US health officials called the Global Health Security Agenda a priority because too many countries lack the health infrastructure necessary to spot a new infection rapidly and sound the alarm before it has time to gain a foothold and even spread into other countries.
Germs "do not recognise or stop at national borders," Health and Human Services Secretary Kathleen Sebelius said today as representatives from participating countries, the World Health Organisation and other groups met to discuss plans. "A threat anywhere is indeed a threat everywhere."
Infectious diseases are a growing concern. Just in the past year, China alerted the world that a new type of bird flu was sickening people; a mysterious and deadly new respiratory virus emerged in the Middle East; and scientists detected the spread of some older diseases to new locales including the first appearance of mosquito-borne chikungunya virus in the Caribbean.
New diseases are but a plane ride away, warned Dr Tom Frieden, director of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.
"There are too many blind spots around the world," he told reporters in preparation for today's meeting.
Last year, the CDC began a pilot project in Uganda to improve detection of such diseases as cholera, drug-resistant tuberculosis and hemorrhagic fevers. Motorcycles raced samples from sick patients in remote parts of the country to provincial capitals, where they could be shipped overnight to a laboratory that could rapidly report the results back.
It "showed that very rapid progress was possible," Frieden said.
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