Thousands in Asia-Pacifc Sprint to Fight H1N1
New York, Oct 31 2009 2:10PM
Some 11,000 people have taken part in today's United Nations running festival in Bangkok, Thailand, to raise awareness of the need to curb the spread of the H1N1 flu pandemic.
ence of direct or indirect harmful
effects on fertility, pregnancy, foetal development,
birthing or post-natal development. ENDS
Over 400,000
confirmed cases and 5,000 deaths from H1N1 flu have been
reported to the UN World Health Organization
(<"http://www.who.int/en/">WHO) as of last week, but the
actual number of cases is much higher since authorities in
many countries have stopped counting individual cases,
Noeleen Heyzer, Executive Secretary of the UN Economic and
Social Commission for Asia and the Pacific (http://www.unescap.org/),
"The spread of this disease underscores the
importance of ensuring a healthy balanced life style,
something that Thailand is known for, as well as ensuring
access to health and social services for all," she said at
the UN Day Run, whose theme this year is "Unite to Fight
H1N1."
Diseases, she emphasized, know no boundaries.
"But they can be stopped by awareness and education
campaigns, healthy communities and affordable health care."
Today's event also commemorated the 60th anniversary
of the UN being based in Thailand. Currently, 31 UN
organizations are based in the Thai capital.
"The UN
works around the world to make development more caring of
our planet and more inclusive for our people," Ms. Heyzer
stressed.
The WHO's latest recommendations call for
single doses of H1N1 flu vaccine for adults, adolescents
starting at age 10, and pregnant women.
The agency
said that the Strategic Advisory Group of Experts (SAGE) on
Immunization, which advises it on vaccine policy and
strategy, recommended further studies in children older than
six months and younger than 10 years, since the data are
limited.
For pregnant women, SAGE noted that studies
in experimental animals using live attenuated or inactivated
vaccines found no evid
"Based on these
data and the substantially elevated risk for a severe
outcome in pregnant women infected with the pandemic virus,
SAGE recommended that any licensed vaccine can be used in
pregnant women, provided no specific contraindication has
been identified by the [national] regulatory authority," WHO
said in its update http://www.who.int/csr/disease/swineflu/notes/briefing_20091030/en/index.html.