APEC strengthens pandemic safeguards
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- Published: Wednesday, 02 March 2016 12:29
The 21 APEC member economies are increasing their efforts to ensure health security in the Asia-Pacific. It comes amid growing concerns about the risk of pandemics that threaten people and productivity across the world’s most populous region.
Senior health officials from APEC economies met in Lima recently to assess health system vulnerabilities and take forward new collaborative measures to address them. Focus is on improving safeguards at and behind borders as well as access to treatment for the region’s 3 billion people.
Dr Anibal Velasquez Valdivia, minister of health for Peru said: “Globalization has increased exposure to borderless health threats that jeopardize lives and the economic activities that drive growth. We are deepening policy cooperation in APEC as a mechanism for building health systems and establishing more robust defences against health emergencies region-wide.”
APEC economies are accelerating technical exchanges between them to enhance their health emergency preparedness, surveillance, response and recovery. These efforts are being advanced under the auspices of an APEC health policy framework known as Healthy Asia-Pacific 2020 and supported by coordination with international health organizations and the private sector.
“Ebola, MERS and now the Zika virus underscore the increasing risk of health emergencies that we all face,” said Dr Victor Cuba, chair of the APEC Health Working Group, which guides regional policy collaboration within the sector. “Adopting ‘health in all policies’ and a whole of government, society and region approach to health system development can help to make us safer and is at the core of APEC’s health agenda.”
Key aspects of the framework include the identification of health security gaps and risks; the development of infection prevention and control infrastructure; and control of antimicrobial resistance that undermines the prevention and treatment of infections caused by bacteria, parasites, viruses and fungi.
Public risk communication and rumour surveillance is a parallel focus, with APEC economies working to strengthen hotline responses to health emergencies.
“Constant epidemiological monitoring and faster responses are urgently needed to stave off crises and the potential for social and economic shocks,” concluded Dr Cuba. “Pooling knowledge and innovation to support these objectives and raise public awareness of evolving health issues can go a long way to achieving greater progress.”
Health Ministers and senior private sector representatives will meet in Lima in August to examine ways of building on regional policy advancements within the sector and decide the next step.
Source: APEC