U.S.
working to halt spread of diseases from Venezuela
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[October 03, 2018]
By Gram Slattery
SAO PAULO (Reuters) - The United States is
working with governments across Latin America to help prevent the spread
of diseases like diphtheria and measles from Venezuela as refugees flee
the chaotic country, U.S. Health and Human Services Secretary Alex Azar
said on Tuesday.
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Azar, a former executive at drugmaker Eli Lilly and Co, said it was
important to effectively treat infirm Venezuelan migrants before
diseases like malaria spread through neighboring countries.
"Disease knows no boundaries. And as we've had the complete collapse
of the public health infrastructure in Venezuela and then migrants
fleeing Venezuela to neighboring countries, they're bringing their
health conditions with them," Azar told Reuters during a stop in
Brazil ahead of a G20 meeting of health ministers in Argentina this
week.
"We're working with our health ministerial counterparts ... because
we want to ensure that these individuals are vaccinated, that they
get the care that they need, because we of course don't want measles
to become endemic in the Western Hemisphere again. We don't want
diphtheria to become widespread."
Venezuela is now in the fifth year of an economic crisis that has
caused its healthcare system to collapse and sparked malnutrition,
hyperinflation, and a migration crisis.
Refugees have ignited health emergencies in neighboring countries,
including in Brazil. Almost 300 cases of measles were recorded in
the Brazilian border state of Roraima between February and early
August, spurring the government to launch a nationwide campaign to
vaccinate 11 million children.
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While in Brazil, Azar visited a popular type of 24-hour health
clinic known as a UPA, where patients can receive basic medical
treatment.
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UPAs have helped reduce the number of hospital visits for patients
whose issues can be dealt with locally. Azar said they could serve
as a useful model for some U.S. communities.
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Brazil, particularly the nation's northeast, was hard-hit by the
2015-16 outbreak of the Zika virus, in which some infected pregnant
women gave birth to children with abnormal smallness of the head, a
condition known as microcephaly.
Azar said that collaboration between the United States and Brazil on
developing a Zika vaccine continued. He added that the United States
and Brazil were to sign an agreement Tuesday under which they would
contribute 14 million reais ($3.5 million) each for research next
year into a range of diseases including dengue and AIDS.
($1 = 3.94 Brazilian reais)
(Reporting by Gram Slattery; Editing by Tom Brown)
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