Download presentation
Presentation is loading. Please wait.
1
U.S. Department of Defense and International Public Health LT Mazie Barcus U.S. NAMRU 2 Jakarta, Indonesia
2
OCONUS Medical Research Units Central Coordinating Hub DoD Overseas Laboratories WRAIR NMRC Peru Kenya Egypt Thailand Indonesia
3
Mission of the Overseas Labs Conduct scientific research on infectious diseases of military importance –Overlap between military relevance and host-nation public health priorities –Technology transfer to host nation Global Emerging Infections System –1996 Presidential Directive –Surveillance of emerging and re-emerging infectious diseases –Host-nation capacity building
4
DoD GEIS Initiatives 1.Enhance surveillance and response components of international public health infrastructure –Surveillance for drug-resistant malaria, antibiotic- resistant enteric organisms, influenza, and unexplained febrile illness –Partnering with international aid organizations and foreign health ministries to improve their ability to participate in an international surveillance network
5
DoD GEIS Initiatives 2.Enhance biomedical and behavioral research efforts on emerging infectious diseases –Collaborate with Military Infectious Disease Research Program –Use GEIS-generated surveillance data to guide research efforts in areas like drug development
6
DoD GEIS Initiatives 3.Expand formal training and outreach to health care providers –Support training of foreign scientists, epidemiologists and technicians –Outbreak investigation courses, health care provider courses, technology transfer
7
DoD GEIS Initiatives 4.Encourage high priority status for emerging infectious diseases and support WHO and other bodies in playing a stronger role in the surveillance, prevention, and response to emerging infectious diseases –Building bridges between international aid agencies, donor agencies, foreign governments, militaries and the UN.
8
GEIS at NAMRU-2 Surveillance for drug-resistant malaria
9
NAMRU-2 Organized an Intervention Address the immediate threat of epidemic malaria in the Menoreh Hills –Ministry of Health: CDC and NIHRD –Provincial Health Officers –District Health Officers WHO in Geneva –Effective therapy USAID/Jakarta –US$500,000 via WHO
10
NAMRU-2’s Direct Role in the Intervention Provided plan of action for the intervention Engaged international agencies for monetary support Training and infrastructure for post-marketing surveillance of Coartem Monitored the impact of the intervention –monitoring passive surveillance data –pre- and post-intervention prevalence surveys Operational research in the Intervention Area –Vector bionomics –Clinical trial of CQ + S/P –Malaria KAP study
11
NAMRU-2’s Continued Efforts Against Malaria on Java Transition from unsustainable intervention to sustainable capacity building Incubate and nurture a NGO that can partner with USAID and other donors to re-build the infrastructure for malaria control
12
USAID/NAMRU-2 Partnership Agreement to bring long-term USAID resources to bear on malaria problem on Java –$4 million over 4 years Utilize NAMRU-2’s assets in the region to re- establish malaria control infrastructure –32 year relationship with Ministry of Health partners –Resident expertise in malaria –Working relationships with international agencies engaged in malaria control
13
Goals of the USAID/NAMRU-2 Collaboration Capacity building along 5 tracks: –Community Participation –Diagnosis –Treatment –Vector Control –Surveillance
15
International Public Health and the DoD Mission: infectious disease research of military importance –Convergence of purposes with developing countries’ public health threats –Technology transfer to host nation GEIS: fully-sanctioned platform for capacity building in infectious disease surveillance and control
Similar presentations
© 2024 SlidePlayer.com. Inc.
All rights reserved.