Omange R W, Ocholla A O, Kwallah A O, Kageha S N, Mwangi J, Cherutich R K, T A Odeny, Nzomo T, Angwenyi S, Yonga P, Kariuki F, Kyalo M, Mutai P C, Nindo F, Songok E M
Department of Medical Microbiology- University of Manitoba, Manitoba.
Jomo Kenyatta University of Agriculture and Technology, Kenya.
Afr J Infect Dis. 2016 Nov 24;11(1):26-43. doi: 10.4314/ajid.v11i1.4537. eCollection 2017.
The Ebola virus disease outbreak of 2014 was the largest, longest and most devastating in the history of the disease. It demonstrated the social and economic impact an emerging infectious disease can have in a globalized world. Health systems in affected countries were stretched to the point of near collapse, while social relations and traditional practices were negatively impacted. Heads of African research institutions, African government representatives, leaders of global pharmaceutical companies, global infectious disease experts and close to 100 young African researchers from 25 countries; Assembled in Geneva on 19 and 20th October 2015, for the inaugural UNESCO-Merck Africa Summit sponsored by the United Nations Educational, Science and Culture Organization and Merck KGA.
The primary goal of the summit was to develop strategies to increase health research capacity in Africa, with special focus on Ebola and enhancing pandemic preparation for emerging infectious diseases. The summit was also provide a forum to showcase the research taking place in Africa, and provided platform for African researchers to network. Some of the key issues discussed included; strategies for enhancing policy frameworks to promote knowledge translation, strengthening of health systems, enhancing knowledge and data sharing, and increasing innovation in Africa.
Summit attendees recognized that Africa still bore the heaviest burden of infectious disease, and increased commitment by African governments to fund health research, offered the best hope for developing health solutions and interventions to improve the health of Africans. Improved health in turn would enhance the productivity of Africans, further supporting the socio-economic transformation currently taking place on the continent.
2014年埃博拉病毒病疫情是该疾病历史上规模最大、持续时间最长且最具破坏性的一次。它展示了一种新兴传染病在全球化世界中可能产生的社会和经济影响。受影响国家的卫生系统被拉伸至近乎崩溃的程度,而社会关系和传统习俗也受到了负面影响。非洲研究机构负责人、非洲政府代表、全球制药公司领导人、全球传染病专家以及来自25个国家的近100名年轻非洲研究人员于2015年10月19日和20日齐聚日内瓦,参加由联合国教育、科学及文化组织和默克集团赞助的首届教科文组织 - 默克非洲峰会。
峰会的主要目标是制定战略,以提高非洲的卫生研究能力,特别关注埃博拉病毒,并加强对新兴传染病的大流行防范。峰会还提供了一个展示非洲正在进行的研究的论坛,并为非洲研究人员提供了建立联系的平台。讨论的一些关键问题包括:加强政策框架以促进知识转化的战略、加强卫生系统、加强知识和数据共享以及在非洲增加创新。
峰会与会者认识到非洲仍然承担着最重的传染病负担,非洲各国政府加大对卫生研究的资金投入,为开发改善非洲人健康的卫生解决方案和干预措施带来了最大的希望。健康状况的改善反过来将提高非洲人的生产力,进一步支持该大陆目前正在进行的社会经济转型。