Apr25 2020 |
3/18 Updates WHO this week urged all countries to test aggressively, noting that South Korea and Taiwan were having success in limiting infections by doing so → Read more |
Apr25 2020 |
WHO Director-General's opening remarks at the media briefing on COVID-19 - 18 March 2020 18 March 2020 → Read more |
Apr25 2020 |
Update on COVID-19 in Ethiopia → Read more |
"WHO recommendations: TEST, TEST & TEST. Unless you do, you will not know!
Nigeria places travel ban on 13 countries. The countries are China, Italy, Iran, South Korea, Spain, Japan, France, Germany, Norway, the United States of America, the United Kingdom, Netherlands and Switzerland
Ethiopia/ Progress update from Dr Lia T (MOH) Of the 6 confirmed cases currently on follow up four of them are now in good condition with no symptoms. Two of the patients have mild to moderate symptoms and they are under frequent follow up.
Questions from Ethiopians to the MOH:
How many people have been tested so far?
What is the capacity of testing in different cities?
Is the test kit available in abundance?
Why don’t we put random temperature check points in the city?
I'm sorry but I find it ""interesting"" that unlike every other country that has been affected by the #COVID19..we tend to get ""negative"" results 70% of the time we test suspects..
What about the 100+ people who have interacted with the confirmed cases What measures are you considering to prohibit non-essential internal travel?
Can you also update on the two Italian Nationals that are suspected and returned from Nairobi to Addis Ababa? Are they contained?
Aggressive testing helps Italian town cut new coronavirus cases to zero
An infection control experiment that was rolled out in a small Italian community at the start of Europe’s coronavirus crisis has stopped all new infections in the town that was at the centre of the country’s outbreak. Through testing and retesting of all 3,300 inhabitants of the town of Vò, near Venice, regardless of whether they were exhibiting symptoms, and rigorous quarantining of their contacts once infection was confirmed, health authorities have been able to completely stop the spread of the illness there.
The success underscores the importance of testing and isolating otherwise healthy carriers, an approach that has been strongly endorsed by the World Health Organization. The WHO this week urged all countries to test aggressively, noting that South Korea and Taiwan were having success in limiting infections by doing so. “Our key message is: test, test, test,”
WHO recommendations: TESR, TEST & TEST
"Highlights:
More than 200,000 cases of COVID-19 have been reported to WHO, and more than 8000 people have lost their lives.
More than 80% of all cases are from two regions – the Western Pacific and Europe.
We know that many countries now face escalating epidemics and are feeling overwhelmed.
Don’t assume your community won’t be affected. Prepare as if it will be.
Don’t assume you won’t be infected. Prepare as if you will be.
But there is hope. There are many things all countries can do.
- Physical distancing measures – like cancelling sporting events, concerts and other large gatherings – can help to slow transmission of the virus.
They can reduce the burden on the health system.
And they can help to make epidemics manageable, allowing targeted and focused measures.
But to suppress and control epidemics, countries must isolate, test, treat and trace.
If they don’t, transmission chains can continue at a low level, then resurge once physical distancing measures are lifted.
WHO continues to recommend that isolating, testing and treating every suspected case, and tracing every contact, must be the backbone of the response in every country. This is the best hope of preventing widespread community transmission.
Most countries with sporadic cases or clusters of cases are still in the position to do this.
——IT CAN BE DONE/WE CAN CONTROL CV——
We understand the effort required to suppress transmission in these situations. But it can be done. A month ago, the Republic of Korea was faced with accelerating community transmission. But it didn’t surrender.
It educated, empowered and engaged communities;
It developed an innovative testing strategy and expanded lab capacity;
It rationed the use of masks;
It did exhaustive contact tracing and testing in selected areas;
And it isolated suspected cases in designated facilities rather than hospitals or at home.
As a result, cases have been declining for weeks. At the peak there were more than 800 cases, and today the report was only 90 cases.
——————————————
WHO is working in solidarity with other countries with community transmission to apply the lessons learned in Korea and elsewhere, and adapt them to the local context.
Likewise, WHO continues to recommend that, wherever possible, confirmed mild cases should be isolated in health facilities, where trained professionals can provide good medical care, and prevent clinical progression and onward transmission.
If that’s not possible, countries can use community facilities to isolate and care for mild cases and refer them for specialized care quickly if needed.
If health facilities are at risk of being overwhelmed, people with mild disease can be cared for at home.
Although this is not the ideal situation, WHO has advice on our website for how home-care can be provided as safely as possible.
WHO continues to call on all countries to implement a comprehensive approach, with the aim of slowing down transmission and flattening the curve.
This approach is saving lives and buying time for the development of vaccines and treatments.
This virus is presenting us with an unprecedented threat. But it’s also an unprecedented opportunity to come together as one against a common enemy – an enemy against humanity. "
Unnecessary risk of a major public health hazard with chloroquine publicity.
From Sanjay Gupta
Symptoms and Labs/Imaging
initial analysis from the outbreak in China (n=44,000)
The majority of infections were in 30-70 year olds
Disease Severity – 1.2% asymptomatic, 80% mild 20% severe disease (testing started after outbreak and may underestimate asymptomatic)
Symptoms:
• Fever 43.8%(eventually in 80%)
• Cough 67.8% (Sputum 33.7%)
• Fatigue 38.1%
• Shortness of Breath 18.7%
• Myalgia/Arthralgia 14.9%
• Sore throat 13.9%
• Headache 13.4% v
Lab/imaging:
• Lymphocytopenia (<1500) 83.2%
• CRP > 10 60.7%
• CXR abnormality 59% (most commonly bilateral or local patchy shadowing)
Other reported Symptoms
• Reports of anosmia in as high as 30-50% of patients (anecdotal reports) 3/23/20
In a small study while diarrhea and sinusitis were seen all patients with those symptoms also had cough however one patient had just rhinitis and otitis with no other symptoms
Cough 7/9, Fever 2/9, Diarrhea (2/9 both had cough and fever) , sinusitis 4/9 (all had cough), rhinitis (2/9, 1 also with otitis 1 with cough), Asymptomatic 1/9 (n=9 Germany)
3/15/20 possible signal that diarrhea may be more common than previously thought in presentation
A systematic review of the efficacy and safety of chloroquine (see covid Chloroquine reviewjcitcare2020in dropbox, or doi.org/10.1016/j.jcrc.2020.03.005)
Details:
— 6 articles were reviewed (one letter, one in-vitro study, one editorial, one expert consensus paper, and 2 national guideline documents)
— there are 23 ongoing clinical trials in China using chloroquine or hydroxychloroquine in different groups and looking at different outcomes: patients with mild to severe to critically ill Covid-19, with outcomes including conversion to a negative PCR assay, normalizing clinical symptoms, clinical recovery time, length of hospital stay, mortality rate, etc. A few studies are comparing it to lopinavir/ritonavir
Results:
— one Chinese lab study found that of 7 antivirals tested, remdesivir and chloroquine were remarkably effective in suppressing SARS-CoV-2, even at quite low doses. chloroquine, unlike remdesivir, functioned at blocking both SARS-CoV-2 cell entry as well as at the post-entry stages of infection, remdesivir only the latter (see covid Chloroquine reviewjcitcare2020 in dropbox, or Wang M. Cell Research 2020; 30: 269), and chloroquine has good penetration into lung tissue
— another article found that in more than 100 patients chloroquine inhibited the exacerbation of pneumonia, improved lung imaging findings, promoted a virus conversion to negative, and shortened the disease course. I should add that the above systematic review of chloroquine did not find evidence of such data in their trial registries
— a Chinese multi-collaborative expert consensus concluded that chloroquine 500 mg twice a day for 10 days was recommended for people with mild, moderate, and severe cases of SARS-CoV-2 pneumonia. They also suggested blood testing to rule out the development of anemia, thrombocytopenia, or leukopenia as well as electrolyte disturbances or hepatic/renal dysfunction, and an EKG to rule out development of QTc prolongation. Of note, this consensus document was relying on information that has not yet been published
— the Dutch Center of Disease Control suggested administering chloroquine to treat severe infections requiring admission to the hospital and oxygen therapy or admitted to the ICU, though treating with optimal supportive care was also considered a reasonable option
— the Italian Society of Infectious and Tropical Disease recommended the use of chloroquine or hydroxychloroquine for 5 to 20 days according to the clinical disease severity, but including those with mild respiratory symptoms who had comorbidities
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Bairex’s medical education lecture series called Broad Strokes ™ incorporates key aspects of both national and international conferences which occur throughout the year.
One of our current main areas of interest in Africa and the Middle East is non-communicable diseases (NCDs). NCDs are emerging as the leading cause of illness and death worldwide, especially in the low and middle income countries. This shift towards NCDs in developing countries has dispelled the popular myth that NCDs primarily afflict affluent (high income) populations. Many LMICs, are currently undergoing epidemiological transitions from predominantly infectious diseases to NCDs. This change can be attributed to changing lifestyles that promote western diet and physical inactivity. Current projections show that the largest increases in NCD deaths by 2025 will be in LMICs.
Therefore, our current emphasis is to educate about NCDs, including:
- Cardiovascular diseases
- Oncology & hematology
- Respiratory diseases
- Metabolic diseases: diabetes
- Neurodegenerative diseases
Our educational objectives are multifold. We aspire that our expert faculty highlight the magnitude of and socio-economic impact of particular NCDs in Africa and the Middle East, identifying the primary risk factors, primary prevention of the NCD and early treatment. The Pan-African and Middle Eastern experience of evolving NCD prevention/control and testing recommendations as well as current management practices should be addressed. Emphasis should be placed on the approaches underway by various nations and communities to strengthen local, country and global initiatives to prevent and control NCDs as part of national health plans and sustainable development frameworks.
Our mission is to share knowledge and create forum for collaboration with fellow medical doctors, nurses, pharmacists and other health care professionals
To Stop the Sale of Falsified Medicines, Africa Must Free Itself from Dependence on Foreign Drugmakers
By Dr. Menghis Bairu
A few years ago I travelled to Ghana to see the state-of-the art pharmaceutical research and manufacturing company a friend had established there. He had long worked as an executive for several of the largest pharmaceutical companies in the United States before launching his company with the goal of bringing to Africa the type of medicines he had spent his career producing.
The company was successful at establishing a high-quality production, but they found themselves competing against imports from countries, such as India and China, that were easy to buy and cheaper. There was little oversight of medicines that came into the African market to assure they were what they claimed to be.
Earlier this month, leaders from seven African nations met in Lomé, Togo to sign a political declaration to crack down on the trafficking of fake medicines in Africa, ratify existing international agreements, and introduce new criminal penalties against traffickers.
The U.K.-based Brazzaville Foundation organized the effort, known as the Lomé Initiative. The Foundation said it will establish an online site for the public to contribute additional ideas and solutions. Proposals that emerge from that process will be discussed at a follow-up forum in Africa before the end of the year.
“Today’s an important day, because it is the first time that us Africans are tackling the trafficking of fake medicines,” said H.E. Faure Gnassingbé, president of Togo during a plenary session of the high-level signing ceremony. “Our continent and our people suffer most from its devastating consequences. Africa must commit to fighting this deadly scourge.”
The problem of falsified medicine is a global problem with deadly consequences. The World Health Organization estimates 128 countries are affected by this problem.
It can be difficult to quantify the extent of the problem because falsified medicines that go undetected may lead a doctor to assume it was the wrong drug for the particular patient rather than the formulation or strength of the drug was different than the packaging claimed.
Each year, an estimated $200 billion of substandard and falsified drugs are sold, which is between 10 to 15 percent of the global pharmaceutical market, according to the World Health Organization. That comes with deadly consequences for the unsuspecting consumers of these falsified or substandard medicines. More than 122,000 children under five die each year due to poor-quality antimalarials in sub-Saharan Africa alone, according to estimates from the American Society of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene.
The problem is particularly acute in Africa, where some 42 percent of all falsified medicines discovered since 2013 have been found, according to the World Health Organization. It estimates that falsified medicines account for anywhere between 30 percent and 60 percent of all medicines sold in certain African countries. In contrast, countries that have established regulations and enforcement, this figure is is just 1 percent.
“These death traffickers do not know any borders,” said Aminata Touré, President of the Economic and Social Council of Senegal, who moderated the summit. “It is crucial that our countries work together, define intergovernmental cooperation mechanisms, share intel, and harmonize legislation to criminalize this activity.”
The Lomé Initiative is a positive step toward protecting and improving the health of Africans, but as my friend recently remarked to me in response to it, “Our leaders always meet but problem persists.”
His remark wasn’t intended to be cynical. It was meant to reflect the reality that Africans will continue to be susceptible to falsified medicines until we address the lack of capacity within the continent to produce the drugs its people need. They will remain vulnerable as long as Africa remains dependent on foreign companies to provide the medicines it requires to assure the health and wellbeing of its people.
To truly combat the problem of falsified medicine, Africa must do far more than criminalize the activity. It must work towards building capacity for its own pharmaceutical industry. To do so will require addressing a range of complex issues from access to capital to building needed infrastructure. It will also require establishing a world-class regulatory capacity operated by competent and empowered regulators to ensure the quality of medicines.
This is not just an urgent issue for the economic future of the continent, but a matter upon which the health and wellbeing of its people will depend.
Dr. Menghis Bairu is a physician, international biopharmaceutical executive, author, and philanthropist. He is founder, chairman, and CEO of Proxenia Venture Partners, which seeks to build companies that address global challenges through innovative approaches.
Dear friends:
I recently returned from Ethiopia and Eritrea where I had the opportunity to work with the Himalayan Cataract Project (HCP), a US based nonprofit that, in partnership with in-country stakeholders, seeks to eradicate preventable and curable blindness in underserved areas of the world. I wanted to share my recent experience with others who may be inspired to support efforts to restore sight and life to the needlessly blind in some of the most difficult to reach locations on the planet.
As a physician and life science executive, I’ve dedicated my professional life working to improve global health through international outreach and philanthropy. Though I live in the San Francisco Bay Area, I feel a deep commitment to giving back to my broader community of origin.
In November, I coordinated and worked with the HCP to conduct a high-volume surgical outreach and training event in Ethiopia and Eritrea. HCP performed 4,300 sight-restoring surgeries and clinical training in less than three week's time. The clinical team was from the United States, Nepal, Ethiopia and Eritrea. It represented a true international effort.
Since 1995, HCP has been providing the highest quality care at the lowest cost in its effort to end preventable blindness. There are 36 million people blind in the world today and nearly half of them—13.4 million people—are blind from cataracts. The organization has an innovative model to address both the huge backlog of people waiting for cataract surgery and the need to train more clinicians to do the work—each sight-restoring surgery performed takes ten minutes and costs $25 in materials.
The HCP has agreed to return to the region in early 2020 to perform 4,000 additional cataract surgeries. To enable this to happen, we need to raise $100,000 to fund the effort.
I've seen first-hand the immeasurable joy radiating from Ethiopians and Eritreans after having their sight restored by HCP, and a world of darkness is washed away with the careful touch of a surgeon. I support the Himalayan Cataract Project because we can solve needless blindness in our lifetime, but only if we work together. Please join in me supporting such a critical cause and donate today!
Sincerely,
Menghis Bairu, MD
Innovative Eye Care Model - HCP works to overcome barriers impeding delivery of cataract care to underserved, needlessly blind people.
Read more
At HCP’s first-ever surgical outreach in Eritrea, Dr. Menghis stood by a young boy's side in a difficult situation.
Read more
HCP co-founders Drs. Geoff Tabin and Sanduk Ruit, and their revolutionary, low-cost, 10-minute procedure caught the attention of 60 Minutes, ...
Watch the Story
https://charity.gofundme.com/o/en/campaign/giving-the-gift-of-sight-in-ethiopia-and-eritrea
The effects of blindness are profound and felt mostly by the poor. Lives are shortened, men and women are torn from the labor force, and kids are robbed of a childhood. In low- and middle-income countries, the effects of blindness have devastating consequences on these individuals and their families.
What makes this situation even more tragic is that 80 percent of blindness is treatable or preventable. In the developing world, 18 million people are unable to perform the tasks of daily living because of cataracts that can be addressed with a 10-minute surgery that requires just $25 in materials.
The Himalayan Cataract Project (HCP) works to cure preventable blindness. Since its establishment in 1995, HCP has been committed to overcoming barriers impeding delivery of cataract care to underserved, needlessly blind people in low- and middle-income countries with a focus on providing high-quality care, training local personnel, and establishing world-class eye care infrastructure where it is needed most. In 2019 alone, Dr Tilahun Kiros and his team conducted six campaigns in Tigray, Ethiopia for over 6,952 sight restoring surgeries.
2019 | Cataract Surgeries | TT Surgeries | Other Surgeries | Total Surgeries |
---|---|---|---|---|
Quiha | 3997 | 893 | 60 | 4950 |
Axum | 1338 | 304 | 0 | 1642 |
We are working now to raise $100,000 to restore sight to 4,000 visually impaired patients in Eritrea and Ethiopia by March 31, 2020. You can help. I am asking that you consider making a $25 contribution to help our effort. Thanks to the generous support of people like you, we have raised $57,350 of $100,000 goal in just two weeks.
If you haven’t done so, please give the Gift of Sight now. If you have, thank you and please encourage others to do the same.