite calls from doctors and health advocates to lockdown the capital earlier this month, Museveni and Health Minister Jane Ruth Aceng elected not to bow to the pressure. So far, their decision appears to be validated. “The opportunity for immediate quarantine of contacts was lost for Mubende and Kassanda,” Museveni said, noting the first suspected cases were registered on 6 September, two weeks before authorities declared the outbreak. This was not the case for Kampala. Knowledge of the threat allowed health authorities to be on reactive footing, and respond quickly to isolate infected people and their contacts. Today, over 300 contacts remain under institutional quarantine overseen by the Ministry of Health. Vaccine Trials Are Underway WHO Africa Director Dr Matshidiso Moeti visited Kassanda and Mubende earlier this month to coordinate with Ugandan health authorities and other international partners in responding to the outbreak. There is currently no known vaccine for the Sudan strain of Ebola responsible for the Ugandan outbreak. But the outbreak presents a unique opportunity to bridge this treatment gap, and a series of trials have been set in motion with the aim of minimizing hospitalisations and deaths. A coalition of organizations including CEPI, Gavi, the World Health Organization and Ugandan health authorities are deploying three vaccine candidates to about 3,000 people who have been in contact with Ebola patients. “As we speak, the government of Uganda is finalizing the regulatory approvals,” Africa CDC Director Dr Ahmed Ogwell told CNN. If any of the candidates can succeed, authorities are hopeful this will be the last outbreak Uganda faces without medical defenses. “By embedding research at the heart of the outbreak response, we can achieve two goals,” the WHO said in a statement. “Evaluate potentially efficacious candidate vaccines, potentially contribute to end this outbreak, and protect populations at risk in the future.” Image Credits: WHO, WHO, WHO. Parliamentarians Seek to Address Post-COVID ‘Tsunami’ of Health System Problems 28/11/2022 Maayan Hoffman UNITE president Ricardo Leite (fourth from right) and MPs at the World Health Summit. “There is this tsunami that is happening after the earthquake that was COVID-19 that is now coming to shore and hitting health systems across the world,” said Ricardo Baptista Leite, president and founder of UNITE, a global network of parliamentarians committed to addressing global health challenges. “The pandemic also led to a huge economic crisis and even poor countries in the global South, who might have been less affected by the pandemic, are going to pay a very severe price due to economic consequences that will lead to challenges in responding to the health needs of those countries,” he said. A week before his organization brings together hundreds of parliamentarians from around the world to discuss the most pressing issues in public health at a global summit, the Portuguese MP, who collaborates closely with the World Health Organization (WHO), warned Health Policy Watch of the need to take swift and collective action before the next pandemic. “This is the moment when international institutions and governments need to step up their game and tackle the global health crisis,” Leite said. “We must double up our efforts to make sure we are better equipped in the future and can respond to health needs.” Leite is a long-time global health advocate. He is also a trained medical doctor in infectious diseases and heads the Public Health department at Católica University of Portugal. False sense of security He told Health Policy Watch that whenever the world has felt “capable of controlling infectious disease, we create a false sense of security that we can lower our guard. Whenever we lower our guard, infectious diseases come back with a vengeance.” This can be seen throughout history with multiple pandemics over the centuries, but also in this century with the emergence of antibiotics and the belief that with penicillin we could control infections – a belief now being called into question with the development of antibiotic-resistant bacteria. Antibiotic-resistant bacteria are responsible for the deaths of some 700,000 people each year – with scientists predicting that these infections could kill more people than cancer by 2050. The pandemic has set back the fight against many diseases by years. Take HIV/AIDS. In December 2020, UNAIDS released its 95-95-95 targets, calling for 95% of all people living with HIV to know their HIV status, 95% of all people with diagnosed HIV infection to receive sustained antiretroviral therapy and 95% of all people receiving antiretroviral therapy to have viral suppression by 2025. But during COVID-19, in many countries, measurement of these goals ceased altogether. Where tracking continued, in some cases, diagnoses were slower. “HIV is an interesting proxy for all infectious and communicable diseases out there,” Leite said. In addition, COVID-19 led to a rise in people being diagnosed with late-stage cancer, an increase in cases related to chronic diseases due to people being kept away from health systems, and a spike in mental illness globally. “Pandemics are a strong demonstration of the case that infectious diseases can undermine our efforts toward prosperity for all,” Leite said. He added that during his time as a medical volunteer in Ukraine he saw a huge rise in multi-resistant and extremely resistant tuberculosis in the region. Leite predicted that as the war continues, it will be almost impossible not to see the TB spillover into neighboring countries and then across the world. “There has to be a clear understanding from the world that dealing with infectious diseases is not only something recommended but is a prerequisite for economic and social development worldwide,” he said. The role of parliamentarians WHO parliamentarian session during the World Health Summit (UNITE) Part of the solution is getting parliamentarians around the table, according to Leite. In 2017, the United Nations passed a resolution on the nexus of global health and foreign policy, encouraging a multi-stakeholder approach to achieve universal health coverage. “The voice of parliamentarians was not part of the discussion,” Leite said. “One cannot expect to build a global health architecture or move forward science-based policy making if we do not keep those who write policy in the loop. We cannot make sure money gets where it needs to if we do not include those that make and approve budgets in parliaments.” While he admitted that UNITE is not a “silver bullet,” he said it is a valuable tool for bringing parliamentarians from more than 90 countries together to share experiences and learn how they can best bring their own country toward a more sustainable future. “The first step was to get the conversation going. The second was to develop regional leadership. We now have 10 regional chapters, each led by an MP or former MP. Then we developed policy hubs, specialized teams that focus on specific policy areas, so they can drill down on concrete policymaking in key areas,” Leite explained. “We empower policymakers to be leaders for change in their own countries.” UNITE’s three priorities At its founding, UNITE was focused solely on issues of infectious diseases, but COVID-19 led it to change its mandate over the summer of 2022 and the organization is now focused more generally on global health matters. “The pandemic has demonstrated that global health issues and infectious diseases go hand in hand,” Leite told Health Policy Watch. “We cannot solve many challenges related to infectious disease, which were the basis of our work in the first years, without addressing all the other global health challenges out there.” UNITE is now taking a three-priority approach, focusing on pandemic prevention preparedness and response; the future of health systems; and health as a human right. The group signed a memorandum of understanding recently with WHO to work together on these pillars and supply parliamentary feedback and insight to support WHO’s related efforts. Next week: UNITE Global Summit From 5-7 December, UNITE will host its global summit in Lisbon, bringing together its parliamentarians and leaders from the global health community to expand and forge new partnerships. Members of the lawmaking, civil society, medical and academic communities will meet to talk about what they feel are the most pressing issues on the global health agenda. Another priority that UNITE is bringing to the forefront of the parliamentarian agenda is the use of digital health to promote universal health coverage. “In the last few months with the creation of the digital health hub, parliamentarians were able to discuss with other stakeholders how to build the right frameworks and increase budgets to implement digital health transformation that can promote access to millions,” Leite said. Finally, Leite added that with its new direction in mind, UNITE members would try to answer three questions during the event: What progress have we made so far during the UN’s Sustainable Development Goals period? What have we learned to help us make even more progress by 2030? What is the role of parliamentarians in helping drive that progress? MPs and the pandemic treaty Session on the pandemic treaty at the World Health Summit. In the past, parliamentary involvement has helped achieve public health goals. In Portugal, Leite cited an example from 22 years ago when the parliament decided to decriminalize the use of drugs. “This was not making drug use legal, but now no one goes to jail for using drugs,” he explained. “We stopped looking at people who use drugs as criminals but instead as people who potentially had a health challenge that needed to be dealt with.” Instead of jail time, drug abusers receive harm reduction and other social and health services. When the legislation was passed, around 1% of the Portuguese population used heroin. Since then, Leite said, the numbers have dropped dramatically. Drug-related crime is down, and new HIV cases tied to drug use have fallen from as high as 60% to only 2%. “The fact that we provided harm reduction services and shifted from a criminal perspective to a health perspective was transformative in achieving better health outcomes and partially solving the drug problem in Portugal,” Leite said. A more recent example was the decision by the African Union to set up the African Medicines Agency, which will become a regulatory body for access to health technologies in the continent and creates a common standard of rules based on science to ensure the safety of citizens in the region. Leite equated the AMA to the European Medicines Agency. UNITE founder Ricardo Baptista Leite and Dr Tedros at signing of an MOU between the two organizations. Moving forward, UNITE Parliamentarians will play a key role in finalizing WHO’s pandemic treaty, aimed at guiding the global response to pandemics. “The regulations that were in place when COVID-19 hit were not sufficient or were not properly enforced,” Leite said. He added that “there is a lack of acknowledgement and awareness among most citizens and many parliamentarians around the world that these negotiations are taking place. We need parliamentarians involved early on. If governments agree on a document, parliaments must ratify it.” In an era of “polarized politics and fake news,” he said that if parliamentarians are not part of the process there is a risk that such a treaty would not be ratified, and the world would be left exactly where it was in December 2019. “Everyone is committed to finding a balanced approach to what we hope will create a toolkit from a policy perspective that can help the world be better prepared to detect outbreaks early and lock them down before they transform into pandemics,” Leite said. “It is not acceptable that 100 years after the Spanish flu we saw so many countries react to COVID-19 the same way as they did 100 years before,” he continued. “We have an obligation to be better prepared to constrain any risk, to keep as many people as possible safe. This is a prerequisite for economic and social development. “We need to keep peace and prosperity as our main goal,” Leite concluded. Image Credits: UNITE. There are a Wide Range of Treatments for Obesity, but Many People Cannot Afford Care 28/11/2022 Editorial team A special project celebrating the fifth anniversary of “Our Views, Our Voices” | Learn more Amber Huett-Garcia at her high and low weight from 2008 to 2021. Amber Huett-Garcia is trying to drive global change for affordable treatment, care and support for individuals suffering from obesity. A resident of the United States and born into a family suffering from generational obesity, she weighed 101 pounds by the time she was in kindergarten. As an adult, she lost 245 pounds and reduced her BMI from 69 to 24. She did it through a combination of treatments, including bariatric surgery, medication and mental health care. While Huett-Garcia is lucky to have a comprehensive employer-based healthcare plan, she recognizes that many people in the United States do not. And for those who are obese, the cost of care can be enormous. The cost of obesity Obesity costs the US healthcare system nearly $173 billion a year, according to the latest report by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Personal medical costs for people living with obesity are close to $1,500 more per year than those who do not suffer from the condition. For people living with obesity and who are on Medicare, few treatments are covered. For example, Medicare has zero anti-obesity medication coverage. Moreover, roughly 40% of the US population lacks coverage for bariatric surgery for obesity, which has been proven most effective. “Affordable healthcare is a human right,” Huett-Garcia said. Amber Huett-Garcia taking part in the “Stop Weight Bias” campaign. She has called for action to ensure that insurance plans pay for the treatment of a wider range of conditions, including obesity, by covering comprehensive science-based interventions. She has also asked that decision-makers within healthcare systems listen and amplify the voices of people with NCDs. “The lives of people living with NCDs depend on it,” she concluded. Read Amber Huett-Garcia’s full NCD Diary. Read previous post. Image Credits: Courtesy of NCD Alliance. Posts navigation Older postsNewer posts This site uses cookies to help give you the best experience on our website. Cookies enable us to collect information that helps us personalise your experience and improve the functionality and performance of our site. By continuing to read our website, we assume you agree to this, otherwise you can adjust your browser settings. Please read our cookie and Privacy Policy. Our Cookies and Privacy Policy Loading Comments... You must be logged in to post a comment.
‘Zero-COVID’ Protestors Win Concessions But Expert Urges China to Increase ‘Hybrid Immunity’ Before Abandoning Policy 28/11/2022 Kerry Cullinan University professors stand between protestors and police at Fudan University in China. Almost three years of harsh lockdowns, enforced quarantines in state facilities and daily testing have tried the patience of many Chinese people, who since Friday have taken to the streets from Shanghai and Nanjing in the east, to central Chengdu and Wuhan and Urumqi and Korla in the north and west. While scores of people have been arrested, protestors have also won some concessions. In Urumqi, where four million people have been in lockdown for over 100 days, officials announced on Monday that it would allow people to travel on buses to do errands and parcel deliveries would resume. Meanwhile, Beijing officials also announced on Sunday that lockdowns of residential areas would not be enforced for longer than 24 hours. These are small indications that Chinese leader Xi Jinping’s “zero-COVID” policy is becoming increasingly impossible to enforce in the face of people’s growing anger and desperation. Two weeks ago, China’s State Council cut compulsory quarantine in a state facility for international visitors and the close contacts of people with COVID from seven to five days, with a further three days at home. It also did away with restrictions on secondary contacts. But a surge in COVID cases in Beijing was followed swiftly by lockdowns, school and restaurant closures, dampening hopes that the country was quietly abandoning the zero-COVID approach. Journalist arrested, assaulted China is trying to both quell and downplay the protests. On Monday, there was increased military and police deployment at sites of weekend protests, and BBC reporter Ed Lawrence was arrested and reportedly assaulted in police custody in Shanghai while reporting on the protests. BBC Statement on Ed Lawrence pic.twitter.com/wedDetCtpF — BBC News Press Team (@BBCNewsPR) November 27, 2022 The weekend protests were sparked by the deaths of 10 people in a fire in an apartment building in Urumqi, the capital of Xinjiang, on Thursday. The screams of people trapped in the burning building last Thursday were captured on social media amid reports that apartment doors had been closed from the outside to enforce the city’s lockdown. Firefighters took more than three hours to stop the fire as cars blocked their path – many with flat batteries after months of not being driven. @renzhiqiang2 ♬ 原聲 – renzhiqiang2 Sealing the doors of COVID-19 contacts is reported to be a common occurrence in China as part of the country’s enforced lockdowns. 用木棍封门,显然还不够。建议官方用钢筋焊死,同时把门上通电,并请官方派两名军人在门外架上机枪。 生我九州者,虽远必封! pic.twitter.com/ajHSk7Jk7Z — 领导干部 (@808Penny) August 30, 2022 Outrage at the deaths in Urumqi led to vigils and protests being arranged in Shanghai, Xi’an, Chongqing and Nanjing, as well as various university campuses, and people turned up in their thousands at some of the protests. Amid chants of ‘Lift lockdown’, ‘No PCR test’ and “We want freedom’, anti-Xi and anti-Communist Party chanting could also be heard. Many people carried blank sheets of white paper to symbolise government censorship, but reports on the protests on Weibo, the Chinese social media platform, were short-lived. Chinese protestors hold blank papers to signify censorship. Back in May, WHO Secretary-General Dr Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus told a media briefing that China’s strategy was no longer sustainable in the face of the more infectious but less lethal Omicron. “When we talk about the zero-COVID strategy, we don’t think that it’s sustainable, considering the behaviour of the virus now and what we anticipate in the future,” said Tedros, prompting a rebuke from Chinese officials Aside from its zero-COVID policy, China’s vaccines, Sinopharm and Coronavac, are only about 60% effective against severe infection in comparison to over 90% protection offered by mRNA vaccines. China still to reckon with COVID infections However, it is possible that China will still have its reckoning with COVID as its weary citizens resist further controls and the highly infectious virus spreads through a population with little immunity. Global data analysis group Airfinity estimates that 1.3 and 2.1 million lives could be at risk if China lifts its zero-COVID policy “given low vaccination and booster rates as well as a lack of hybrid immunity”. It based its risk analysis on the cumulative peak cases and deaths from Hong Kong’s BA.1 wave as a proxy for mainland China. “Mainland China has very low levels of immunity across its population. Its citizens were vaccinated with domestically produced jabs Sinovac and Sinopharm which have been proven to have significantly lower efficacy and provide less protection against infection and death,” Airfinity said in a statement on Monday. “This vaccine-induced immunity has waned over time and with low booster uptake and no natural infections, the population is more susceptible to severe disease. China’s current booster uptake is 40%, whilst Hong Kong’s primary series uptake was 34% back in February 2022 when it saw a large spike in cases due to the BA.1 omicron variant,” said Airfinity. Dr Louise Blair, Airfinity’s head of vaccines and epidemiology, called on China to “ramp up vaccinations to raise immunity in order to lift its zero-COVID policy, especially given how large its elderly population is”. Blair said that China needs “hybrid immunity” from both vaccinations and infections to ensure “much less impactful and deadly COVID-19 waves”. Localised protests Prior to the national weekend protests, there have been intense local protests, particularly at the Foxconn facility in Zhengzhou, which makes 70% of the Apple’s iPhones. Workers work long shifts and usually stay in massive factory dormitories that can house up to 300,000 people. But after a small COVID outbreak in the city in October, Foxconn closed the dining halls and introduced “closed loop” production to cut workers’ contact with the outside world to meet production demands for the launch of the iPhone14. Tesla and other factories have used this approach during lockdowns in Shanghai in March. But Foxconn workers started to panic in fear of being forcibly quarantined there, and have clashed a number of times with police. Numerous reports of poor treatment and neglect at state quarantine facilities have also leaked out in public, alongside videos of small children removed from COVID-exposed parents being forced to fend for themselves in such facilities. 上海儿童集中营。 pic.twitter.com/BNTbOPXBLD — 方舟子 (@fangshimin) April 2, 2022 Image Credits: Twitter. Uganda Extends Lockdowns in Bid to End Ebola Outbreak 28/11/2022 Stefan Anderson 68 days and 52 deaths into Uganda’s Ebola outbreak, authorities are hopeful the spread of the virus has been contained. Uganda’s President Yoweri Museveni has extended quarantine measures in the two districts at the epicentre of the country’s Ebola epidemic for another 21 days, citing the need to protect gains in the fight against the virus. This marks the third renewal of lockdowns in Kassanda and Mubende, and authorities are hopeful it will be the last. Movement in and out of the districts was first restricted on 15 October, and renewed for another 21 days on 5 November. The measures include a curfew and the closure of social spaces like churches, bars and markets. “It may be too early to celebrate success, but overall, I have been briefed that the picture is good,” Museveni said in a televised address delivered by vice-president Jessica Alupo. While the situation is “still fragile”, Museveni said Ugandan health authorities are “very optimistic” that the outbreak will end “in the coming month.” The government’s optimism is buoyed by Uganda’s continued progress in stamping out the outbreak. Three districts have completed over 42 days since the last case of Ebola was detected, while six districts – including the epicentres of Kassanda and Mubende as well as the capital, Kampala – remain in “follow-up” protocols. The virus has so far claimed 56 lives, while another 22 probable Ebola deaths were registered before the government issued its official declaration of the outbreak on 20 September. “If we open now and a case appears, we will have destroyed all the gains we have made in this war,” Museveni said. “Our healthcare workers will continue to do all it takes to save lives and bring the epidemic to an end.” Full reopening if the 21-day mark is reached With numbers dropping, bed occupancy rates within the past 24 hours stood at just 27.9% in Mubende isolation units. The government’s decision to extend lockdowns by 21 days is based on the incubation period of Ebola. The three-week mark is a key indicator of whether transmission has been stopped. Mid-way through November, Mubende appeared to be in the clear. The district had gone 13 days without reporting a new case. But on day 14, a 23-year-old medical student with links to previous cases was diagnosed with the virus. “Without completing 21 days, as we saw with Mubende, a case can pop up anywhere,” the President said. “It is important that we complete the entire cycle.” Kassanda has now reached 15 days since reporting a new case, while Mubende has not registered a confirmed case for 14 days. If both districts hold on for another week, Uganda’s fifth deadly encounter with the Sudan strain of Ebola may come to a swift end. “We are relying on you to cooperate and bring this epidemic to an end,” the President told residents of Kassanda and Mubende, noting their commitment and sacrifice thus far. “If there is no case by the end of the 21-day period, we will re-open fully.” Threat of urban transmission avoided Ebola’s invasion of Uganda’s Gulu municipality and its slum-like camps for internally displaced persons in 2000 was the cause of the deadliest Ebola epidemic in the country’s history. When six school children were diagnosed with Ebola in Kampala in late October, fears of the virus embedding itself in the capital spiked. On paper, Ebola’s mortality rate of up to 90% makes the virus easy to contain. Museveni also noted that as a virus transferred through contact and bodily fluids, Ebola, despite its “devastating nature”, is far easier to control than airborne threats like COVID-19. But if allowed to embed itself in densely populated areas, things can quickly spiral out of control. “If we had allowed the escalation of the outbreak into Kampala, the consequences would have been bad, including possible exportation to our African brothers in neighbouring countries,” Museveni said. Despite calls from doctors and health advocates to lockdown the capital earlier this month, Museveni and Health Minister Jane Ruth Aceng elected not to bow to the pressure. So far, their decision appears to be validated. “The opportunity for immediate quarantine of contacts was lost for Mubende and Kassanda,” Museveni said, noting the first suspected cases were registered on 6 September, two weeks before authorities declared the outbreak. This was not the case for Kampala. Knowledge of the threat allowed health authorities to be on reactive footing, and respond quickly to isolate infected people and their contacts. Today, over 300 contacts remain under institutional quarantine overseen by the Ministry of Health. Vaccine Trials Are Underway WHO Africa Director Dr Matshidiso Moeti visited Kassanda and Mubende earlier this month to coordinate with Ugandan health authorities and other international partners in responding to the outbreak. There is currently no known vaccine for the Sudan strain of Ebola responsible for the Ugandan outbreak. But the outbreak presents a unique opportunity to bridge this treatment gap, and a series of trials have been set in motion with the aim of minimizing hospitalisations and deaths. A coalition of organizations including CEPI, Gavi, the World Health Organization and Ugandan health authorities are deploying three vaccine candidates to about 3,000 people who have been in contact with Ebola patients. “As we speak, the government of Uganda is finalizing the regulatory approvals,” Africa CDC Director Dr Ahmed Ogwell told CNN. If any of the candidates can succeed, authorities are hopeful this will be the last outbreak Uganda faces without medical defenses. “By embedding research at the heart of the outbreak response, we can achieve two goals,” the WHO said in a statement. “Evaluate potentially efficacious candidate vaccines, potentially contribute to end this outbreak, and protect populations at risk in the future.” Image Credits: WHO, WHO, WHO. Parliamentarians Seek to Address Post-COVID ‘Tsunami’ of Health System Problems 28/11/2022 Maayan Hoffman UNITE president Ricardo Leite (fourth from right) and MPs at the World Health Summit. “There is this tsunami that is happening after the earthquake that was COVID-19 that is now coming to shore and hitting health systems across the world,” said Ricardo Baptista Leite, president and founder of UNITE, a global network of parliamentarians committed to addressing global health challenges. “The pandemic also led to a huge economic crisis and even poor countries in the global South, who might have been less affected by the pandemic, are going to pay a very severe price due to economic consequences that will lead to challenges in responding to the health needs of those countries,” he said. A week before his organization brings together hundreds of parliamentarians from around the world to discuss the most pressing issues in public health at a global summit, the Portuguese MP, who collaborates closely with the World Health Organization (WHO), warned Health Policy Watch of the need to take swift and collective action before the next pandemic. “This is the moment when international institutions and governments need to step up their game and tackle the global health crisis,” Leite said. “We must double up our efforts to make sure we are better equipped in the future and can respond to health needs.” Leite is a long-time global health advocate. He is also a trained medical doctor in infectious diseases and heads the Public Health department at Católica University of Portugal. False sense of security He told Health Policy Watch that whenever the world has felt “capable of controlling infectious disease, we create a false sense of security that we can lower our guard. Whenever we lower our guard, infectious diseases come back with a vengeance.” This can be seen throughout history with multiple pandemics over the centuries, but also in this century with the emergence of antibiotics and the belief that with penicillin we could control infections – a belief now being called into question with the development of antibiotic-resistant bacteria. Antibiotic-resistant bacteria are responsible for the deaths of some 700,000 people each year – with scientists predicting that these infections could kill more people than cancer by 2050. The pandemic has set back the fight against many diseases by years. Take HIV/AIDS. In December 2020, UNAIDS released its 95-95-95 targets, calling for 95% of all people living with HIV to know their HIV status, 95% of all people with diagnosed HIV infection to receive sustained antiretroviral therapy and 95% of all people receiving antiretroviral therapy to have viral suppression by 2025. But during COVID-19, in many countries, measurement of these goals ceased altogether. Where tracking continued, in some cases, diagnoses were slower. “HIV is an interesting proxy for all infectious and communicable diseases out there,” Leite said. In addition, COVID-19 led to a rise in people being diagnosed with late-stage cancer, an increase in cases related to chronic diseases due to people being kept away from health systems, and a spike in mental illness globally. “Pandemics are a strong demonstration of the case that infectious diseases can undermine our efforts toward prosperity for all,” Leite said. He added that during his time as a medical volunteer in Ukraine he saw a huge rise in multi-resistant and extremely resistant tuberculosis in the region. Leite predicted that as the war continues, it will be almost impossible not to see the TB spillover into neighboring countries and then across the world. “There has to be a clear understanding from the world that dealing with infectious diseases is not only something recommended but is a prerequisite for economic and social development worldwide,” he said. The role of parliamentarians WHO parliamentarian session during the World Health Summit (UNITE) Part of the solution is getting parliamentarians around the table, according to Leite. In 2017, the United Nations passed a resolution on the nexus of global health and foreign policy, encouraging a multi-stakeholder approach to achieve universal health coverage. “The voice of parliamentarians was not part of the discussion,” Leite said. “One cannot expect to build a global health architecture or move forward science-based policy making if we do not keep those who write policy in the loop. We cannot make sure money gets where it needs to if we do not include those that make and approve budgets in parliaments.” While he admitted that UNITE is not a “silver bullet,” he said it is a valuable tool for bringing parliamentarians from more than 90 countries together to share experiences and learn how they can best bring their own country toward a more sustainable future. “The first step was to get the conversation going. The second was to develop regional leadership. We now have 10 regional chapters, each led by an MP or former MP. Then we developed policy hubs, specialized teams that focus on specific policy areas, so they can drill down on concrete policymaking in key areas,” Leite explained. “We empower policymakers to be leaders for change in their own countries.” UNITE’s three priorities At its founding, UNITE was focused solely on issues of infectious diseases, but COVID-19 led it to change its mandate over the summer of 2022 and the organization is now focused more generally on global health matters. “The pandemic has demonstrated that global health issues and infectious diseases go hand in hand,” Leite told Health Policy Watch. “We cannot solve many challenges related to infectious disease, which were the basis of our work in the first years, without addressing all the other global health challenges out there.” UNITE is now taking a three-priority approach, focusing on pandemic prevention preparedness and response; the future of health systems; and health as a human right. The group signed a memorandum of understanding recently with WHO to work together on these pillars and supply parliamentary feedback and insight to support WHO’s related efforts. Next week: UNITE Global Summit From 5-7 December, UNITE will host its global summit in Lisbon, bringing together its parliamentarians and leaders from the global health community to expand and forge new partnerships. Members of the lawmaking, civil society, medical and academic communities will meet to talk about what they feel are the most pressing issues on the global health agenda. Another priority that UNITE is bringing to the forefront of the parliamentarian agenda is the use of digital health to promote universal health coverage. “In the last few months with the creation of the digital health hub, parliamentarians were able to discuss with other stakeholders how to build the right frameworks and increase budgets to implement digital health transformation that can promote access to millions,” Leite said. Finally, Leite added that with its new direction in mind, UNITE members would try to answer three questions during the event: What progress have we made so far during the UN’s Sustainable Development Goals period? What have we learned to help us make even more progress by 2030? What is the role of parliamentarians in helping drive that progress? MPs and the pandemic treaty Session on the pandemic treaty at the World Health Summit. In the past, parliamentary involvement has helped achieve public health goals. In Portugal, Leite cited an example from 22 years ago when the parliament decided to decriminalize the use of drugs. “This was not making drug use legal, but now no one goes to jail for using drugs,” he explained. “We stopped looking at people who use drugs as criminals but instead as people who potentially had a health challenge that needed to be dealt with.” Instead of jail time, drug abusers receive harm reduction and other social and health services. When the legislation was passed, around 1% of the Portuguese population used heroin. Since then, Leite said, the numbers have dropped dramatically. Drug-related crime is down, and new HIV cases tied to drug use have fallen from as high as 60% to only 2%. “The fact that we provided harm reduction services and shifted from a criminal perspective to a health perspective was transformative in achieving better health outcomes and partially solving the drug problem in Portugal,” Leite said. A more recent example was the decision by the African Union to set up the African Medicines Agency, which will become a regulatory body for access to health technologies in the continent and creates a common standard of rules based on science to ensure the safety of citizens in the region. Leite equated the AMA to the European Medicines Agency. UNITE founder Ricardo Baptista Leite and Dr Tedros at signing of an MOU between the two organizations. Moving forward, UNITE Parliamentarians will play a key role in finalizing WHO’s pandemic treaty, aimed at guiding the global response to pandemics. “The regulations that were in place when COVID-19 hit were not sufficient or were not properly enforced,” Leite said. He added that “there is a lack of acknowledgement and awareness among most citizens and many parliamentarians around the world that these negotiations are taking place. We need parliamentarians involved early on. If governments agree on a document, parliaments must ratify it.” In an era of “polarized politics and fake news,” he said that if parliamentarians are not part of the process there is a risk that such a treaty would not be ratified, and the world would be left exactly where it was in December 2019. “Everyone is committed to finding a balanced approach to what we hope will create a toolkit from a policy perspective that can help the world be better prepared to detect outbreaks early and lock them down before they transform into pandemics,” Leite said. “It is not acceptable that 100 years after the Spanish flu we saw so many countries react to COVID-19 the same way as they did 100 years before,” he continued. “We have an obligation to be better prepared to constrain any risk, to keep as many people as possible safe. This is a prerequisite for economic and social development. “We need to keep peace and prosperity as our main goal,” Leite concluded. Image Credits: UNITE. There are a Wide Range of Treatments for Obesity, but Many People Cannot Afford Care 28/11/2022 Editorial team A special project celebrating the fifth anniversary of “Our Views, Our Voices” | Learn more Amber Huett-Garcia at her high and low weight from 2008 to 2021. Amber Huett-Garcia is trying to drive global change for affordable treatment, care and support for individuals suffering from obesity. A resident of the United States and born into a family suffering from generational obesity, she weighed 101 pounds by the time she was in kindergarten. As an adult, she lost 245 pounds and reduced her BMI from 69 to 24. She did it through a combination of treatments, including bariatric surgery, medication and mental health care. While Huett-Garcia is lucky to have a comprehensive employer-based healthcare plan, she recognizes that many people in the United States do not. And for those who are obese, the cost of care can be enormous. The cost of obesity Obesity costs the US healthcare system nearly $173 billion a year, according to the latest report by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Personal medical costs for people living with obesity are close to $1,500 more per year than those who do not suffer from the condition. For people living with obesity and who are on Medicare, few treatments are covered. For example, Medicare has zero anti-obesity medication coverage. Moreover, roughly 40% of the US population lacks coverage for bariatric surgery for obesity, which has been proven most effective. “Affordable healthcare is a human right,” Huett-Garcia said. Amber Huett-Garcia taking part in the “Stop Weight Bias” campaign. She has called for action to ensure that insurance plans pay for the treatment of a wider range of conditions, including obesity, by covering comprehensive science-based interventions. She has also asked that decision-makers within healthcare systems listen and amplify the voices of people with NCDs. “The lives of people living with NCDs depend on it,” she concluded. Read Amber Huett-Garcia’s full NCD Diary. Read previous post. Image Credits: Courtesy of NCD Alliance. Posts navigation Older postsNewer posts This site uses cookies to help give you the best experience on our website. Cookies enable us to collect information that helps us personalise your experience and improve the functionality and performance of our site. By continuing to read our website, we assume you agree to this, otherwise you can adjust your browser settings. Please read our cookie and Privacy Policy. Our Cookies and Privacy Policy Loading Comments... You must be logged in to post a comment.
Uganda Extends Lockdowns in Bid to End Ebola Outbreak 28/11/2022 Stefan Anderson 68 days and 52 deaths into Uganda’s Ebola outbreak, authorities are hopeful the spread of the virus has been contained. Uganda’s President Yoweri Museveni has extended quarantine measures in the two districts at the epicentre of the country’s Ebola epidemic for another 21 days, citing the need to protect gains in the fight against the virus. This marks the third renewal of lockdowns in Kassanda and Mubende, and authorities are hopeful it will be the last. Movement in and out of the districts was first restricted on 15 October, and renewed for another 21 days on 5 November. The measures include a curfew and the closure of social spaces like churches, bars and markets. “It may be too early to celebrate success, but overall, I have been briefed that the picture is good,” Museveni said in a televised address delivered by vice-president Jessica Alupo. While the situation is “still fragile”, Museveni said Ugandan health authorities are “very optimistic” that the outbreak will end “in the coming month.” The government’s optimism is buoyed by Uganda’s continued progress in stamping out the outbreak. Three districts have completed over 42 days since the last case of Ebola was detected, while six districts – including the epicentres of Kassanda and Mubende as well as the capital, Kampala – remain in “follow-up” protocols. The virus has so far claimed 56 lives, while another 22 probable Ebola deaths were registered before the government issued its official declaration of the outbreak on 20 September. “If we open now and a case appears, we will have destroyed all the gains we have made in this war,” Museveni said. “Our healthcare workers will continue to do all it takes to save lives and bring the epidemic to an end.” Full reopening if the 21-day mark is reached With numbers dropping, bed occupancy rates within the past 24 hours stood at just 27.9% in Mubende isolation units. The government’s decision to extend lockdowns by 21 days is based on the incubation period of Ebola. The three-week mark is a key indicator of whether transmission has been stopped. Mid-way through November, Mubende appeared to be in the clear. The district had gone 13 days without reporting a new case. But on day 14, a 23-year-old medical student with links to previous cases was diagnosed with the virus. “Without completing 21 days, as we saw with Mubende, a case can pop up anywhere,” the President said. “It is important that we complete the entire cycle.” Kassanda has now reached 15 days since reporting a new case, while Mubende has not registered a confirmed case for 14 days. If both districts hold on for another week, Uganda’s fifth deadly encounter with the Sudan strain of Ebola may come to a swift end. “We are relying on you to cooperate and bring this epidemic to an end,” the President told residents of Kassanda and Mubende, noting their commitment and sacrifice thus far. “If there is no case by the end of the 21-day period, we will re-open fully.” Threat of urban transmission avoided Ebola’s invasion of Uganda’s Gulu municipality and its slum-like camps for internally displaced persons in 2000 was the cause of the deadliest Ebola epidemic in the country’s history. When six school children were diagnosed with Ebola in Kampala in late October, fears of the virus embedding itself in the capital spiked. On paper, Ebola’s mortality rate of up to 90% makes the virus easy to contain. Museveni also noted that as a virus transferred through contact and bodily fluids, Ebola, despite its “devastating nature”, is far easier to control than airborne threats like COVID-19. But if allowed to embed itself in densely populated areas, things can quickly spiral out of control. “If we had allowed the escalation of the outbreak into Kampala, the consequences would have been bad, including possible exportation to our African brothers in neighbouring countries,” Museveni said. Despite calls from doctors and health advocates to lockdown the capital earlier this month, Museveni and Health Minister Jane Ruth Aceng elected not to bow to the pressure. So far, their decision appears to be validated. “The opportunity for immediate quarantine of contacts was lost for Mubende and Kassanda,” Museveni said, noting the first suspected cases were registered on 6 September, two weeks before authorities declared the outbreak. This was not the case for Kampala. Knowledge of the threat allowed health authorities to be on reactive footing, and respond quickly to isolate infected people and their contacts. Today, over 300 contacts remain under institutional quarantine overseen by the Ministry of Health. Vaccine Trials Are Underway WHO Africa Director Dr Matshidiso Moeti visited Kassanda and Mubende earlier this month to coordinate with Ugandan health authorities and other international partners in responding to the outbreak. There is currently no known vaccine for the Sudan strain of Ebola responsible for the Ugandan outbreak. But the outbreak presents a unique opportunity to bridge this treatment gap, and a series of trials have been set in motion with the aim of minimizing hospitalisations and deaths. A coalition of organizations including CEPI, Gavi, the World Health Organization and Ugandan health authorities are deploying three vaccine candidates to about 3,000 people who have been in contact with Ebola patients. “As we speak, the government of Uganda is finalizing the regulatory approvals,” Africa CDC Director Dr Ahmed Ogwell told CNN. If any of the candidates can succeed, authorities are hopeful this will be the last outbreak Uganda faces without medical defenses. “By embedding research at the heart of the outbreak response, we can achieve two goals,” the WHO said in a statement. “Evaluate potentially efficacious candidate vaccines, potentially contribute to end this outbreak, and protect populations at risk in the future.” Image Credits: WHO, WHO, WHO. Parliamentarians Seek to Address Post-COVID ‘Tsunami’ of Health System Problems 28/11/2022 Maayan Hoffman UNITE president Ricardo Leite (fourth from right) and MPs at the World Health Summit. “There is this tsunami that is happening after the earthquake that was COVID-19 that is now coming to shore and hitting health systems across the world,” said Ricardo Baptista Leite, president and founder of UNITE, a global network of parliamentarians committed to addressing global health challenges. “The pandemic also led to a huge economic crisis and even poor countries in the global South, who might have been less affected by the pandemic, are going to pay a very severe price due to economic consequences that will lead to challenges in responding to the health needs of those countries,” he said. A week before his organization brings together hundreds of parliamentarians from around the world to discuss the most pressing issues in public health at a global summit, the Portuguese MP, who collaborates closely with the World Health Organization (WHO), warned Health Policy Watch of the need to take swift and collective action before the next pandemic. “This is the moment when international institutions and governments need to step up their game and tackle the global health crisis,” Leite said. “We must double up our efforts to make sure we are better equipped in the future and can respond to health needs.” Leite is a long-time global health advocate. He is also a trained medical doctor in infectious diseases and heads the Public Health department at Católica University of Portugal. False sense of security He told Health Policy Watch that whenever the world has felt “capable of controlling infectious disease, we create a false sense of security that we can lower our guard. Whenever we lower our guard, infectious diseases come back with a vengeance.” This can be seen throughout history with multiple pandemics over the centuries, but also in this century with the emergence of antibiotics and the belief that with penicillin we could control infections – a belief now being called into question with the development of antibiotic-resistant bacteria. Antibiotic-resistant bacteria are responsible for the deaths of some 700,000 people each year – with scientists predicting that these infections could kill more people than cancer by 2050. The pandemic has set back the fight against many diseases by years. Take HIV/AIDS. In December 2020, UNAIDS released its 95-95-95 targets, calling for 95% of all people living with HIV to know their HIV status, 95% of all people with diagnosed HIV infection to receive sustained antiretroviral therapy and 95% of all people receiving antiretroviral therapy to have viral suppression by 2025. But during COVID-19, in many countries, measurement of these goals ceased altogether. Where tracking continued, in some cases, diagnoses were slower. “HIV is an interesting proxy for all infectious and communicable diseases out there,” Leite said. In addition, COVID-19 led to a rise in people being diagnosed with late-stage cancer, an increase in cases related to chronic diseases due to people being kept away from health systems, and a spike in mental illness globally. “Pandemics are a strong demonstration of the case that infectious diseases can undermine our efforts toward prosperity for all,” Leite said. He added that during his time as a medical volunteer in Ukraine he saw a huge rise in multi-resistant and extremely resistant tuberculosis in the region. Leite predicted that as the war continues, it will be almost impossible not to see the TB spillover into neighboring countries and then across the world. “There has to be a clear understanding from the world that dealing with infectious diseases is not only something recommended but is a prerequisite for economic and social development worldwide,” he said. The role of parliamentarians WHO parliamentarian session during the World Health Summit (UNITE) Part of the solution is getting parliamentarians around the table, according to Leite. In 2017, the United Nations passed a resolution on the nexus of global health and foreign policy, encouraging a multi-stakeholder approach to achieve universal health coverage. “The voice of parliamentarians was not part of the discussion,” Leite said. “One cannot expect to build a global health architecture or move forward science-based policy making if we do not keep those who write policy in the loop. We cannot make sure money gets where it needs to if we do not include those that make and approve budgets in parliaments.” While he admitted that UNITE is not a “silver bullet,” he said it is a valuable tool for bringing parliamentarians from more than 90 countries together to share experiences and learn how they can best bring their own country toward a more sustainable future. “The first step was to get the conversation going. The second was to develop regional leadership. We now have 10 regional chapters, each led by an MP or former MP. Then we developed policy hubs, specialized teams that focus on specific policy areas, so they can drill down on concrete policymaking in key areas,” Leite explained. “We empower policymakers to be leaders for change in their own countries.” UNITE’s three priorities At its founding, UNITE was focused solely on issues of infectious diseases, but COVID-19 led it to change its mandate over the summer of 2022 and the organization is now focused more generally on global health matters. “The pandemic has demonstrated that global health issues and infectious diseases go hand in hand,” Leite told Health Policy Watch. “We cannot solve many challenges related to infectious disease, which were the basis of our work in the first years, without addressing all the other global health challenges out there.” UNITE is now taking a three-priority approach, focusing on pandemic prevention preparedness and response; the future of health systems; and health as a human right. The group signed a memorandum of understanding recently with WHO to work together on these pillars and supply parliamentary feedback and insight to support WHO’s related efforts. Next week: UNITE Global Summit From 5-7 December, UNITE will host its global summit in Lisbon, bringing together its parliamentarians and leaders from the global health community to expand and forge new partnerships. Members of the lawmaking, civil society, medical and academic communities will meet to talk about what they feel are the most pressing issues on the global health agenda. Another priority that UNITE is bringing to the forefront of the parliamentarian agenda is the use of digital health to promote universal health coverage. “In the last few months with the creation of the digital health hub, parliamentarians were able to discuss with other stakeholders how to build the right frameworks and increase budgets to implement digital health transformation that can promote access to millions,” Leite said. Finally, Leite added that with its new direction in mind, UNITE members would try to answer three questions during the event: What progress have we made so far during the UN’s Sustainable Development Goals period? What have we learned to help us make even more progress by 2030? What is the role of parliamentarians in helping drive that progress? MPs and the pandemic treaty Session on the pandemic treaty at the World Health Summit. In the past, parliamentary involvement has helped achieve public health goals. In Portugal, Leite cited an example from 22 years ago when the parliament decided to decriminalize the use of drugs. “This was not making drug use legal, but now no one goes to jail for using drugs,” he explained. “We stopped looking at people who use drugs as criminals but instead as people who potentially had a health challenge that needed to be dealt with.” Instead of jail time, drug abusers receive harm reduction and other social and health services. When the legislation was passed, around 1% of the Portuguese population used heroin. Since then, Leite said, the numbers have dropped dramatically. Drug-related crime is down, and new HIV cases tied to drug use have fallen from as high as 60% to only 2%. “The fact that we provided harm reduction services and shifted from a criminal perspective to a health perspective was transformative in achieving better health outcomes and partially solving the drug problem in Portugal,” Leite said. A more recent example was the decision by the African Union to set up the African Medicines Agency, which will become a regulatory body for access to health technologies in the continent and creates a common standard of rules based on science to ensure the safety of citizens in the region. Leite equated the AMA to the European Medicines Agency. UNITE founder Ricardo Baptista Leite and Dr Tedros at signing of an MOU between the two organizations. Moving forward, UNITE Parliamentarians will play a key role in finalizing WHO’s pandemic treaty, aimed at guiding the global response to pandemics. “The regulations that were in place when COVID-19 hit were not sufficient or were not properly enforced,” Leite said. He added that “there is a lack of acknowledgement and awareness among most citizens and many parliamentarians around the world that these negotiations are taking place. We need parliamentarians involved early on. If governments agree on a document, parliaments must ratify it.” In an era of “polarized politics and fake news,” he said that if parliamentarians are not part of the process there is a risk that such a treaty would not be ratified, and the world would be left exactly where it was in December 2019. “Everyone is committed to finding a balanced approach to what we hope will create a toolkit from a policy perspective that can help the world be better prepared to detect outbreaks early and lock them down before they transform into pandemics,” Leite said. “It is not acceptable that 100 years after the Spanish flu we saw so many countries react to COVID-19 the same way as they did 100 years before,” he continued. “We have an obligation to be better prepared to constrain any risk, to keep as many people as possible safe. This is a prerequisite for economic and social development. “We need to keep peace and prosperity as our main goal,” Leite concluded. Image Credits: UNITE. There are a Wide Range of Treatments for Obesity, but Many People Cannot Afford Care 28/11/2022 Editorial team A special project celebrating the fifth anniversary of “Our Views, Our Voices” | Learn more Amber Huett-Garcia at her high and low weight from 2008 to 2021. Amber Huett-Garcia is trying to drive global change for affordable treatment, care and support for individuals suffering from obesity. A resident of the United States and born into a family suffering from generational obesity, she weighed 101 pounds by the time she was in kindergarten. As an adult, she lost 245 pounds and reduced her BMI from 69 to 24. She did it through a combination of treatments, including bariatric surgery, medication and mental health care. While Huett-Garcia is lucky to have a comprehensive employer-based healthcare plan, she recognizes that many people in the United States do not. And for those who are obese, the cost of care can be enormous. The cost of obesity Obesity costs the US healthcare system nearly $173 billion a year, according to the latest report by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Personal medical costs for people living with obesity are close to $1,500 more per year than those who do not suffer from the condition. For people living with obesity and who are on Medicare, few treatments are covered. For example, Medicare has zero anti-obesity medication coverage. Moreover, roughly 40% of the US population lacks coverage for bariatric surgery for obesity, which has been proven most effective. “Affordable healthcare is a human right,” Huett-Garcia said. Amber Huett-Garcia taking part in the “Stop Weight Bias” campaign. She has called for action to ensure that insurance plans pay for the treatment of a wider range of conditions, including obesity, by covering comprehensive science-based interventions. She has also asked that decision-makers within healthcare systems listen and amplify the voices of people with NCDs. “The lives of people living with NCDs depend on it,” she concluded. Read Amber Huett-Garcia’s full NCD Diary. Read previous post. Image Credits: Courtesy of NCD Alliance. Posts navigation Older postsNewer posts This site uses cookies to help give you the best experience on our website. Cookies enable us to collect information that helps us personalise your experience and improve the functionality and performance of our site. By continuing to read our website, we assume you agree to this, otherwise you can adjust your browser settings. Please read our cookie and Privacy Policy. Our Cookies and Privacy Policy Loading Comments... You must be logged in to post a comment.
Parliamentarians Seek to Address Post-COVID ‘Tsunami’ of Health System Problems 28/11/2022 Maayan Hoffman UNITE president Ricardo Leite (fourth from right) and MPs at the World Health Summit. “There is this tsunami that is happening after the earthquake that was COVID-19 that is now coming to shore and hitting health systems across the world,” said Ricardo Baptista Leite, president and founder of UNITE, a global network of parliamentarians committed to addressing global health challenges. “The pandemic also led to a huge economic crisis and even poor countries in the global South, who might have been less affected by the pandemic, are going to pay a very severe price due to economic consequences that will lead to challenges in responding to the health needs of those countries,” he said. A week before his organization brings together hundreds of parliamentarians from around the world to discuss the most pressing issues in public health at a global summit, the Portuguese MP, who collaborates closely with the World Health Organization (WHO), warned Health Policy Watch of the need to take swift and collective action before the next pandemic. “This is the moment when international institutions and governments need to step up their game and tackle the global health crisis,” Leite said. “We must double up our efforts to make sure we are better equipped in the future and can respond to health needs.” Leite is a long-time global health advocate. He is also a trained medical doctor in infectious diseases and heads the Public Health department at Católica University of Portugal. False sense of security He told Health Policy Watch that whenever the world has felt “capable of controlling infectious disease, we create a false sense of security that we can lower our guard. Whenever we lower our guard, infectious diseases come back with a vengeance.” This can be seen throughout history with multiple pandemics over the centuries, but also in this century with the emergence of antibiotics and the belief that with penicillin we could control infections – a belief now being called into question with the development of antibiotic-resistant bacteria. Antibiotic-resistant bacteria are responsible for the deaths of some 700,000 people each year – with scientists predicting that these infections could kill more people than cancer by 2050. The pandemic has set back the fight against many diseases by years. Take HIV/AIDS. In December 2020, UNAIDS released its 95-95-95 targets, calling for 95% of all people living with HIV to know their HIV status, 95% of all people with diagnosed HIV infection to receive sustained antiretroviral therapy and 95% of all people receiving antiretroviral therapy to have viral suppression by 2025. But during COVID-19, in many countries, measurement of these goals ceased altogether. Where tracking continued, in some cases, diagnoses were slower. “HIV is an interesting proxy for all infectious and communicable diseases out there,” Leite said. In addition, COVID-19 led to a rise in people being diagnosed with late-stage cancer, an increase in cases related to chronic diseases due to people being kept away from health systems, and a spike in mental illness globally. “Pandemics are a strong demonstration of the case that infectious diseases can undermine our efforts toward prosperity for all,” Leite said. He added that during his time as a medical volunteer in Ukraine he saw a huge rise in multi-resistant and extremely resistant tuberculosis in the region. Leite predicted that as the war continues, it will be almost impossible not to see the TB spillover into neighboring countries and then across the world. “There has to be a clear understanding from the world that dealing with infectious diseases is not only something recommended but is a prerequisite for economic and social development worldwide,” he said. The role of parliamentarians WHO parliamentarian session during the World Health Summit (UNITE) Part of the solution is getting parliamentarians around the table, according to Leite. In 2017, the United Nations passed a resolution on the nexus of global health and foreign policy, encouraging a multi-stakeholder approach to achieve universal health coverage. “The voice of parliamentarians was not part of the discussion,” Leite said. “One cannot expect to build a global health architecture or move forward science-based policy making if we do not keep those who write policy in the loop. We cannot make sure money gets where it needs to if we do not include those that make and approve budgets in parliaments.” While he admitted that UNITE is not a “silver bullet,” he said it is a valuable tool for bringing parliamentarians from more than 90 countries together to share experiences and learn how they can best bring their own country toward a more sustainable future. “The first step was to get the conversation going. The second was to develop regional leadership. We now have 10 regional chapters, each led by an MP or former MP. Then we developed policy hubs, specialized teams that focus on specific policy areas, so they can drill down on concrete policymaking in key areas,” Leite explained. “We empower policymakers to be leaders for change in their own countries.” UNITE’s three priorities At its founding, UNITE was focused solely on issues of infectious diseases, but COVID-19 led it to change its mandate over the summer of 2022 and the organization is now focused more generally on global health matters. “The pandemic has demonstrated that global health issues and infectious diseases go hand in hand,” Leite told Health Policy Watch. “We cannot solve many challenges related to infectious disease, which were the basis of our work in the first years, without addressing all the other global health challenges out there.” UNITE is now taking a three-priority approach, focusing on pandemic prevention preparedness and response; the future of health systems; and health as a human right. The group signed a memorandum of understanding recently with WHO to work together on these pillars and supply parliamentary feedback and insight to support WHO’s related efforts. Next week: UNITE Global Summit From 5-7 December, UNITE will host its global summit in Lisbon, bringing together its parliamentarians and leaders from the global health community to expand and forge new partnerships. Members of the lawmaking, civil society, medical and academic communities will meet to talk about what they feel are the most pressing issues on the global health agenda. Another priority that UNITE is bringing to the forefront of the parliamentarian agenda is the use of digital health to promote universal health coverage. “In the last few months with the creation of the digital health hub, parliamentarians were able to discuss with other stakeholders how to build the right frameworks and increase budgets to implement digital health transformation that can promote access to millions,” Leite said. Finally, Leite added that with its new direction in mind, UNITE members would try to answer three questions during the event: What progress have we made so far during the UN’s Sustainable Development Goals period? What have we learned to help us make even more progress by 2030? What is the role of parliamentarians in helping drive that progress? MPs and the pandemic treaty Session on the pandemic treaty at the World Health Summit. In the past, parliamentary involvement has helped achieve public health goals. In Portugal, Leite cited an example from 22 years ago when the parliament decided to decriminalize the use of drugs. “This was not making drug use legal, but now no one goes to jail for using drugs,” he explained. “We stopped looking at people who use drugs as criminals but instead as people who potentially had a health challenge that needed to be dealt with.” Instead of jail time, drug abusers receive harm reduction and other social and health services. When the legislation was passed, around 1% of the Portuguese population used heroin. Since then, Leite said, the numbers have dropped dramatically. Drug-related crime is down, and new HIV cases tied to drug use have fallen from as high as 60% to only 2%. “The fact that we provided harm reduction services and shifted from a criminal perspective to a health perspective was transformative in achieving better health outcomes and partially solving the drug problem in Portugal,” Leite said. A more recent example was the decision by the African Union to set up the African Medicines Agency, which will become a regulatory body for access to health technologies in the continent and creates a common standard of rules based on science to ensure the safety of citizens in the region. Leite equated the AMA to the European Medicines Agency. UNITE founder Ricardo Baptista Leite and Dr Tedros at signing of an MOU between the two organizations. Moving forward, UNITE Parliamentarians will play a key role in finalizing WHO’s pandemic treaty, aimed at guiding the global response to pandemics. “The regulations that were in place when COVID-19 hit were not sufficient or were not properly enforced,” Leite said. He added that “there is a lack of acknowledgement and awareness among most citizens and many parliamentarians around the world that these negotiations are taking place. We need parliamentarians involved early on. If governments agree on a document, parliaments must ratify it.” In an era of “polarized politics and fake news,” he said that if parliamentarians are not part of the process there is a risk that such a treaty would not be ratified, and the world would be left exactly where it was in December 2019. “Everyone is committed to finding a balanced approach to what we hope will create a toolkit from a policy perspective that can help the world be better prepared to detect outbreaks early and lock them down before they transform into pandemics,” Leite said. “It is not acceptable that 100 years after the Spanish flu we saw so many countries react to COVID-19 the same way as they did 100 years before,” he continued. “We have an obligation to be better prepared to constrain any risk, to keep as many people as possible safe. This is a prerequisite for economic and social development. “We need to keep peace and prosperity as our main goal,” Leite concluded. Image Credits: UNITE. There are a Wide Range of Treatments for Obesity, but Many People Cannot Afford Care 28/11/2022 Editorial team A special project celebrating the fifth anniversary of “Our Views, Our Voices” | Learn more Amber Huett-Garcia at her high and low weight from 2008 to 2021. Amber Huett-Garcia is trying to drive global change for affordable treatment, care and support for individuals suffering from obesity. A resident of the United States and born into a family suffering from generational obesity, she weighed 101 pounds by the time she was in kindergarten. As an adult, she lost 245 pounds and reduced her BMI from 69 to 24. She did it through a combination of treatments, including bariatric surgery, medication and mental health care. While Huett-Garcia is lucky to have a comprehensive employer-based healthcare plan, she recognizes that many people in the United States do not. And for those who are obese, the cost of care can be enormous. The cost of obesity Obesity costs the US healthcare system nearly $173 billion a year, according to the latest report by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Personal medical costs for people living with obesity are close to $1,500 more per year than those who do not suffer from the condition. For people living with obesity and who are on Medicare, few treatments are covered. For example, Medicare has zero anti-obesity medication coverage. Moreover, roughly 40% of the US population lacks coverage for bariatric surgery for obesity, which has been proven most effective. “Affordable healthcare is a human right,” Huett-Garcia said. Amber Huett-Garcia taking part in the “Stop Weight Bias” campaign. She has called for action to ensure that insurance plans pay for the treatment of a wider range of conditions, including obesity, by covering comprehensive science-based interventions. She has also asked that decision-makers within healthcare systems listen and amplify the voices of people with NCDs. “The lives of people living with NCDs depend on it,” she concluded. Read Amber Huett-Garcia’s full NCD Diary. Read previous post. Image Credits: Courtesy of NCD Alliance. Posts navigation Older postsNewer posts This site uses cookies to help give you the best experience on our website. Cookies enable us to collect information that helps us personalise your experience and improve the functionality and performance of our site. By continuing to read our website, we assume you agree to this, otherwise you can adjust your browser settings. Please read our cookie and Privacy Policy. Our Cookies and Privacy Policy
There are a Wide Range of Treatments for Obesity, but Many People Cannot Afford Care 28/11/2022 Editorial team A special project celebrating the fifth anniversary of “Our Views, Our Voices” | Learn more Amber Huett-Garcia at her high and low weight from 2008 to 2021. Amber Huett-Garcia is trying to drive global change for affordable treatment, care and support for individuals suffering from obesity. A resident of the United States and born into a family suffering from generational obesity, she weighed 101 pounds by the time she was in kindergarten. As an adult, she lost 245 pounds and reduced her BMI from 69 to 24. She did it through a combination of treatments, including bariatric surgery, medication and mental health care. While Huett-Garcia is lucky to have a comprehensive employer-based healthcare plan, she recognizes that many people in the United States do not. And for those who are obese, the cost of care can be enormous. The cost of obesity Obesity costs the US healthcare system nearly $173 billion a year, according to the latest report by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Personal medical costs for people living with obesity are close to $1,500 more per year than those who do not suffer from the condition. For people living with obesity and who are on Medicare, few treatments are covered. For example, Medicare has zero anti-obesity medication coverage. Moreover, roughly 40% of the US population lacks coverage for bariatric surgery for obesity, which has been proven most effective. “Affordable healthcare is a human right,” Huett-Garcia said. Amber Huett-Garcia taking part in the “Stop Weight Bias” campaign. She has called for action to ensure that insurance plans pay for the treatment of a wider range of conditions, including obesity, by covering comprehensive science-based interventions. She has also asked that decision-makers within healthcare systems listen and amplify the voices of people with NCDs. “The lives of people living with NCDs depend on it,” she concluded. Read Amber Huett-Garcia’s full NCD Diary. Read previous post. Image Credits: Courtesy of NCD Alliance. Posts navigation Older postsNewer posts