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Reporting global health news Thomas Abraham JMSC 0042

Reporting global health news

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Reporting global health news. Thomas Abraham JMSC 0042. 3 important stories in the future. Bio terrorism Naturally occurring disease threats Newly emerging infectious disease. The 2001 anthrax attacks. Sept and October 2001- at least five letters with anthrax were mailed - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Reporting global health news

Reporting global health newsThomas Abraham

JMSC 0042

Page 2: Reporting global health news

3 important stories in the future Bio terrorism Naturally occurring disease threats Newly emerging infectious disease

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The 2001 anthrax attacks Sept and October 2001- at least five

letters with anthrax were mailed 3 to media organizations 2 to two US senators 22 people contracted anthrax 5 died

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Robert Stevens, photo editor

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“terrorists -- people who were either involved with, associated with, or are seeking to take advantage of the September 11 attacks -- are now poisoning our communities with anthrax.” John Ashcroft

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US intelligence believes Iraq has the technology and supplies of anthrax suitable for terrorist use. 'They aren't making this stuff in caves in Afghanistan,' the CIA source said. 'This is prima facie evidence of the involvement of a state intelligence agency. Maybe Iran has the capability. But it doesn't look likely politically. That leaves Iraq.’

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Bruce Ivens

http://www.fbi.gov/about-us/history/famous-cases/anthrax-amerithrax/amerithrax-investigation

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Smallpox as a weapon While anthrax was dangerous, smallpox

would be a lot more dangerous as a bio-weapon

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Egyptian Pharoah Ramses V , 1157 BC (photo WHO)

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Eradicated in 1979 after a global vaccination programme led by The WHO

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Smallpox virus repositories Official repositories: US CDC in Atlanta

and a Russian government lab, Koltsovo,

Siberia

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Through the Cold War period, both the United States and the Soviet Union developed bio-weapons. Other countries, including the UK, worked on bio weapons research

For more on this, go to an excellent PBS documentary “The Plague Wars

(www.pbs.org/wgbh/pages/frontline/shows/plague)

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Soviet defector Kantjan Alibekov (Ken Alibek)

Soviet Union had weaponised and stored 20 tons of plague, 20 tons of smallpox, and “hundreds of tons of anthrax”

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Dr Matthew Messelson,Harvard University

“we had developed tularemia as our standardized lethal weapon, Venezuelan equine encephalitis as our standardized non-lethal weapon. We had brucellosis weapons, we had anti-crop fungal weapons. We had a very impressive series of munitions, ready-to-go biological weapons”

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Many developing countries want smallpox stocks destroyed If the virus is released, or used as a

weapon, poorer countries will have no access to vaccines

The United States, Russia and other countries say they need to keep these stocks for research into vaccines and drugs, in case terrorists or “rogue states” get hold of the smallpox virus

This year, there was no agreement at the WHO- will be considered again in three years time.

A story worth following…

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Diseases as global political issues: the case of swine flu In April 2009, a new flu virus emerged

in Mexico and the United States, spreading rapidly.

Flu and public health experts were alarmed.

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Where politics comes in No country wants to be seen as

harboring disease No country wants to be seen as

managing a disease outbreak badly So they try and hide things..

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Disputes on how the disease should be handled China was criticised for putting

Mexican tourists under quarantine in a hotel in Beijing

In China and elsewhere, people were critical of the US for not putting in health checks at airports to see that sick people did not travel and spread the disease

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Disputes over vaccines and medicines Flu vaccine manufacturers are

concentrated in the richer countries (eg Glaxo Smith Kline in the UK, Sanofi Pasteur in France, Novartis in Switzerland, CSL in Australia).

Wealth countries had pre-booked vaccines, leaving little for other countries

WHO arranged for poorer countries to receive vaccines

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Environmental change and disease In 1997, giant forest fires broke out in

Kalimantan and Borneo in Indonesia

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1997 forest fires in Kalimantan and Borneo

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Haze reaches Malaysia, Singapore and Thailand

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1998. Perak, Malaysia An unusual disease breaks out among

people working in pig farms High fever, muscle pain, convulsions

and possible death Pigs also affected, and transmitted the

disease to humans 265 human cases, 105 deaths Eventually traced to a previously

unknown virus

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Malaysia flying foxes

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Emerging infectious diseases Population growth has led humans to expand to

new environments and come in contact with new pathogens

Social and cultural factors have contributed to the spread of new diseases

Globalization has led to the spread of new diseases

Most of them are zoonotic diseases= spreading from animals to humans

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Disease is global Viruses and bacteria do not recognise

human borders Disease fighting needs to be

coordinated globally- which is what the WHO does

The International Health Regulations Tensions between what national and

international, between governments and the international community