PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

Child survival takes center stage as leaders convene to renew commitments

PATH and partners issue diarrhea/pneumonia declaration to call for action against leading causes of child mortality

2012-06-15
(Press-News.org) With an unprecedented commitment that bridges the urgent need to address diarrheal disease with unique opportunities to overcome it once and for all, leaders in global health issued today's Declaration on Scaling-up Treatment of Diarrhea and Pneumonia. PATH joins the US Agency for International Development, the Clinton Health Access Initiative, the Micronutrient Initiative, and others in raising a collective voice, calling for investments to scale-up the use of proven tools, particularly oral rehydration solution, zinc, and amoxicillin.

"We call on all high-burden countries and the international community to join [our] commitments to provide the resources, political will, and focused action necessary to end preventable childhood diarrheal and pneumonia deaths. We believe that working together we can ensure all children with diarrhea or pneumonia receive these life-saving products and reach their fifth birthday," the partners declared.

The declaration adds to the momentum this week in global health and development, highlighted by a Child Survival Call to Action on June 14-15 in Washington, DC. Country leaders and global health experts are convening to re-affirm their commitments to combine today's tools with tomorrow's innovative approaches and overcome the diseases that threaten the lives of children every day, particularly diarrhea, pneumonia, and malaria.

In advance of the Call to Action, UNICEF released a report last week that underscores the magnitude of the threat posed by diarrheal disease and pneumonia, the urgency to step up our efforts, and the proven, affordable solutions that can prevent needless deaths. The UNICEF report, Pneumonia and diarrhoea: Tackling the deadliest diseases for the world's poorest children, details that pneumonia and diarrhea are leading killers of the world's youngest children, accounting for 29 percent of deaths among children under age 5 worldwide – or more than 2 million lives lost each year.

"The Call to Action and the UNICEF report highlight that tackling the top killers that endanger children's health – such as diarrhea, pneumonia, and malaria – will make the most immediate impact," commented Steve Davis, President and CEO of PATH. "We have tools in hand and many others close to ready that can save lives and create a cycle of health and prosperity for children and communities around the world."

"Child mortality stifles the promise and potential of our communities, but this does not have to be the case," said Dr. Vu Minh Huong, senior team leader for immunization and manager of the Enhanced Diarrheal Disease Control Initiative for PATH's Vietnam Country Program. "We know how to help our children grow strong and relieve the strain on their families. Today's commitments are so encouraging—global and country leaders recognize that diarrhea and pneumonia are still major problems, but we can overcome them today if we work together."

PATH's work in low-resource countries of Africa and Asia is improving access to the simple solutions that can defeat diarrheal disease—revitalizing the use of oral rehydration solution and paving inroads for broad distribution of zinc. We are equipping health workers with comprehensive insight and basic yet powerful tools for treating diarrhea and pneumonia, including urgent rehydration and zinc for diarrhea, antibiotics for pneumonia, and education on nutrition, sanitation, and home care that can prevent severe illness in the future. The declaration highlights these critical tools as essential to partnerships among governments, civil society, and the private sector undertaking an integrated strategy to overcome diarrheal and pneumonia deaths.

Global attention to child survival

Diarrhea and pneumonia are among several scourges—also including, malaria, and HIV/AIDS—targeted in an ambitious campaign highlighted today through the release of the Child Survival Call to Action and related events in Washington, DC. Convened by the Governments of the United States, Ethiopia, and India, and organized in close collaboration with UNICEF, the Child Survival Call to Action focuses on ending preventable child death through the survival of newborns, children, and mothers. Seven hundred prominent leaders from government, the private sector, faith-based organizations, and civil society today kick off a long-term, focused effort to save children's lives.

INFORMATION:

Please visit www.apromiserenewed.org and www.defeatdd.org for more information.

About PATH

PATH is an international nonprofit organization that transforms global health through innovation. PATH takes an entrepreneurial approach to developing and delivering high-impact, low-cost solutions, from lifesaving vaccines and devices to collaborative programs with communities. Through its work in more than 70 countries, PATH and its partners empower people to achieve their full potential. For more information, please visit www.path.org.

END



ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Still capable of adapting: Research team studies genetic diversity of living fossils

2012-06-15
The morphology of coelacanths has not fundamentally changed since the Devonian age, that is, for about 400 million years. Nevertheless, these animals known as living fossils are able to genetically adapt to their environment. This is described by PD Dr. Kathrin Lampert from the RUB's Department of Animal Ecology, Evolution and Biodiversity along with colleagues from Würzburg, Bremen, Kiel and Dar es Salaam (Tanzania) in the journal Current Biology. "Coelacanths are rare and extremely endangered. Understanding the genetic diversity of these animals could help make preservation ...

European geneticists condemn use of testing to establish 'racial purity'

2012-06-15
The use of genetic testing to establish racial origins for political purposes is not only scientifically foolish, but also unethical and should be condemned, the European Society of Human Genetics (ESHG) said today (Thursday June 14). The society, which promotes research in basic and applied human and medical genetics and ensures high standards in clinical genetic practice, said that the use by a member of parliament from the Hungarian far-right Jobbik party of a genetic test to attempt to prove his 'ethnic purity' was ethically unacceptable. The company Nagy Gén scanned ...

Training people to inhibit movements can reduce risk-taking

2012-06-15
New research from psychologists at the Universities of Exeter and Cardiff shows that people can train their brains to become less impulsive, resulting in less risk-taking during gambling. The research could pave the way for new treatments for people with addictions to gambling, drugs or alcohol as well as impulse-control disorders, such as ADHD. Published today (14 June 2012), in the journal Psychological Science, the study assessed whether asking people to stop making simple movements while in a simulated gambling situation affected how risky or cautious they were ...

Training character strengths makes you happy

2012-06-15
Character strengths can be defined as traits that are rated as morally positive. That they are positively linked to life satisfaction has already been shown in many studies. That they have a causal effect on life satisfaction and that practicing them triggers an increase in the sense of wellbeing, however, has now been proved by Willibald Ruch, René T. Proyer and Claudia Buschor from the Department of Personality and Assessment at the University of Zurich for the first time. Practice pays off For their current study, the team of researchers randomly divided a sample ...

How many cells can our blood tolerate?

How many cells can our blood tolerate?
2012-06-15
When people say "Blood is thicker than water," they are literally right. Because nearly half of the 'life liquid' consists of solid components. The red blood cells form the greatest part of it – all in all around 40 percent of the blood. They contain the red pigment hemoglobin and are responsible for the transport of oxygen. "It is amazing that the percentage of this component is not only similar in all human beings but also in many other vertebrates," Prof. Dr. Stefan Schuster of the Friedrich Schiller University Jena (Germany) says. Therefore it can be assumed that ...

Making the invisible visible

2012-06-15
While youth suicide is declining overall, the rate of youth suicide in rural America has remained steady. A key to helping rural families with children at risk of suicide is frank discussion of guns says Jonathan Singer, assistant professor of social work at Temple University and co-author of a new study that examined how clinicians, including social workers and counselors involve parents in prevention and treatment of youth suicide. The study, "Engaging parents of suicidal youth in a rural environment" was published in the May issue of Child & Family Social Work. Singer ...

Warm climate -- cold Arctic?

2012-06-15
To address the question about how climate may develop in the future, earth scientists direct their attention to the past. They look for epochs with similar conditions to today. The major identified climatic processes are then simulated with numerical models to further test possible reactions of the Earths' system. An epoch which is often regarded suitable for such an undertaking is the Eemian warm period, which began around 125,000 years ago following the Saalian ice age. For about 10,000 years, average temperatures on Earth in the Eemian were rather enhanced – probably ...

Research debunks bodybuilding myth: Growth-promoting hormones don't stimulate strength

2012-06-15
New research from scientists at McMaster University reveals exercise-related testosterone and growth hormone do not play an influential role in building muscle after weightlifting, despite conventional wisdom suggesting otherwise. The findings indicate that bodybuilders who look to manipulate those hormones through exercise routines are wasting their time. In two separate studies, published in the Journal of Applied Physiology and the European Journal of Applied Physiology, researchers found anabolic hormones—long thought to be essential for building a muscular frame—do ...

Switchable nano magnets

2012-06-15
Using individual molecules instead of electronic or magnetic memory cells would revolutionise data storage technology, as molecular memories could be thousand-fold smaller. Scientists of Kiel University took a big step towards developing such molecular data storage. They succeeded in selectively switching on and off the magnetism of individual molecules, so-called spin-crossover complexes, by electrons. The interdisciplinary study is part of the Collaborative Research Centre 677 "Functions by Switching", which is funded by the German Research Foundation (DFG). The results ...

Secret love cheats pose a greater infection risk than those in open sexual relationships

2012-06-15
People who were sexually unfaithful without their partner's knowledge were less likely to practice safe sex than those who had other sexual relationships with their partner's consent. They were also more likely to be under the influence of drugs and alcohol at the time of the encounter. In a study published in The Journal of Sexual Medicine, researchers from the University of Michigan, USA, found that condom use for vaginal and anal sex was 27% and 35% lower in sexually unfaithful relationships and drug and alcohol use was 64% higher. Of the 1,647 people who replied ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Socioeconomic and political stability bolstered wild tiger recovery in India

Scratching an itch promotes antibacterial inflammation

Drivers, causes and impacts of the 2023 Sikkim flood in India

Most engineered human cells created for studying disease

Polar bear population decline the direct result of extended ‘energy deficit’ due to lack of food

Lifecycle Journal launches: A new vision for scholarly publishing

Ancient DNA analyses bring to life the 11,000-year intertwined genomic history of sheep and humans

Climate change increases risk of successive natural hazards in the Himalayas

From bowling balls to hip joints: Chemists create recyclable alternative to durable plastics

Promoting cacao production without sacrificing biodiversity

New £2 million project to save UK from food shortages

SCAI mourns Frank J. Hildner, MD, FSCAI: A founder and leader

New diagnostic tool will help LIGO hunt gravitational waves

Social entrepreneurs honored for lifesaving innovations

Aspects of marriage counseling may hold the key to depolarizing, unifying the country, study finds

With $2 million in new funding, Montana State research lab continues explorations into viruses and honeybee health

Scientists chip away at potato storage problems

Research update: Generating electricity from tacky tape

People’s acceptance of AI judgements on moral decisions: A study on justified defection

Wildfire smoke can carry toxins hundreds of kilometers, depositing grime on urban structures, surfaces: research

New study highlights AI’s potential to help doctors detect congenital heart defects

Your fridge uses tech from the 50’s, but scientists have an update

Archaeology: Ancient Greek and Roman cultures caused lead pollution in Aegean Sea region

Lead contamination in ancient Greece points to societal change

Antidepressant use before, during, and after pregnancy

Risk factors for and health status of socially isolated adults

Community racial and ethnic representation among physicians in US internal medicine residency programs

Salt and nutritional content of foods advertised during televised professional football games

KTU researcher on energy revolution: sustainability is still a work in process

Urgent action needed to keep Europe polio-free, warn heads of ECDC and WHO Europe

[Press-News.org] Child survival takes center stage as leaders convene to renew commitments
PATH and partners issue diarrhea/pneumonia declaration to call for action against leading causes of child mortality