Avian influenza remains the No.1 danger for global public health, said
Richard Nesbit, World Health Organization's Acting Regional Director for the
Western Pacific, on Friday.
He made the remarks at the conclusion of WHO's Western Pacific Region meeting
held in Auckland, New Zealand.
The WHO (World Health Organization) 57th annual meeting calls on its member
countries to step up their defenses against emerging diseases, including bird
flu, and to devote more resources to counter the growing threat from
noncommunicable diseases.
Earlier this week, Nesbit urged member country delegates to do more to
prepare for an outbreak of bird flu, saying no nation would be immune.
He said WHO lacked about half of the funds needed to help countries prepare
for and fight bird flu.
WHO spokesman Peter Cordingley said many countries did not have the money or
resources to implement full emergency plans.
The five-day meeting on Sept. 18-22 also endorsed a regional strategy
designed to stem the exodus of health care workers from poorer countries in the
region to more affluent nations.
Other issues examined included universal access to HIV/AIDS treatment,
prevention and control of tuberculosis, and program updates on measles
elimination, hepatitis B control and polio eradication, as well as tobacco
control, mental health and environmental health.
The 58th session of the Regional Committee for the Western Pacific will take
place in South Korea, in 2007.