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Integrated Management of Childhood Illness PDF Imprimer

  

 
The WHO essential medicines and health products programme works to increase access to essential, high-quality, safe, effective and affordable medical products

Essential medicines are those that satisfy the priority health care needs of a population.Essential medicines are those that satisfy the priority health care needs of a population. They are selected using criteria of efficacy, safety, cost of a course of therapy, compliance, multiple usage and storage, ease of administration and local availability. Medicines and health products often make up the largest portion of countries’ (and households’) health spending and their impact on health financing places them in a central position in all discussions, strategies and plans for universal health coverage. Access to quality-assured and affordable medicines is an essential component of universal health coverage.

Currently, the majority of people in low- and middle-income countries pay for medicines out-of-pocket, often leading to financial hardship. With the rise in non-communicable diseases – many of which are chronic conditions that require long-term treatment – the financial burden will become even greater, as will the need to accelerate progress towards universal health coverage.

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Image of the World No Tobacco Day 2010 poster, showing a cartoon drawing of the male and female symbols holding a no smoking sign.
 
 
Overview PDF Imprimer

Tobacco: Deadly in any form or disguise

WHO has selected “Tobacco products” as the theme for World No Tobacco Day 2006 to:

highlight the harms associated with use of any tobacco product

explain how the tobacco epidemic ravages countries that can least afford its toll of disability, disease, lost productivity and death

call on governments to enact regulation of tobacco products

stress the importance of the WHO Framework Convention on Tobacco Control (FCTC) in regulating tobacco products.

Tobacco is the only legal consumer product that kills when used exactly as intended by the manufacturer. World No Tobacco Day will help to save more lives and to limit the damage caused by tobacco use.

The key messages of this year's World No Tobacco Day are:

The tobacco industry puts profits and growth ahead of people and health.

Tobacco companies will continue to develop new products and disguise them in a cloak of attractiveness and reduced harmfulness.

All tobacco products, current and emerging, are harmful and addictive.

Governments should regulate all types of tobacco.

All countries have a moral obligation to ratify and fully implement the WHO FCTC to save lives.

 

 A group of people hold up their yellow fever vaccination cards in Darfur, Sudan (Photo: WHO Sudan)A group of people hold up their yellow fever vaccination cards in Darfur, Sudan (Photo: WHO Sudan)

Yellow fever is an acute viral haemorrhagic disease transmitted by infected mosquitoes, mainly Aedes aegypti. The "yellow" in the name refers to the jaundice that affects some patients. Most of those infected experience mild symptoms including include fever, headache, jaundice, muscle pain, nausea, vomiting and fatigue. Between 15% and 20% go into a severe haemorrhagic phase and half of those patients die.

Globally, yellow fever causes around 200,000 cases and 30,000 deaths per year. Over 900 million people are at risk of being infected in the tropical areas of Africa and South America.

Sudan is the only country in Eastern Mediterranean Region in the yellow fever zone. Large epidemics has been reported in Sudan in 1940, 1959, 2003, 2005, 2012 and 2013. Sudan conducted a yellow fever risk assessment exercise in early 2013 and confirmed that the yellow fever virus was circulating in all parts of the country. Apart from Sudan, serological evidence of circulation of yellow fever virus has been documented in Djibouti and Somalia.

Recommendations to control yellow fever included conducting preventive campaigns with the yellow fever vaccine, of which a single dose provides lifelong protection. In addition, the vaccine should be introduced in countries’ routine child immunization programme. Saudi Arabia requires a valid yellow fever vaccination certificate from those travelling from endemic countries to perform umrah and hajj.

In 2017, over 50 partners launched the Eliminate Yellow fever Epidemics (EYE) Strategy: an unprecedented partnership supporting 40 at-risk countries in Africa and the Americas to protect at-risk populations, prevent international spread, and contain outbreaks rapidly. By 2026, it is expected that more than 1 billion people will be protected against the disease.

There is currently no specific treatment for yellow fever, although proper case management improves survival rate. Use of yellow fever vaccine which offers life-long immunity can protect one from yellow fever.

 


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