Posts Tagged ‘World Health Organization’

Dozens of Countries Launch Decade of Action for Road Safety

Thursday, May 26th, 2011 by

At the 64th session of the World Health Assembly in Geneva, which closed on Tuesday, one of the leading topics was international road safety.  With over 1.3 million deaths annually, and ranking as the leading cause of mortality among 15-29 year olds and the ninth leading cause of death for all ages, the task of making the world’s roads safe for travel is formidable, to say the least. 

On May 11th, partially in anticipation of the Global Health Summit, dozens of countries around the world kicked off the first global Decade of Action for Road Safety 2011-2020. The governments of dozens of countries as far reaching as Russia, Sri Lanka and Nigeria have committed to taking new steps to save lives on their roads. Some of the proposed actions include enacting legislation or stepping up enforcement of helmet, seat belt, child safety restraint, speeding, and alcohol intoxication laws.  Only 15% of countries currently have comprehensive measures addressing all of these factors.

Pedestrians, bicyclists and motorcyclists account for almost half of the deaths on the world’s roads.  In a massive effort to curtail these accidents, part of the funding for this initiative will go towards the construction of footpaths and cycle only lanes.  The World Health Organization (WHO), who will provide technical support and monitor the effort, believes that successful implementation of the proposed measures could save over five million lives between now and 2020. 

None of us should have to bear the grief and devastation caused by a road traffic crash,” said Dr Etienne Krug, WHO Director of the Department of Violence and Injury Prevention and Disability. “The steps outlined in the Global Plan for the Decade are immediately doable, and will do much to spare the suffering of so many.”

Photo by Goran Zec.

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Before You Say “Pandemic”, Consider the Source

Wednesday, April 29th, 2009 by
who4

World Health Organization

As quickly as swine flu is popping up around the globe, “news” about swine flu is being consumed at an even faster pace.  If you ever played Whisper Down the Lane, you know that information often changes as it passes from person to person. With the advent of social networks such as Twitter, basic facts can morph into panicky fiction as quickly as a text message is transmitted.

It is at times like these that we need to carefully search out credible sources of information. Let’s take a moment to look at two authoritative sources of international health news and the arbiters of the term “pandemic”: the United Nations World Health Organization (WHO) and the U.S. Centers for Disease Control (CDC).

In an effort to provide meaningful and consistent characterization of flu outbreaks, both the WHO and the CDC have formulated rating systems.  The WHO rates the severity of an outbreak of a new contagion using a six-phase system ranging from no-risk (Level 1) to pandemic (Level 6):

1.       No animal virus has caused human infection

2.       An animal influenza virus has caused at least one human to become ill

3.       An animal influenza virus has caused sporadic cases or small clusters of people to become ill, but there is no sustained human to human transmission (current level of avian or “bird’ flu worldwide)

4.       Verified human-to-human transmission of enough volume to cause community level  outbreaks (such as the swine flu outbreak at the school in Queens, New York)

5.       Human-to-human spread into at least two countries in close proximity without a known host travelling from one country to another (Tourists who return home from Mexico and become ill do not meet this test)

6.      Community level outbreaks on at least two continents (Pandemic)

Don’t even try to “tweet” this important information on Twitter.

Once a pandemic has been declared by the WHO, the CDC uses a “Pandemic  Severity Index” to rate flu outbreaks based on the number of anticipated deaths.  Category 1 outbreaks have an expected death toll limited to less than 90,000, while category 5 puts the number at almost 2 million.  The CDC developed this system in response to the Avian Flu threat in 2007 in order to standardize the level  response taken by  public health agencies around the U.S. and the world. 

Word is just in that the WHO has raised its pandemic alert to Level 5. Let’s keep the WHO criteria firmly in mind as the contagion spreads. There are 36,000 deaths in the U.S. each year from flu complications, and we have a long way to go to reach Category 2.

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