University of South Florida Medical Center, Tampa, FL, USA.
BMC Public Health. 2010 Dec 3;10 Suppl 1(Suppl 1):S7. doi: 10.1186/1471-2458-10-S1-S7.
The revised International Health Regulations [IHR(2005)], which requires the Member States of the World Health Organization (WHO) to develop core capacities to detect, assess, report, and respond to public health threats, is bringing new challenges for national and international surveillance systems. As more countries move toward implementation and/or strengthening of their infectious disease surveillance programs, the strengthening of clinical microbiology laboratories becomes increasingly important because they serve as the first line responders to detect new and emerging microbial threats, re-emerging infectious diseases, the spread of antibiotic resistance, and the possibility of bioterrorism. In fact, IHR(2005) Core Capacity #8, "Laboratory", requires that laboratory services be a part of every phase of alert and response.Public health laboratories in many resource-constrained countries require financial and technical assistance to build their capacity. In recognition of this, in 2006, the American Society for Microbiology (ASM) established an International Laboratory Capacity Building Program, LabCap, housed under the ASM International Board. ASM LabCap utilizes ASM's vast resources and its membership's expertise-40,000 microbiologists worldwide-to strengthen clinical and public health laboratory systems in low and low-middle income countries. ASM LabCap's program activities align with HR(2005) by building the capability of resource-constrained countries to develop quality-assured, laboratory-based information which is critical to disease surveillance and the rapid detection of disease outbreaks, whether they stem from natural, deliberate or accidental causes.ASM LabCap helps build laboratory capacity under a cooperative agreement with the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) and under a sub-contract with the Program for Appropriate Technology in Health (PATH) funded by the United States Agency for International Development (USAID). Successful activities of ASM LabCap have occurred throughout Africa, Asia, Central America and the Caribbean. In addition, ASM LabCap coordinates efforts with international agencies such as the WHO in order to maximize resources and ensure a unified response, with the intended goal to help build integrated disease surveillance and response capabilities worldwide in compliance with HR(2005)'s requirements.
经修订的《国际卫生条例(2005)》要求世界卫生组织(世卫组织)会员国制定核心能力,以发现、评估、报告和应对公共卫生威胁,这给国家和国际监测系统带来了新的挑战。随着越来越多的国家着手实施和/或加强其传染病监测计划,加强临床微生物学实验室变得越来越重要,因为它们是发现新出现和正在出现的微生物威胁、重新出现的传染病、抗生素耐药性传播以及生物恐怖主义可能性的第一线应对者。事实上,《国际卫生条例(2005)》核心能力 8 号“实验室”要求实验室服务成为警报和应对各个阶段的一部分。许多资源有限的国家的公共卫生实验室需要财政和技术援助来建设其能力。有鉴于此,美国微生物学会(ASM)于 2006 年成立了国际实验室能力建设计划,LabCap,由 ASM 国际理事会管理。ASM LabCap 利用 ASM 的丰富资源及其成员的专业知识——全球 40,000 名微生物学家——加强了资源有限国家的临床和公共卫生实验室系统。ASM LabCap 的项目活动符合《国际卫生条例(2005)》,通过建设资源有限国家的能力,确保以质量保证为基础的实验室信息,这对于疾病监测和迅速发现疾病暴发至关重要,无论是源于自然、蓄意还是意外原因。ASM LabCap 根据与美国疾病控制与预防中心(CDC)的合作协议以及与美国国际开发署(USAID)资助的适宜卫生技术方案(PATH)的分包合同开展实验室能力建设。ASM LabCap 在整个非洲、亚洲、中美洲和加勒比地区开展了成功的活动。此外,ASM LabCap 与世卫组织等国际机构协调努力,以最大限度地利用资源并确保统一应对,目的是帮助全球建立符合《国际卫生条例(2005)》要求的综合疾病监测和应对能力。