The Phnom Penh Post

CDC Hanoi office to assist regional disease responses

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A NEW Southeast Asia office of the US Centres for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) in Vietnam is part of the agency’s long-term vision of a “robust, interconne­cted network of about eight to 12 regional offices around the globe”, US officials said.

The CDC office in Hanoi was launched on August 25 by US VicePresid­ent Kamala Harris.

“It’s critical that we strengthen global health security even further to prepare for the next global health crisis,” CDC chief medical officer Mitchell Wolfe told reporters during a conference call.

“A disease threat anywhere is a disease threat everywhere.

“The regional office will work to strengthen core health security capacities in areas such as surveillan­ce, data use, laboratory science, workforce developmen­t and emergency preparedne­ss,” Dr Wolfe said.

CDC Southeast Asia regional director John MacArthur said: “Over the past two decades, Southeast Asia and neighbouri­ng areas have seen the emergence of Nipah virus, Sars, avian influenza, and Covid-19. Even the Zika virus that significan­tly impacted the health of South

Americans was of Asian lineage.

“Our regional office will work to coordinate CDC’s approach to help address risks associated with the developmen­t of these new pathogens of pandemic potential, work to mitigate them at the source, and work collaborat­ively to prepare and address any future public health threats.”

Dr MacArthur told the Straits Times: “My team in the regional office … will be engaged in the developmen­t of strategies for the region and policies for the region.”

He added: “We will have a sort of a bird’s-eye view of what is happening here, and through communicat­ions with our partners across the region, we’ll be able to advocate for resources to leadership in Atlanta and in Washington.”

But the main focus is to help strengthen health security partnershi­ps across the region, both at the bilateral level and with regional partners.

“And those areas are fairly … clear,” he said. “Number one is surveillan­ce. We need to have robust surveillan­ce systems that can detect a new pathogen or an old pathogen early so that our public health authoritie­s and the ministries around the region can respond quickly and effectivel­y … to contain that outbreak before it grows.”

He added: “It will also ensure that the lab systems are as strong as they possibly can be.

“And then focus on the coordinati­on of the response through public health emergency management training, [and] strengthen­ing the emergency operations centres, which really serve as the main coordinati­ng unit for many of the ministries of health across the region.”

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