Afghan Government Tells Foreign Donors How Aid Should Be Spent
"The Afghan government wants foreign donors to focus 80 percent of the billions of dollars flowing into the country on priority projects it believes are key to pulling the country out of poverty and turmoil, Afghan officials said," the Associated Press reports. According to the news service, government officials "lament" that much of aid money has "financed temporary programs or unsustainable projects that will not make a long-term difference in the daily lives of Afghan citizens." One draft of a conference communique obtained by the AP said the Afghan government will propose programs to improve roads, dams and irrigation systems, increase farm production, and offer literacy training for adults. The official government priority plan has not been released, the article notes (Riechmann, 7/12).
Researchers Test Temperature-Sensitive Vaccine In Mice
Scientists have created a "temperature-sensitive" vaccine in mice, a method that they hope "will lead to a new generation of vaccines for major bacterial diseases such as tuberculosis,"
WHO Flu Expert Reflects On Lessons Learned From H1N1 At International Conference On Emerging Infectious Diseases
One of the "most important lessons" from the world's response to the H1N1 (swine flu) pandemic was "the vital role of preparedness, from diagnostic testing to stockpiling of antiviral medications," Keiji Fukuda, the WHO's top flu expert, said Sunday during an opening session of the International Conference on Emerging Infectious Diseases, CIDRAP News reports. "Preparation for future disease threats should keep moving forward, Fukuda said. 'We need to make sure science is the basis for policy decisions,' he said. 'It will never be the only thing on the table, but it has to be on the table.'" CDC Director Thomas Frieden and National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases (NIAID) Director Anthony Fauci also spoke at the conference, according to the news service (Schnirring, 7/12).
Study Identifies Opportunity For Low-Cost HPV Vaccine In India
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Commonwealth Ministers Call For Increased Investment In Women
A meeting of Commonwealth gender affairs ministers "resolved that governments in [their] countries ...should give women social protection," Daily Nation/allAfrica.com reports. The delegates called for improvement in maternal health, asking for international support to "ensure that 90 percent of women giving birth are attended to by skilled health workers by 2015." The resolution also addressed a need for skilled health workers, universal access to HIV care, and the presence of women in parliaments. "The resolutions will be presented to the high level U.N. summit set to discuss Millennium Development Goals in September," according to the article (Shimoli/Leftie, 7/11).
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