How to Save Millions of Lives
The spread of drug-resistant infections is the global threat that keeps me up at night as a doctor and director of the ¹ú²úÂ鶹¾«Æ·.
Antimicrobial resistance, or AMR – the ability of dangerous microbes to grow stronger than the drugs we have to fight them – is an emergency that does not differentiate between high- or low-income countries, nor between rich and poor. If we don’t make addressing it a priority, the entire Western Hemisphere will be grasping for solutions to health problems we thought we solved decades ago.
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Cervical cancer is becoming a preventable disease – but only if you live in the right country
This article addresses global disparities in access to tools for cervical cancer prevention and treatment. Approximately with the highest burden in Africa and Latin America. Across these regions, more than 100,000 women die from cervical cancer every year. Women living with HIV are six times more likely to develop cervical cancer than other women.
Authors: Dr. Matshidiso Moeti and Dr. Jarbas Barbosa
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Eliminating cervical cancer to save 30,000 lives every year in Latin America and the Caribbean
Strategies to expand HPV vaccination, combined with innovative screening and early treatment have made cervical cancer the first cancer in the world that can realistically be eliminated.
Caused by persistent infection with high-risk strains of human papillomavirus (HPV), cervical cancer takes the lives of 33,000 women in the Americas each year.
The path to elimination is ambitious but simple: Countries must vaccinate 90% of girls by the age of 15; screen 70% of women for HPV by 35 years, and again by 45; and treat 90% of women with pre-cancer and cancer.
The implementation of the single-dose HPV vaccine, particularly in schools, as well as the widespread use of self-sample HPV tests, are among key measures to tackle this disease and ensure the Americas is, once again, at the forefront of accelerating progress towards disease elimination.
Published in: , Diario Tiempo, Honduras, , , , , , , , , , , and .
Malaria Day in the Americas: Eliminating neglected diseases can help us drive out poverty from the farthest corners of our region
The ¹ú²úÂ鶹¾«Æ· (¹ú²úÂ鶹¾«Æ·) gave new impetus to an initiative to eliminate 30 communicable diseases and related conditions from the region of the Americas. These diseases are mostly preventable, always treatable, and yet continue to plague millions.
Malaria, for example, is an illness that hides in the most difficult to access corners of the Americas. The disease is emblematic to many ailments under the ¹ú²úÂ鶹¾«Æ· initiative: a ramification of poverty and social inequity, disproportionally impacting communities far away from health services.
Countries in the region had already committed to the ¹ú²úÂ鶹¾«Æ· elimination initiative in 2019, but COVID-19 delayed our resolve. Now is time to get back on track.
Published in: , , , , , , , , , The Nation Newspaper, Barbados, Le Nouvelliste National, Haiti, Antigua Observer, Antigua, , De West, Suriname, and .