Absolute global povetry has gone down. But that naturally isn't the politically correct news to say. Especially for Americans.About 50,000 people die every day because of the effects of poverty. What massive global action are we taking to prevent those deaths?...oh yes..fuck all again. — Isaac
Of course there are more Americans now than then. — ssu
Absolute global poverty has gone down. But that naturally isn't the politically correct news to say. Especially for Americans. — ssu
Now, due to a new cause of death on the scene, we're back up to 900,000 or so per 100,000, only unlike in 2000, when it was accepted as normal, this time it's being seen as something which every grain of social, economic and political effort must be immediately put to reducing. — Isaac
You're failing to take into account the fact that the figure would likely be much higher if "social, economic and political effort" hadn't been "put to reducing" it. — Janus
we took no further steps at all — Isaac
Someone that doesn't know or understand that there are far more Americans today than one hundred years ago has to go to himself or herself. It isn't misleading.Exactly. So it's a misleading statistic deliberately cited in terms designed to further the fear and panic. Yet you thought it a good idea to promote it. — Isaac
Someone that doesn't know or understand that there are far more Americans today than one hundred years ago has to go to himself or herself. It isn't misleading. — ssu
Just to make the observation note that this isn't just your average flu epidemic. — ssu
Every other epidemic (pandemic) has had far less deaths with (with the exception of HIV). — ssu
Remind me again of the massive global effort to tackle the HIV crisis? — Isaac
well funded. — Olivier5
So we are making progress? — Olivier5
Although, the investment in this vaccine technology will ultimately save lives in the future because it will speed up response to the next asshole virus. — frank
No. HIV, poverty, tuberculosis, malaria, childhood obesity, heart disease, cancer, mental health issues, are all still ongoing causes of death and debilitation and we're still largely ignoring them (relative to covid).
We're not doing better, we've just created a system in which the cause with the most Facebook likes gets the fucking cavalry whilst everything else gets the home guard. — Isaac
Will it though? With rapidly dropping effectiveness against even minor variants of SARS-Cov-2, to what extent do you think it's going to be of any use against a completely different SARS altogether? — Isaac
Yes, we've got a cracking new delivery system, and that's not to be sniffed at, but as a response to epidemics in general, creating vaccines is an extremely inefficient method. — Isaac
With all the attention firmly focused on vaccination, the chances of anything useful being done to prepare for the next one are remote. — Isaac
Decades later, people wish they had addressed the weaknesses of those health systems, because new threats keep coming. — Olivier5
The more efficient method is to let them die in their front yards gasping for breath? Or what? — frank
National leaders and leaders of international organizations and other stakeholders take early decisive action based on science, evidence and best practice when confronted with health emergencies. They discourage the politicization of measures to protect public health, ensure social protection and promote national unity and global solidarity.
We reiterate our call for heads of government to appoint a national high-level coordinator with the authority and political accountability to lead whole-of government and whole-of-society approaches, and routinely conduct multisectoral simulation exercises to establish and maintain effective preparedness.
National leaders, manufacturers and international organizations ensure that COVID-19 vaccines and other countermeasures are allocated in a way that will have the most impact in stopping the pandemic, that access is fair and equitable, and not based on ability to pay, with health care workers and the most vulnerable having priority access. Each country should get an initial allocation of vaccine sufficient to cover at least 2% of its population, to cover frontline health care workers.
Citizens demand accountability from their governments for health emergency preparedness, which requires that governments empower their citizens and strengthen civil society.
Every individual takes responsibility for seeking and using accurate information to educate themselves, their families and their communities. They adopt health promoting behaviours and take actions to protect the most vulnerable. They advocate for these actions within their communities.
Heads of government strengthen national systems for preparedness: identifying, predicting and detecting the emergence of pathogens with pandemic potential based on a ‘One Health’ approach that integrates animal and human health; building core public health capacities and workforce for surveillance, early detection and sharing of information on outbreaks and similar events; strengthening health systems based on universal health coverage with surge capacity for clinical and supportive services; and putting in place systems of social protection to safeguard the vulnerable, leaving no one behind.
Researchers, research institutions, research funders, the private sector, governments, the World Health Organization and international organizations improve coordination and support for research and development in health emergencies and establish a sustainable mechanism to ensure rapid development, early availability, effective and equitable access to novel vaccines, therapeutics, diagnostics and non-pharmaceutical interventions for health emergencies, including capacity for testing, scaled manufacturing and distribution.
Heads of government renew their commitment to the multilateral system and strengthen WHO as an impartial and independent international organization, responsible for directing and coordinating pandemic preparedness and response.
We call for sustained investment in prevention and preparedness, commensurate with the scale of a pandemic threat.
G20 leaders ensure that adequate finance is made available now to mitigate the current and future economic and socioeconomic consequences of the pandemic.
Heads of government protect and sustain the financing of their national capacities for health emergency preparedness and response developed for COVID-19, beyond the current pandemic.
The United Nations, the World Health Organization, and the International Financing Institutions develop a mechanism for sustainable financing of global health security, which mobilizes resources on the scale and within the timeframe required, is not reliant on development assistance, recognizes preparedness as a global common good, and is not at the mercy of political and economic cycles.
The World Bank and other International Financial Institutions (IFI) make research and development (R&D) investments eligible for IFI financing and develop mechanisms to provide financing for global R&D for health emergencies.
State Parties to the International Health Regulations (IHR), or the WHO Director-General, propose amendments of the IHR to the World Health Assembly, to include: strengthening early notification and comprehensive information sharing; intermediate grading of health emergencies; development of evidence based recommendations on the role of domestic and international travel and trade recommendations; and mechanisms for assessing IHR compliance and core capacity implementation, including a universal, periodic, objective and external review mechanism.
National leaders, the World Health Organization, the United Nations and other international organizations develop predictive mechanisms for assessing multisectoral preparedness, including simulations and exercises that test and demonstrate the capacity and agility of health emergency preparedness systems, and their functioning within societies.
The Secretary-General of the United Nations, the Director-General of the World Health Organization, and the heads of International Financing Institutions convene a UN Summit on Global Health Security, with the aim of agreeing on an international framework for health emergency preparedness and response, incorporating the IHR, and including mechanisms for sustainable financing, research and development, social protection, equitable access to countermeasures for all, and mutual accountability. — WHO-Global Preparedness Monitoring Board
We're not doing better, we've just created a system in which the cause with the most Facebook likes gets the fucking cavalry whilst everything else gets the home guard. — Isaac
New documents show that just 18 months before the first Covid cases appeared, researchers had submitted plans to release skin-penetrating nanoparticles containing "novel chimeric spike proteins" of bat coronaviruses into cave bats in Yunnan, China.
They also planned to create chimeric viruses, genetically enhanced to infect humans more easily, and requested $14 million from the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency (DARPA) to fund the work.
Papers, confirmed as genuine by a former member of the Trump administration, show they were hoping to introduce "human-specific cleavage sites" to bat coronaviruses which would make it easier for the virus to enter human cells.
A Covid-19 researcher from the World Health Organisation (WHO), who wished to remain anonymous, said it was alarming that the grant proposal included plans to enhance the more deadly disease of Middle-East Respiratory Syndrome (Mers).
“The scary part is they were making infectious chimeric Mers viruses,” the source said. “These viruses have a fatality rate over 30 per cent, which is at least an order of magnitude more deadly than Sars-CoV-2.
On July 5, 2021, a Correspondence was published in The Lancet called “Science, not speculation, is essential to determine how SARS-CoV-2 reached humans”.1 The letter recapitulates the arguments of an earlier letter (published in February, 2020) by the same authors,2 which claimed overwhelming support for the hypothesis that the novel coronavirus causing the COVID-19 pandemic originated in wildlife. The authors associated any alternative view with conspiracy theories by stating: “We stand together to strongly condemn conspiracy theories suggesting that COVID-19 does not have a natural origin”. The statement has imparted a silencing effect on the wider scientific debate, including among science journalists.3 The 2021 letter did not repeat the proposition that scientists open to alternative hypotheses were conspiracy theorists, but did state: “We believe the strongest clue from new, credible, and peer-reviewed evidence in the scientific literature is that the virus evolved in nature, while suggestions of a laboratory leak source of the pandemic remain without scientifically validated evidence that directly supports it in peer-reviewed scientific journals”. In fact, this argument could literally be reversed. As will be shown below, there is no direct support for the natural origin of SARS-CoV-2, and a laboratory-related accident is plausible.
No, the more efficient method is
National leaders and leaders of international organizations and other stakeholders take early decisive action based on science, evidence and best practice when confronted with health emergencies. They discourage the politicization of measures to protect public health, ensure social protection and promote national unity and global solidarity.
We reiterate our call for heads of government to appoint a national high-level coordinator with the authority and political accountability to lead whole-of government and whole-of-society approaches, and routinely conduct multisectoral simulation exercises to establish and maintain effective preparedness.
National leaders, manufacturers and international organizations ensure that COVID-19 vaccines and other countermeasures are allocated in a way that will have the most impact in stopping the pandemic, that access is fair and equitable, and not based on ability to pay, with health care workers and the most vulnerable having priority access. Each country should get an initial allocation of vaccine sufficient to cover at least 2% of its population, to cover frontline health care workers.
Citizens demand accountability from their governments for health emergency preparedness, which requires that governments empower their citizens and strengthen civil society.
Every individual takes responsibility for seeking and using accurate information to educate themselves, their families and their communities. They adopt health promoting behaviours and take actions to protect the most vulnerable. They advocate for these actions within their communities.
Heads of government strengthen national systems for preparedness: identifying, predicting and detecting the emergence of pathogens with pandemic potential based on a ‘One Health’ approach that integrates animal and human health; building core public health capacities and workforce for surveillance, early detection and sharing of information on outbreaks and similar events; strengthening health systems based on universal health coverage with surge capacity for clinical and supportive services; and putting in place systems of social protection to safeguard the vulnerable, leaving no one behind.
Researchers, research institutions, research funders, the private sector, governments, the World Health Organization and international organizations improve coordination and support for research and development in health emergencies and establish a sustainable mechanism to ensure rapid development, early availability, effective and equitable access to novel vaccines, therapeutics, diagnostics and non-pharmaceutical interventions for health emergencies, including capacity for testing, scaled manufacturing and distribution.
Heads of government renew their commitment to the multilateral system and strengthen WHO as an impartial and independent international organization, responsible for directing and coordinating pandemic preparedness and response.
We call for sustained investment in prevention and preparedness, commensurate with the scale of a pandemic threat.
G20 leaders ensure that adequate finance is made available now to mitigate the current and future economic and socioeconomic consequences of the pandemic.
Heads of government protect and sustain the financing of their national capacities for health emergency preparedness and response developed for COVID-19, beyond the current pandemic.
The United Nations, the World Health Organization, and the International Financing Institutions develop a mechanism for sustainable financing of global health security, which mobilizes resources on the scale and within the timeframe required, is not reliant on development assistance, recognizes preparedness as a global common good, and is not at the mercy of political and economic cycles.
The World Bank and other International Financial Institutions (IFI) make research and development (R&D) investments eligible for IFI financing and develop mechanisms to provide financing for global R&D for health emergencies.
State Parties to the International Health Regulations (IHR), or the WHO Director-General, propose amendments of the IHR to the World Health Assembly, to include: strengthening early notification and comprehensive information sharing; intermediate grading of health emergencies; development of evidence based recommendations on the role of domestic and international travel and trade recommendations; and mechanisms for assessing IHR compliance and core capacity implementation, including a universal, periodic, objective and external review mechanism.
National leaders, the World Health Organization, the United Nations and other international organizations develop predictive mechanisms for assessing multisectoral preparedness, including simulations and exercises that test and demonstrate the capacity and agility of health emergency preparedness systems, and their functioning within societies.
The Secretary-General of the United Nations, the Director-General of the World Health Organization, and the heads of International Financing Institutions convene a UN Summit on Global Health Security, with the aim of agreeing on an international framework for health emergency preparedness and response, incorporating the IHR, and including mechanisms for sustainable financing, research and development, social protection, equitable access to countermeasures for all, and mutual accountability.
— WHO-Global Preparedness Monitoring Board — Isaac
How’re those “social responses” working out? — NOS4A2
Such actions suggest people are more of a problem than Covid-19. — NOS4A2
Could be better, could be worse?
There are definitely problematic humans out there. (Are you one of them?)
Will it?Although, the investment in this vaccine technology will ultimately save lives in the future because it will speed up response to the next asshole virus. — frank
The more efficient method is to let them die in their front yards gasping for breath? Or what? — frank
You're failing to take into account the fact that the figure would likely be much higher if "social, economic and political effort" hadn't been "put to reducing" it. — Janus
No. I said
we took no further steps at all — Isaac
...although, had I not, my comment would still have been true. In 20 year's time the death toll would be dramatically reduced. — Isaac
Why do people live? What do they hope to accomplish by living? Should they be helped to live, made to live, solely for the sake of living?
It would be easier to design an emergency response strategy to a health crisis if people's lives would be considered in terms of "living as a means to an end", rather than just "living for the sake of living".
It is, of course, unacceptable to bring this up in polite society. But it is precisely because we haven't cleared this up and instead made it into a taboo topic that our response to a crisis (any crisis) is bound to be ineffective — baker
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