Daily Sabah (Turkey)

WHO official links cholera outbreaks to climate change

- GENEVA / AA

CHOLERA outbreaks worldwide are deeply linked to climate change, a World Health Organizati­on (WHO) official said Tuesday after a meeting of a key advisory group on immunizati­on.

Dr. Kate O’Brien, the WHO’s director of immunizati­on, vaccines and biological­s, spoke at a press conference of the organizati­on’s Strategic Advisory Group of Experts on Immunizati­on, known as SAGE.

“I think we do have to acknowledg­e that the ongoing cholera outbreaks are deeply linked to climate change in emergency and conflict situations and we have raised the alarm on cholera,” said O’Brien.

“It’s not only about vaccines; certainly, they’re not the first line of defense against cholera. Cholera is a disease that affects clean water and clean sanitation. Vaccines are a method of preventing disease when it’s present.” O’Brien also said the world was currently gearing up for measles outbreaks.

“With outbreaks ongoing, climate change, population­s on the move and humanitari­an crises, the prevention of disease through immunizati­on couldn’t be more important than it is now,” she said.

She said immunizati­on programs have shown that resilience to diseases is at the heart of responding to new pathogens, “in particular pathogens like we’ve all just experience­d, the COVID-19 disease.”

She said the SAGE group had recently previewed new tuberculos­is vaccines and

several TB vaccines are in the pipeline to prevent adolescent and adult disease.

“TB is one of the most impactful diseases that takes the lives of people around the world. Over 1.3 million people died of tuberculos­is in 2022, with over 10 million falling ill from tuberculos­is.”

She also said the biggest impediment to access to vaccines is not disinforma­tion, which was prevalent at the height of COVID-19, but the availabili­ty of such medicines in some areas. “The COVID-19 pandemic poignantly showed that vaccine availabili­ty and access alone are not sufficient. There needs to be community, family and individual demand for vaccines so that people can get what is available to them.

“And over the past, as you well know, during the COVID-19 pandemic, there was a really impressive scaling of the amount of misinforma­tion and frankly just overwhelmi­ng amounts of informatio­n, which we refer to as an ‘infodemic,’” she added.

She said some of that informatio­n was incorrect, either unintentio­nally incorrect or intentiona­lly or misinforma­tion.

“The primary reason people don’t get vaccinated, however, is not that.

“For many people, the hours clinics are open, the distances that have to be traveled, and potentiall­y, the quality of the services are just insufficie­nt for them to actually get the vaccines that are offered.”

 ?? ?? The WHO official emphasized clean water’s critical role in combating cholera outbreaks.
The WHO official emphasized clean water’s critical role in combating cholera outbreaks.

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