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United States – México Border Health Commission. If the U.S. - México Border were a separate state, it would rank...  First in number of children living.

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Presentation on theme: "United States – México Border Health Commission. If the U.S. - México Border were a separate state, it would rank...  First in number of children living."— Presentation transcript:

1 United States – México Border Health Commission

2 If the U.S. - México Border were a separate state, it would rank...  First in number of children living in poverty  Second in incidence of tuberculosis  Third in deaths from hepatitis  Last in number of health professionals/100,000 population  Last in per capita income U.S. México Border Counties Coalition March 2006 www.bordercounties.org

3 Purpose of the U.S.-México Border Health Commission (BHC)  Identify and evaluate current and future health problems affecting the population in the United States-México border area  Encourage and facilitate actions to address these problems

4 La Paz Agreement Definition of Border – 100 km – 60 miles

5 Goals of the BHC  Institutionalize a domestic focus on border health that can transcend political changes  Create an effective venue for binational discussion to address key public health issues at the border

6 Roles of the BHC  Promote social and community participation  Act as a catalyst for needed change  Increase resources for the border  Encourage self-responsibility for health  Institutionalize domestic focus

7 BHC Composition and Structure  Two nations  Ten border states (six Mexican States, four U.S. States)  United States and México Sections— 12 Members each  Led by two Commissioners

8 BHC Accomplishments

9 Commission Outreach Offices (OROs) Accomplishments of the individual OROs are provided in the Thirteenth Annual Meeting Briefing Binder.

10 Border Binational Health Week (BBHW) 2005  Purpose- weeklong series of events to bring awareness to health needs along the border  Update- 2005 BBHW focused on “Families in Action for Health,” and helped to provide health awareness to people along the border Contact: Ernesto Ramirez, Mexico Section and Christopher Hickey, Ph.D., OGHA

11 Border Governors Conference  Annual conferences include governors from all ten border states, ongoing work tables  Update- 24 th annual conference (August 2006, Austin) will focus on public health emergency preparedness and pandemic influenza preparedness

12 Border Health Risk Factor Surveillance  Purpose- a surveillance system to monitor risk factors for chronic disease  Update- in January, the binational technical team met and recommended improvements to survey data collection methodology Contact: Carmen Sanchez-Vargas, HHS/CDC Liaison to the BHC

13 Binational Border Health Information Platform  Purpose- Web-based border health data system for researchers and policymakers  Update- Ongoing binational collaboration to complete project later this year in October, 2006. Contact: Dr. Rafael Lozano Ascencio, Mexican Secretariat of Health, and Dr. Sam Notzon, National Center for Health Statistics, CDC/HHS

14 Border Infectious Disease Surveillance (BIDS)  Purpose- BIDS program funds binational disease surveillance infrastructure and has developed channels of communication that serve as a framework for future efforts in disease surveillance, preparedness and response.  Update- convened 5 th Annual Meeting, developed English/Spanish laboratory and epidemiology manuals, and provided diagnostic kits and supplies Contact: Hector Martinez, Mexican Section

15 Early Warning Infectious Disease Surveillance (EWIDS)  Purpose- the EWIDS Project will improve cross- border activities in early detection, identification, and reporting of infectious diseases associated with potential bio-terror agents or other major threats to public health.  Update- on March 9, 2006, the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services released $5 million to U.S.-México Science Foundation (FUMEC), who will administer funds to six Mexican border states and the SSA Contact: Hector Martinez, Mexican Section, and Christopher Hickey, OGHA

16 Binational Public Health Research Forum  Purpose- to convene a meeting between researchers and policymakers along the border to identify health research priorities.  Status- Scheduled for October 2006 Contact: Dra. Dora Elia Cortés Hernández and Hector Martinez

17 Lead (Pb) Issues Along the Border  Purpose- a meeting was convened to discuss the issue of lead (Pb) in candy and other non-paint sources  Update- the meeting took place on Jan. 26- 27, 2006. U.S. border state officials, U.S. federal officials, and BHC México Section Executive Secretary participated. Contact: Dan Reyna, U.S. Section

18 Multi-Drug Resistant Tuberculosis (TB) Efforts  Purpose- To ensure effective transportation of Multi-Drug Resistant Tuberculosis (MDR-TB) drugs across the U.S.-México border Update- The Commission coordinated a call with the Texas Department of State Health Services, PAHO, Mexican National TB Program that helped stakeholders to agree on strategies for consistent cross-border transport of TB medications Contact: R.J. Dutton, Ph.D. Texas Department of State Health Services

19 Ventanillas de Salud Purpose- Stations within the Mexican Consulates to help direct the population at risk to appropriate health services Purpose- Stations within the Mexican Consulates to help direct the population at risk to appropriate health services Status- Two Ventanillas de Salud were opened in 2006. They are Tucson, Arizona and McAllen, Texas. Another one is expected to open later this year in El Paso, Texas Status- Two Ventanillas de Salud were opened in 2006. They are Tucson, Arizona and McAllen, Texas. Another one is expected to open later this year in El Paso, Texas Contact: Paola Pliego, Mexican Section

20 National Infant Immunization Week/Vaccination Week in the Americas Purpose- an annual observance to promote immunization Purpose- an annual observance to promote immunization Status- There will be borderwide events, particularly in the State of Arizona, during the week of April 22-29 to promote the importance of immunization. Status- There will be borderwide events, particularly in the State of Arizona, during the week of April 22-29 to promote the importance of immunization. Contact: Carmen Sanchez-Vargas, HHS/CDC Liaison to the BHC


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