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Vuvuzelas – the horns used by football fans celebrating last year’s World Cup – not only cause noise pollution but may also spread diseases, say experts.
A short burst on the instrument creates a spittle shower similar to a sneeze, travelling at a four million droplets a second, a PLoS One journal study shows.
In crowded venues one person blowing a vuvuzela could infect many others with airborne illness like the flu or TB.
Organisers are considering whether to allow them at the 2012 London Olympics.
Vuvuzela etiquette
Critics say they are anti-social and unsafe because of their potential to generate a din louder than a plane taking off.
People with infections must be advised against blowing their vuvuzelas close to other people”
Dr Ruth McNerney, who carried out the latest work at the London School of Hygiene & Tropical Medicine, said a “vuvuzela blowing etiquette” may be needed rather than a ban.
“Just as with coughs or sneezes, action should be taken to prevent disease transmission, and people with infections must be advised against blowing their vuvuzelas close to other people,” she said.
Her team investigated the vuvuzela hazard using a laser device to measure how many droplets were produced by eight volunteers using the horns.
On average, 658,000 lung particles, or aerosols, per litre of air were expelled from the instruments.
The droplets shot into the air at the rate of four million per second.
In comparison, when the volunteers were asked to shout, they produced only 3,700 particles per litre at a rate of 7,000 per second.
“When attending a sporting event and surrounded by vuvuzela players, a spectator could expect to inhale large numbers of respiratory aerosols over the course of the event,” Dr McNerney warned.
Shinyanga — In an unprecedented situation in Meatu District, Shinyanga Region, a woman delivered a child with two heads at the weekend.However, according to the district medical officer in charge, Dr Archie Hella, the child was still born because the mother was brought late to the hospital for delivery.
Ms Ngolo Magembe, 19, was brought on May 18 at around 8pm while in critical condition. This was contributed by failure for her part to regularly attend ante-natal clinics, the doctor said. According to him, during delivery the child had taken her legs out first instead of the head as is usual. Efforts by personnel at the hospital to save the child’s life proved futile as it was still born, he explained, continuing:”The life of the child could have been saved if the mother was brought to the hospital much earlier.”
He said the hospital and other health stakeholders have been emphasizing on the importance of sending expectant mothers to hospital early. However, the response was still very poor, and this had led to many avoidable deaths of mothers and children, he lamented.
He said the usual practice has been that until a pregnant mother was in a critical condition that was when relatives would rush her to a hospital, which is often too late. Dr Hella said Ms Magembe was recovering well at the hospital.
VOA Sky over Tripoli, Libya, is illuminated by explosions during an airstrike, early Tuesday, May 24, 2011
Several strong explosions have shaken Tripoli early Tuesday as NATO warplanes repeatedly bombed targets around the Libyan capital.
Correspondents on the scene describe it as one of the most intense series of airstrikes since NATO’s air campaign against the forces of Libyan leader Moammar Gadhafi began. More than a dozen explosions were heard in the first hour of the raids.
A government spokesman reported casualties, but that could not be confirmed.
Britain and France have decided to deploy attack helicopters to join the NATO air campaign. French Foreign Minister Alain Juppe Monday said the deployment falls within the United Nations mandate to protect Libyan civilians. He said it will take place as soon as possible.
NATO has about 200 aircraft at its disposal for the operations in Libya, but it has not used any helicopters to conduct its core mission of hitting Gadhafi forces threatening civilians.
A high-ranking U.S. diplomat is on a three-day visit to the Libyan rebel stronghold of Benghazi in what the State Department calls “another signal” of America’s support for the rebels’ Transitional National Council. Assistant Secretary of State for Near Eastern Affairs Jeffrey Feltman is the most senior U.S. official to visit Libya since the uprising against Moammar Gadhafi began in February.
A State Department statement called the NTC “a legitimate and credible interlocutor for the Libyan people.”
On Sunday, the European Union’s foreign policy chief, Catherine Ashton, opened an EU office in Benghazi.
Alassane Ouattara gestures during his inauguration ceremony, in Yamoussoukro, Ivory Coast, May 21, 2011.
Alassane Ouattara has been inaugurated as Ivory Coast’s new president, six months after he won an election that the previous president refused to recognize.
President Ouattara took the oath of office more than three weeks ago. So Saturday’s inauguration in the political capital Yamoussoukro was more of a rally for supporters of the man who outlasted former president Laurent Gbabgo in the political crisis that followed November’s vote.
With Gbagbo under house arrest, the formal Ouattara inauguration was a chance for foreign governments to show their support for the new leader. United Nations Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon and French President Nicolas Sarkozy were in attendance as were the leaders of Burkina Faso, Senegal, Liberia, Ghana, Guinea, Mali, Togo, and Nigeria.
President Ouattara said Ivorians now face the world, themselves, and their destiny.
The president expressed what he called his infinite gratitude to those who chose him as their president. He said Saturday’s investiture is their victory, the victory of their sovereignty.
Ouattara has moved quickly to take control of a faltering economy by reopening banks, paying overdue civil service salaries, and resuming cocoa exports. France and the European Union are providing more than $820 million in emergency assistance.
Ouattara took power Apirl 11 when former president Gbagbo was captured after U.N. and French attack helicopters bombed the presidential compound where he was holding out in an underground bunker.
President Ouattara personally thanked President Sarkozy for that intervention under the U.N. mandate. He said it allowed many lives to be saved and the Ivorian people will always recognize that French contribution.
Gbagbo rejected U.N.-certified electoral results that showed Ouattara won their November run-off. He used the military to besiege Ouattara’s hotel as members of his party’s youth wing attacked Ouattara supporters and West African immigrants from countries that backed Ouattara’s claim to the presidency.
The International Criminal Court (ICC) intends to investigate crimes by both Ouattara and Gbagbo forces. President Ouattara says Ivorian justice will prosecute anyone found guilty of human rights abuses, whether they fought for him or against him.
Ouattara said it is time to consolidate the pillars of the republic, renew its courage, and unite Ivorians to celebrate peace, without which, he says, development is not possible.
TCHIAKOULLE, Guinea — Nestled in the mountains of northern Guinea, accessible only by foot, lies the birthplace of the maid who says Dominique Strauss-Kahn tried to rape her in a New York hotel.
With no electricity nor phone lines, the village of Tchiakoulle could not be further from the bright lights of Manhattan where one of its daughters has brought one of the world’s most powerful men to his knees.
In the shadow of steep cliffs in the Fouta Djallon region, home to the Fulani ethnic group, Tchiakoulle boasts seven concrete houses, one built by the alleged victim’s sister, and a few dozen mud huts alongside a river.
The 32-year-old hotel chambermaid at the Sofitel hotel accusing the former International Monetary Fund chief of sexual assault and attempted rape “was born here, her father was born here,” said her half-brother Boubacar, 42, born to the same father.
He was speaking to an AFP journalist who tracked down the woman’s home village after rigourous cross-checking and verification with his own family in New York and those of the victim.
Boubacar said his half-sister lived in Tchiakoulle until the age of 13 before moving to Labe, the main town in the region, some 80 kilometres (50 miles) away, but returned home to get married at about 17.
The couple had a daughter, but shortly after the marriage, her husband, the son of a rich Fulani marabout, passed away.
It was then that the young women left with her child to the United States, according to her half-brother.
He said her sister Hassanatou, already living in New York, had paid for her journey with the help of her husband, a shopkeeper in the Big Apple. Hassanatou is the owner of one of the village’s seven concrete houses.
Their mother usually lives in the house, but was seeking medical treatment in Dakar at the time of AFP’s visit.
The members of the accuser’s family living in the village describe her as very pretty, but illiterate, having never been to school. She attended a madrassa in the village where she learned to recite verses on the veranda.
Her uncle, Mody, remembers a girl who was “not rebellious”, while another relative in Labe describes her as “a serious, kind girl and no one knew any trouble from her.”
The 60-year-old said that three days ago he heard “on local radio that a white man abused a girl in the United States. I could not have imagined it was my niece.”
Cut off from the world, no one in the village knew what had become of their long-lost daughter, the last of six children — three girls, three boys — born to a father with two wives.
Her father was a poor farmer, but also a respected Muslim cleric in the region until his death at age 90 in 2009. Residents of the hamlet say her family was very pious.
Unlike her sister Hassanatou, the young woman appears to have cut all ties with her home village.
“Since my sister left over 10 years ago, I have spoken to her once,” said Boubacar, her half-brother.
“It was after dad’s death. I was in Bissau. I called to give her my condolences but as soon as she saw the number she realised it was from Africa and said: “don’t bother calling me”.
“She didn’t know who was on the other end of the line but when I told her she agreed to talk to me.”
Her uncle also has had no news from his niece: “Since she left I haven’t received a letter, photos, nothing.”
Thousands of Guineans live and work abroad in other African countries, Europe and the United States because, despite its massive mineral wealth, half of Guinea’s 10 million population live in poverty.
Although 100% condom programmes can be effective in increasing condom use in commercial sex transactions, they should be implemented in ways that do not violate the human rights of sex workers or their clients.
This is one of the recommendations in a report on human rights and the Global Fund recently released by the Canadian HIV/AIDS Legal Network and the Open Society Foundations (OSF).
These 100% condom use programmes (also called 100% CUP) are a central part of national HIV responses in a number of countries, including China, Cambodia, Vietnam, Thailand, Mongolia, Laos and Myanmar.
These programmes, which are designed to ensure that condoms are used in all commercial sex transactions, usually target sex workers in brothels or entertainment establishments. According to the report, in most cases, the strategy is to make commercial sex without condoms illegal and to enforce that illegality – which means that local authorities and the police are, inevitably, integrally involved in these programmes.
The report acknowledged that evaluations have found these programmes to be effective in reducing unsafe sex in commercial sex establishments. However, the report added, although they are meant to protect sex workers and their clients, in most cases the programmes have been designed without meaningful participation of sex workers or their NGO allies. Also, sex workers’ experiences have not frequently figured in evaluations of these programmes.
Finally, according to the report, several studies have documented abusive practices in these programmes, such as: forced registration of sex workers; mandatory STI testing and health examinations at health facilities where sex workers were mistreated; repressive policing; force-marching of sex workers to health facilities with military or police escorts; and public posting of photographs of sex workers who are accused of having had sex without condoms.
In one of these studies, the report said, sex workers reported that they were forced by brothel and nightclub owners to have sex with police in exchange for the police looking the other way when 100% CUP rules were violated.
The authors argued that there are other ways to achieve the target of 100% condom use, without having to resort to mandatory and abusive measures. The report cited the example of sex worker collectives such as those in the Sonagachi neighbourhood of Kolkata, India. The authors said that these collectives have created an environment that ensures that all workers demand condom use; and that the work of these collectives has resulted in both (a) effective HIV prevention and (b) empowering sex workers to stand up to police brutality and stigma in the community.
However, the report said, it may be that these alternative strategies are not well known to CCMs. The use of 100% CUP continues to be supported by CCMs; for example, in a Round 9 Indonesia proposal, the programme included promulgating and enforcing local regulations so that regular condom use would become the norm where sex is sold.
The Legal Network and the OSF recommended that the Global Fund develop criteria that would allow it to identify and reject proposals that include prevention programmes for sex workers that exhibit a lack of human rights protections for the workers and their clients. The report said that CCMs or other applicants that propose 100 percent condom programmes should be required to provide detailed information about the implementation of these programmes, including, for example:
the nature and degree of participation of organisations that are legitimate representatives of sex workers in the design, implementation and evaluation of these programmes;
measures taken to protect sex workers against abuse by clients, police and managers of brothels or entertainment venues; and
measures taken to consider less top-down alternatives to 100% CUP.
Finally, the authors recommended that the Technical Review Panel (TRP) be fully briefed on 100% CUP and alternatives to it; and that the Global Fund invest in capacity-building for CCMs in this area, including providing them with information on best practices
Nafissatou Diallo, maid assaulted by IMF Chief Dominique Strauss-Kahn
A hotel maid, Nafissatou Diallo, who says IMF chief Dominique Strauss-Kahn tried to rape her was due to testify before a New York grand jury on Wednesday, as the French presidential hopeful faced growing pressure to resign.
A lawyer for the 32-year-old African widow dismissed a suggestion by Strauss-Kahn’s defense counsel that the incident at the luxury Times Square Sofitel last Saturday might not have been a sexual assault.
“There’s nothing consensual about what took place in that hotel room,” attorney Jeffrey Shapiro told NBC’s “Today” show, adding he believed she would testify “at some point today.”
The arrest dashed Strauss-Kahn’s prospects for the French presidency and raised broader questions over the future of the International Monetary Fund. Developing countries, looking to a succession, have questioned Europe’s hold on the post.
The United States, the IMF’s biggest shareholder, said Strauss-Kahn was clearly unable to go on running the global lender from a prison cell, whatever the legal outcome.
“I can’t comment on the case, but he is obviously not in a position to run the IMF,” Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner said on Tuesday, calling for an interim head to be named.
European Commission President Jose Manuel Barroso said Europe would naturally put forward a candidate to replace him if Strauss-Kahn decided to step down.
Germany, which wants a European to keep the job, said the IMF should deal with its immediate leadership internally and it was too early to discuss a successor to Strauss-Kahn.
French officials said John Lipsky, the IMF’s American number two, whose term expires in August, would represent the Fund at next week’s Group of Eight summit in Deauville, France.
China, Brazil and South Africa questioned Europe’s right to the top job but Europeans said it made sense for them to retain the post while the Fund plays such a crucial role in helping to ease the euro zone debt crisis.
Strauss-Kahn, who denies the charges, is expected to remain in New York’s Rikers Island jail, known for gang violence, at least until his next court appearance on Friday, when lawyers may again request bail. Any trial could be six months away.
If convicted, he could face 25 years in prison. A law enforcement source said he had been placed on suicide watch, but purely as a precautionary measure.
In the U.S. legal system, a grand jury convenes in secret to hear evidence and decide whether to indict the defendant.
In the only public hint of Strauss-Kahn’s possible line of defense, his attorney Benjamin Brafman told his arraignment hearing on Monday: “The evidence we believe will not be consistent with a forcible encounter.”
However, Shapiro said his client, an asylum seeker from the West African nation of Guinea with a 15-year-old daughter, told Reuters she had not been aware of Strauss-Kahn’s identity until a day after the alleged attack.
“She didn’t have any idea who he was or have any prior dealings with this guy,” the personal injury lawyer said.
“She wants to remain anonymous because she’s very much afraid that something could happen to her physically, she feels very threatened by this,” he said of the global attention.
SET-UP?
An opinion poll in France, taken before his first court appearance on Monday and released on Wednesday, showed that more than half the population believe Strauss-Kahn was set up.
The CSA poll found that 57 percent of respondents thought that the Socialist politician, who had been frontrunner for the 2012 election, was definitely or probably the victim of a plot.
Fully 70 percent of Socialist sympathizers took that view. Most French media have dismissed conspiracy theories.
The poll findings highlighted a cultural divide, with French Socialist politicians and commentators denouncing the public parading of Strauss-Kahn, unshaven and in handcuffs, before he has had a chance to defend himself.
New York Mayor Michael Bloomberg agreed such a display was humiliating and would be unfair if a defendant were to be found innocent. “But if you don’t want to do the ‘perp walk’, don’t do the crime,” he told reporters.
U.S. media have criticized the French for a tradition of secrecy on politicians’ sex lives, and for showing more compassion for Strauss-Kahn than for the alleged rape victim, whose identity some French newspapers have published.
The French daily Liberation said the IMF chief had told its editors in off-record comments last month that he had just the right qualities to lead France, notably a calm manner, in contrast to conservative President Nicolas Sarkozy.
“Today I fit with everything the French people want — recognized competence, calm, international experience,” he was quoted as having said at an April 28 meeting.
EUROPEAN JOB
The IMF said it had not been in touch with Strauss-Kahn since his arrest but it would be important to do so “in due course.” Two IMF board sources told Reuters the board would ask Strauss-Kahn whether he planned to continue in his post.
In Strauss-Kahn’s absence, Lipsky is temporarily in charge of the institution which manages the world economy and is in the midst of helping euro zone states like Greece, Ireland and Portugal tackle debt woes.
The White House is considering proposing David Lipton, President Barack Obama’s international economic adviser and a former deputy treasury secretary, to replace Lipsky, whose term ends in August, sources familiar with the matter said.
Strauss-Kahn began to lose European support on Tuesday.
“Given the situation, that bail has been denied, he has to consider that he would otherwise do damage to the institution,” Austrian Finance Minister Maria Fekter said.
A European has held the post of managing director since the IMF was created in 1945, and four of them have been French.
French Finance Minister Christine Lagarde is thought to be interested in the post but her prospects have been clouded by a decision this month by a Paris public prosecutor to recommend a full-scale inquiry into her role in awarding financial compensation to a prominent businessman in 2008.
Emerging countries are starting to flex their muscle over who should succeed Strauss-Kahn, who had been expected to leave soon anyway to run for the French presidency.
China said on Tuesday the selection of the next IMF boss should be based on “fairness, transparency and merit.” It marked the first time that the fund’s third largest member has weighed in so publicly on an IMF selection debate.
South African Finance Minister Pravin Gordhan and a senior Brazilian government official, who asked not to be named, said the next chief should be from a developing country, pressing a case to give emerging economies a greater say in world affairs.
But Brazilian Finance Minister Guido Mantega said the affair should not be used to press for changes in the way the IMF head is picked, telling GloboNews TV the discussion “is too premature at this point” and Strauss-Kahn was “probably one of the best IMF chiefs that we had in the past years.”
Mr Bill Gates: co-chair of the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation
Mr. President, Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina, Director-General Dr. Margaret Chan, Excellencies, ladies and gentlemen.
The World Health Organization and this assembly have set the standard for global cooperation in pursuit of better health. For decades, you have established ambitious goals, such as eradicating smallpox. And you have rallied the world to accomplish those goals. It is an honor to join you today.
I had the privilege of addressing this assembly in 2005, when my wife Melinda and I were new to global health. At that time, we were so optimistic about the future. The world was finally starting to use its greatest resource, innovation, to solve this difficult problem – the fact that billions of people don’t have the chance to lead a healthy, productive life.
In the past six years, my optimism has continued to grow.
An recent important new book Getting Better by the economist Charles Kenny shows that life is getting better, rapidly, for people in poor countries. To build his argument, he examines a series of key quality-of-life indicators, including child survival, school enrollment, and levels of violence.
I hope this book gets the acclaim it deserves. It proves that the great work this assembly has been leading is having an enormous impact. We need the people who make funding decisions and set policy to understand the progress being achieved every day. I believe we have the opportunity to make even more progress, faster, for more people.
This opportunity is the reason I devoted my time to the Gates Foundation. Health and development is the most rewarding work I can think of, and Melinda and I will devote the rest of our lives to it.
When I was a teenager, I was captivated by computers because I believed they would change the world. I couldn’t predict exactly what the future would look like, but I was amazed by a sense to improve and empower.
Over the years, as I watched so much change taking root, I also saw glimpses of what was not changing. In 1994, I traveled to sub-Saharan Africa. It was impossible to ignore the devastating impact of disease and poverty on people’s lives.
Then, in 1998, Melinda and I read an article about rotavirus. We learned that it was the leading cause of diarrhea in young children – and that it caused 500 000 deaths annually. Our first child had just been born, and there was a good chance she’d suffered from rotavirus. But in the United States, children don’t die from diarrhea, so this was not a worry for us.
We’d never been forced to reckon with rotavirus, in fact, we’d never even heard of it because there was no chance our daughter would be killed by it.
This was a sobering realization for me. I had built my life around the idea that innovation is for everyone. When I began to understand how billions of people are deprived of its benefits, it made me angry. That’s when I decided to use my personal wealth would be used to help confront that inequity.
Thirty years ago, when I founded Microsoft my colleagues and I envisioned a computer for everyone. Now, I join you in seeking good health care for every human being.
At the Gates Foundation, our goal is to spur innovation on health problems.
Our priorities are your priorities: to make motherhood safer; to ensure that newborns survive their first 30 days; to provide children with a nutritious diet.
We see what you see everyday – that diseases like HIV, tuberculosis, and malaria can destroy communities. Along with great partners like the Global Fund, we want to help you diagnose, treat, and above all, prevent disease.
As we think about how to deploy our resources most effectively, one intervention stands out: vaccines.
Today, I would like to talk about how you can provide the leadership to make this the Decade of Vaccines.
Vaccines are an extremely elegant technology. They can be inexpensive, they are easy to deliver, and they are proven to protect children lifelong from disease. At Microsoft, we dreamed about technologies that were so powerful and yet so simple. Today, I like to imagine what the future will look like when world leaders start to take full advantage of vaccines.
In this Decade, we can achieve a lot.
Early in this decade, we will eradicate polio.
By the end of the decade, five or six new vaccines will be available to all children of the world.
And, crucially, every country in the world will have built a delivery system made to get vaccines to every last child.
To put an end to polio and reach all children with new vaccines, we must create strong immunization programmes.
In January of last year, I called for the world to accelerate progress on vaccines. That was a moment, and now there is momentum. I’m excited that global health leaders are now collaborating to put a specific global vaccine action plan in place.
The success of that plan will be a blueprint for the success of the Decade of Vaccines. It will depend on us to do our best work.
Vaccines and immunization
The greatest asset of every country is the energy and talent of its people. Disease saps that energy and squanders that talent. Repeated intestinal infections stunt children’s growth and reduce their cognitive development. Meningitis can cause permanent neurologic disability. Malaria prevents people from being productive; over a lifetime, high rates of malaria are cause substantially reduced earnings.
That’s why vaccines are one of the best investments we can make in the future: healthy people drive thriving economies. As we free billions of people from the relentless burden of sickness and death will unleash more human potential than ever before.
Let me give you an example of the difference vaccines can make.
This year, 20 million children will have severe pneumonia. More than a million will die. But even when the disease doesn’t take a child’s life, it can affect the child’s and family’s future.
For the survivors, the sickness reduces their chances of growing up healthy and strong. Their parents will go into debt. But we now have vaccines against two of the leading causes of pneumonia which make it possible for countries to reduce the burden and tap into people’s energy and nurture their talent.
Product development
The pneumonia vaccines are a symbol of one of the most exciting trends in global health, the drive towards equity in delivering innovations.
In the past, innovations developed vaccines for rich countries, and it took more than a decade before they were introduced in poor countries. But that is changing.
The newest pneumonia vaccines were available in developing countries only a few years after they were approved for use in developed countries. The same is true of a new rotavirus vaccine. But approved and available don’t mean delivered. Now it is up to the GAVI Alliance and many of you in this room to ensure that these vaccines reach the children who need them.
Last December, Burkina Faso, Mali, and Niger made history when they introduced a brand new vaccine for Meningitis A, the first vaccine developed specifically for use in Africa.
The story began in 1996, when the deadliest meningitis epidemic in memory tore through 25 countries in Africa, infecting more than 250 000 people. Meningitis strikes with frightening speed. A perfectly healthy child can be playing with friends one minute and literally be dead a few hours later.
In 1996, the only weapon against meningitis was barely useful at all, a short-lasting vaccine that wasn’t effective among young children. Health officials used it to control outbreaks that were already raging, so they called it “medicine after death.” They demanded a better vaccine that could prevent outbreaks.
The WHO and an organization called PATH formed the Meningitis Vaccine Project in 2001. The partners set a target price of 50 cents for the vaccine, which would make it affordable.
But producing a vaccine at that low price required a new approach to drug development. The Meningitis Vaccine Project worked with a Dutch biotech company to obtain key raw materials and arranged a technology transfer from the United States. Then, the Serum Institute of India agreed to manufacture the vaccine at the target price.
I am pleased to announce that we now have very early results from the use of vaccines from Burkina Faso. In the first 16 weeks of this year, there was just a single case of meningitis reported in the country.
It’s too soon to declare victory, but the early data makes me hopeful. For centuries, meningitis terrorized a region of 400 million people. This vaccine can help end the terror.
We need to continue creating and delivering more vaccines, but finally, for the first time, we can see a bright future.
Vaccine coverage
To keep the promise of equitable access to health care, all new vaccines must be priced low enough so that all countries can afford them. The Gates Foundation is working with many vaccine manufacturers to ensure that vaccines are available at a reasonable price. I believe that we can cut the combined price of the pentavalent, pneumococcus, and rotavirus vaccines in half by 2016.
But even when prices are fair, delivering vaccines to every child takes a great commitment.
Many developing countries are already doing a great job. Bangladesh, Nicaragua, Rwanda, and Vietnam routinely reach about 90 percent of their infants. But there are many places where vaccination rates are low. Almost every country can do better, must do better, if this decade is to reach the potential of the Decade of Vaccines.
Leading a health ministry is a hard job. You face a multitude of complicated choices. The stakes are always life and death and you have many priorities.
But you all have access to one key resource: your own leadership. And leadership can be decisive. The best immunization systems work because leaders hold themselves accountable for results. They diagnose problems, innovate to solve them, and spread the best ideas.
Let me give an example. Just a few years ago, the Indian state of Bihar was vaccinating under 30 percent. Then, a new chief minister, Nitish Kumar, was elected, and he made it clear that he expected change.
So even though Bihar is still one of the most challenging places in the world, but it’s no longer one of the least vaccinated. Under Chief Minister Kumar, the vaccination rate has more than doubled, and it plans to go higher.
I visited with Chief Minister Kumar two months ago, and his understanding of what was working and what wasn’t was impressive. He understood the innovations that were being tested.
Examples like this inspire all of us for better leadership. I was also struck by the chief minister’s popularity. People are hungry for visionary leaders who not only promise a better future, but take a basic system and make it work.
Today, I ask for your leadership. In 2005, you set two critically important immunization-related goals that we have not yet reached.
Let us renew our pledge that no country will be below 90 percent coverage. Let us rededicate ourselves to the idea that no district will be below 80 percent coverage. We will meet those goals if, and only if, you lead. With your leadership, you will make this the Decade of Vaccines.
As a global health community, it is imperative that we shine a light on the countries doing the best work. We need to know who the innovators are, so that the most powerful ideas spread far and wide.
Starting in 2012, the Gates Foundation will bestow an award on the individual or organization that has made the most uniquely innovative contribution to the Decade of Vaccines. This could be innovation in the science, delivery, or funding of vaccines. I will announce the winner every January in my annual letter. My goal is to make sure that pioneering global health leaders get the credit they deserve.
Polio
The long fight against polio proves just how powerful vaccine technology can be, but it also demonstrates that it is only as effective as the quality of delivery.
Twenty-three years ago, here in this building, the delegates to this Assembly resolved to wipe polio off the planet. And now we’re 99 percent of the way there, because of two things: a 13 cent vaccine so easy to administer that even I have done it many times; and the most impressive, farthest-reaching delivery effort global health has ever seen.
It is fantastic that more than 100 countries no longer have polio. In the most difficult conditions in the world, we are making stunning progress. Despite the ongoing war, Afghanistan has had only one case this year.
But progress is not the same as success, and eradication is not guaranteed. We have tools: diagnostics, surveillance systems, and vaccines that are constantly being improved, but the virus keeps spreading back into countries where it had been eliminated. There are countries where the virus continues to circulate, despite multiple campaigns every year. Globally, the polio programme is not assured of funding to keep running campaigns and improving vaccination systems.
These discouraging facts raise a question: do we really have the political commitment to eradicate polio?
Are donor countries, especially the G8, ready to close today’s funding gap and see the job through to the very end?
Are the countries where polio still exists ready to take extraordinary action to reach every single child with the vaccine?
We have a choice. We can keep doing what we’ve been doing, immunizing the same children over and over and missing the children who are the most vulnerable. Or we can do more. We can step up our fundraising, we can intensify our campaigns, and we can do what it takes to get to zero cases. If we make that choice, we will prove that people are capable of coming together to solve complex, worldwide problems.
The eradication of polio will be a great victory for this Assembly. You started the courageous fight against this disease. You will finish it. And then you will be able to move on to the next ambitious goal.
One of the polio leaders I respect most is Dr. Muhammad Pate, who directs Nigeria’s national eradication effort. Just a few years ago, Nigeria was the most troublesome spot on the polio map. It had hundreds of cases. Much worse, it lacked the commitment to bringing that number down.
But Dr. Pate, along with the global polio partners, President Goodluck Jonathan, and members of the ministry of health, helped rally government and traditional leaders around the cause. Dr. Pate told me that his agency makes a point of identifying poor-performing states publicly. That’s the kind of accountability that leads to results. Last year, thanks to a nationwide effort, polio was down 95 percent in Nigeria. Nigeria’s leaders still have a lot of work ahead of them, but they have turned the polio programme around.
During my last visit to Nigeria, Dr. Pate asked me a small favor. He hoped I’d be willing to sign his daughter’s school yearbook. I was more than willing, of course, and I want Dr. Pate’s daughter to know this: I admire her father very much, I want to someday introduce my children to him one day soon, and I hope more than anything that when that day comes we shall be celebrating the fact that there is no more polio in Nigeria.
Call to action
The world has a great opportunity right now, and whether or not we seize it will depend in large part on those of us in this room. It will depend on our ability to do the difficult, necessary things to usher in the Decade of Vaccines.
Donor countries, will have to increase investment in vaccines and immunization, even though they are coping with budget crises. The GAVI Pledging meeting in June gives you and your governments the opportunity to show your support. If donors are generous, we will prevent 4 million deaths by 2015. By 2020, we can prevent 10 million deaths.
Pharmaceutical companies, you must make sure vaccines are affordable for poor countries. Specifically, you must make a commitment to tiered pricing.
For all 193 Member States, you must make vaccines a high priority focus of your health systems, to ensure that all your children have access to existing vaccines now, and to new ones that have recently become available.
At the Gates Foundation, we are committed to working with all our partners – civil society, donors, drug companies, and national governments – to help you do the difficult but necessary things.
I am confident because I’ve seen so many examples of leadership.
British Prime Minister David Cameron passed the toughest austerity budget in his country’s memory. Yet, in the face of enormous pressure, he kept his promise to maintain development spending. A few months later, he announced that the United Kingdom would double its commitment to the polio campaign.
Another example is the Serum Institute of India, led by Dr. Cyrus Poonawalla, has broken the mold for the low-cost manufacture of vaccines. They developed the meningitis vaccine, they are the world’s largest producer of the measles vaccines, and they provide the pentavalent vaccine to GAVI at a lower price than any other manufacturer in the world. In the coming years they will manufacture inexpensive diarrhea and pneumonia vaccines.
Nitish Kumar and Muhammad Pate and many others have demonstrated that the best leaders can overcome tough challenges.
Together, and with your leadership, we can make this the decade in which we take full advantage of the technology of vaccines. When we do it, we will build an entirely new future based on the understanding that global health is the cornerstone of global prosperity.
It might be the most difficult thing we’ve ever done, but it will also be the most important.