Pacific Health Summit Focuses On Pandemic Prevention And Preparedness
06/21/07
Everyone has heard the warnings and the
facts are self-evident. Within the next decade, the world could face a
deadly Pandemic that could easily kill millions, disrupt the normal flow of
life worldwide and create economic havoc. The question has shifted from
"what if?" to "what can we do?"
This year, the third annual meeting of the Pacific Health Summit, June
12-14 in Seattle, focuses on the threat of worldwide pandemics. Delegates
from public health, business, health care, and government from around the
Pacific Rim will meet in Seattle to discuss and set plans of action that
could help diminish, deter or defeat a potentially lethal pandemic.
"A global pandemic is the No. 1 health crisis facing our planet," said
Michael Birt, executive director of the Pacific Health Summit. "The good
news is that we can develop tangible and effective measures to respond to,
and possibly prevent, pandemics. Health-care and policy leaders from around
the Pacific Rim have come here to collaborate on these measures. We have
the right people here to do great things. It will be an effective and
influential Summit."
One of the major issues under review is the need to develop and
distribute vaccines in Pacific Rim countries at the frontline of pandemic
outbreaks. Last month, members of the World Health Organization (WHO)
agreed on principles for sharing avian influenza virus samples for vaccine
research through a global network. New outbreaks in various parts of the
world have made the need for collaboration on avian influenza and other
pandemics paramount.
"If an influenza pandemic emerges, the traditional 'just in time'
distribution model will simply be too late," said Joe Hogan, president and
CEO of GE Healthcare, a founding sponsor of the Pacific Health Summit. "Now
is the time for governments, non-governmental organizations, academia and
businesses to work together to plan for a pandemic and to ensure everyone
has access to vaccines and other medical technologies when they need them."
The 2007 Pacific Health Summit will showcase and discuss the profound
policy implications of possible new scientific and technological
developments related to improved vaccine capabilities for avian influenza.
The timing of the discussion and the possible scientific breakthroughs are
a unique opportunity to launch global efforts at pandemic preparedness that
could yield much more effective and equitable responses for both developing
and developed worlds.
Participants in the 2007 Pacific Health Summit include:
-- Margaret Chan, M.D., Director-General, World Health Organization
-- Tadataka Yamada, M.D., Ph.D., President, Global Health Program, Bill &
Melinda Gates Foundation
-- Nils Daulaire, M.D., President and CEO, Global Health Council
-- Huqun Bai, Deputy Director-General, Bureau of Disease Prevention and
Control, Ministry of Health, China
-- Anna Barker, Ph.D., Deputy Director, Strategic Scientific Initiatives,
National Cancer Institute
-- William Castell, Chairman, The Wellcome Trust
-- Zhu Chen, Ph.D., Vice President and Member, Chinese Academy of Sciences
-- Chris Elias, M.D., M.P.H., President, PATH
-- Laurie Garrett, Senior Fellow for Global Health, Council on Foreign
Relations
-- Bruce Gellin, M.D., M.P.H., Director, National Vaccine Program Office,
U.S. Department of Health and Human Services
-- David Heymann, M.D., Assistant Director-General, Communicable Diseases,
World Health Organization
-- Joe Hogan, President and CEO, GE Healthcare
-- Lee Hood, M.D., Ph.D., President, Institute for Systems Biology
-- David Nabarro, M.D., UN System Senior Coordinator for Avian and Human
Influenza
-- Triono Soendoro, Ph.D., Director-General, National Institute of Health
Research and Development, Ministry of Health, Indonesia
-- Lee Hartwell, Ph.D., President and Director, Fred Hutchinson Cancer
Research Center
About the Pacific Health Summit
The Pacific Health Summit launched in 2005 to connect science and
policy for a healthier world and, now in its third year, has become widely
recognized as an important event on the global health calendar. The
invitation-only Pacific Health Summit brings together a broad spectrum of
stakeholders necessary for an effective response to key health issues, a
unique model where agendas are set aside for the global greater good. The
Pacific Health Summit is co-presented by The National Bureau of Asian
Research, Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center and the Bill & Melinda
Gates Foundation. The Russell Family Foundation is the founding
organization for the Summit. For more information, please visit
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