IAC Express 2007 |
Issue number 678: August 13, 2007 |
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Contents
of this Issue
Select a title to jump to the article. |
- MMWR
notifies readers of revised recommendations to vaccinate all persons ages
11-18 with MCV4 at earliest opportunity
- JAMA
study concludes that current vaccine financing system results in gaps for
underinsured U.S. children
- IAC
website posts updated and new immunization-education print materials
- CDC
issues an update on U.S. and worldwide influenza activity in 2006-07 and
on composition of 2007-08 influenza vaccine
- JAMA
study finds community strategies can prevent deaths during influenza
pandemic
- CDC net
conferences coming soon--New Influenza Vaccine Recommendations and Travel
Health Issues Including Malaria
- August 9
issue of IAC's Hep Express electronic newsletter now available online
- Support
the National Viral Hepatitis Roundtable
- Asian
Liver Center publishes 2007 edition of its Physician's Guide to Hepatitis
B
- Asian
Liver Center operates an information health line
- National
Task Force on Hepatitis B: Focus on Asian and Pacific Islander Americans
works to eliminate hepatitis B-related mortality and morbidity
- National
Viral Hepatitis Training Center offers training in San Diego
- Fifth
International Bird Flu Summit scheduled for September 27-28 in Las Vegas
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Abbreviations |
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AAFP, American Academy of Family Physicians; AAP,
American Academy of Pediatrics; ACIP, Advisory Committee on Immunization
Practices; AMA, American Medical Association; CDC, Centers for Disease
Control and Prevention; FDA, Food and Drug Administration; IAC, Immunization
Action Coalition; MMWR, Morbidity and Mortality Weekly Report; NCIRD,
National Center for Immunization and Respiratory Diseases; NIVS, National
Influenza Vaccine Summit; VIS, Vaccine Information Statement; VPD,
vaccine-preventable disease; WHO, World Health Organization. |
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Issue 678: August 13, 2007 |
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1. |
MMWR notifies readers of revised recommendations to vaccinate all persons
ages 11-18 with MCV4 at earliest opportunity
CDC published "Notice to Readers: Revised
Recommendations of the
Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices to Vaccinate All
Persons Aged 11-18 Years with Meningococcal Conjugate Vaccine"
in the August 10 issue of MMWR. Portions of the notice are
reprinted below.
In January 2005, a quadrivalent meningococcal polysaccharide-protein conjugate vaccine (MCV4)
(Menactra, sanofi pasteur,
Inc., Swiftwater, Pennsylvania) was licensed for use among
persons aged 11-55 years. In May 2005, the Advisory Committee on
Immunization Practices (ACIP) recommended routine vaccination
with 1 dose of MCV4 for persons aged 11-12 years, persons
entering high school (i.e., at approximately age 15 years) if
not previously vaccinated with MCV4, and other persons at
increased risk for meningococcal disease, including college
freshmen living in dormitories. Background information regarding
meningococcal disease and the vaccine, including a discussion of
duration of protection and use of the vaccine for outbreak
control, has been published previously.
In June 2007, ACIP revised its recommendation to include routine
vaccination of all persons aged 11-18 years with 1 dose of MCV4
at the earliest opportunity. Persons aged 11-12 years should be
routinely vaccinated at the 11-12 years healthcare visit as
recommended by ACIP. ACIP continues to recommend routine
vaccination for persons aged 19-55 years who are at increased
risk for meningococcal disease: college freshmen living in
dormitories, microbiologists routinely exposed to isolates of
Neisseria meningitidis, military recruits, travelers to or
residents of countries in which N. meningitidis meningitis is
hyperendemic or epidemic, persons with terminal complement
component deficiencies, and persons with anatomic or functional
asplenia.
The ACIP goal is routine vaccination of all adolescents with
MCV4 beginning at age 11 years. ACIP and partner organizations,
including the American Academy of Pediatrics, American Academy
of Family Physicians, American Medical Association, and Society
for Adolescent Medicine, recommend a healthcare visit for
children aged 11-12 years to receive recommended vaccinations
and indicated preventive services. This visit is the optimal
time for adolescents to receive MCV4. In addition, because the
incidence of meningococcal disease increases during adolescence,
healthcare providers should vaccinate previously unvaccinated
persons aged 11-18 years with MCV4 at the earliest possible
healthcare visit. College freshmen living in dormitories are at
increased risk for meningococcal disease and should be
vaccinated with MCV4 before college entry if they have not been
vaccinated previously. Because of difficulties in targeting
freshmen in dormitories, colleges may elect to target their
vaccination campaigns to all matriculating freshmen. . . .
ACIP encourages healthcare providers to vaccinate with MCV4
throughout the year to minimize seasonal increases in demand
during July and August when students prepare to return to school
from summer vacation. Vaccine providers should administer MCV4
and Tdap (tetanus toxoid, reduced diphtheria toxoid, and
acellular pertussis) vaccine to persons aged 11-18 years during
the same visit if both vaccines are indicated and available. If
simultaneous vaccination is not feasible (e.g., a vaccine is not
available), MCV4 and Tdap can be administered using any order of
administration. When making decisions about timing of
vaccination, providers should consider that eligibility for the
Vaccines for Children Program ends at age 19 years.
Guillain-Barre syndrome (GBS) has been associated with receipt
of MCV4. Persons with a history of GBS might be at increased
risk for postvaccination GBS; therefore, a history of GBS is a
relative contraindication to receiving MCV4. Persons recommended
to receive meningococcal vaccination who have a history of GBS
(or their parents) should discuss the decision to be vaccinated
with their healthcare provider. Meningococcal polysaccharide
vaccine (MPSV4) is an acceptable alternative for short-term
protection against meningococcal disease (3-5 years). Providers
who have questions about ordering MCV4 or MPSV4 may contact
sanofi pasteur by telephone at (800) 822-2463 [(800) VACCINE] or
online at http://www.vaccineshoppe.com
To access a web-text (HTML) version of the complete notice, go
to: http://www.cdc.gov/mmwr/preview/mmwrhtml/mm5631a3.htm
To access a ready-to-print (PDF) version of this issue of MMWR,
go to: http://www.cdc.gov/mmwr/PDF/wk/mm5631.pdf
To receive a FREE electronic subscription to MMWR (which
includes new ACIP statements), go to:
http://www.cdc.gov/mmwr/mmwrsubscribe.html
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2. |
JAMA study concludes that current vaccine financing system results in gaps
for underinsured U.S. children
The August 8 issue of the Journal of the American
Medical
Association (JAMA) includes an article that concludes that
because of gaps in the U.S. vaccine financing system, many
underinsured children are unable to receive publicly purchased
vaccines in either the public or private sectors. Titled "Gaps
in Vaccine Financing for Underinsured Children in the United
States," the article was written by Grace M. Lee, MD, MPH;
Jeanne M. Santoli, MD; Claire Hannan, MPH, et al. The article
abstract is reprinted below; the full text is available to JAMA
subscribers.
Also in the August 8 issue, JAMA published a related editorial,
"Reasons and Remedies for Underinsurance for Child and
Adolescent Vaccines," written by Matthew M. Davis, MD, MAPP. A
link to an extract (the first 150 words of the editorial) is
given at the end of this IAC Express article. The full text is
available to JAMA subscribers.
[Article abstract]
Context: The number of new vaccines recommended for children and
adolescents has nearly doubled during the past 5 years, and the
cost of fully vaccinating a child has increased dramatically in
the past decade. Anecdotal reports from state policy makers and
clinicians suggest that new gaps have arisen in financial
coverage of vaccines for children who are underinsured (i.e.,
have private insurance that does not cover all recommended
vaccines). In 2000, approximately 14% of children were
underinsured for vaccines in the United States.
Objectives: To describe variation among states in the provision
of new vaccines to underinsured children and to identify
barriers to state purchase and distribution of new vaccines.
Design, Setting, and Participants: A 2-phase mixed-methods study
of state immunization program managers in the United States. The
first phase included 1-hour qualitative telephone interviews
conducted from November to December 2005 with 9 program managers
chosen to represent different state vaccine financing policies.
The second phase incorporated findings from phase 1 to develop a
national telephone and paper-based survey of state immunization
program managers that was conducted from January to June 2006.
Main Outcome Measures: Percentage of states in which
underinsured children are unable to receive publicly purchased
vaccines in the private or public sectors.
Results: Immunization program managers from 48 states (96%)
participated in the study. Underinsured children were not
eligible to receive publicly purchased meningococcal conjugate
or pneumococcal conjugate vaccines in the private sector in 70%
and 50% of states, respectively, or in the public sector in 40%
and 17% of states, respectively. Due to limited financing for
new vaccines, 10 states changed their policies for provision of
publicly purchased vaccines between 2004 and early 2006 to
restrict access to selected new vaccines for underinsured
children. The most commonly cited barriers to implementation in
underinsured children were lack of sufficient federal and state
funding to purchase vaccines.
Conclusions: The current vaccine financing system has resulted
in gaps for underinsured children in the United States, many of
whom are now unable to receive publicly purchased vaccines in
either the private or public sectors. Additional strategies are
needed to ensure financial coverage for all vaccines,
particularly new vaccines, among this vulnerable population.
To access the article abstract from the JAMA website, go to:
http://jama.ama-assn.org/cgi/content/abstract/298/6/638
To access the editorial extract (first 150 words of the
editorial) from the JAMA website, go to:
http://jama.ama-assn.org/cgi/content/extract/298/6/680
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3. |
IAC website posts updated and new immunization-education print materials
IAC recently updated two of its
immunization-education materials
and created a new one. Details follow:
Intended to help health professionals direct parents and
patients to science-based immunization information, the print
piece "Reliable Sources of Immunization Information: Where to go
to find answers!" was updated with new information.
To access it, go to:
http://www.immunize.org/catg.d/p4012.pdf
The professional-education resource "It's Federal Law! You must
give your patients current Vaccine Information Statements
(VISs)" was updated to reflect the dates of the most current
versions of VISs.
To access it, go to:
http://www.immunize.org/catg.d/p2027.pdf
IAC recently developed a new two-page chart, titled "Guide to
Contraindications and Precautions to Commonly Used Vaccines." It
is adapted from information found in the CDC document "General
Recommendations on Immunization: Recommendations of the Advisory
Committee on Immunization Practices (ACIP)."
To access the new chart, go to:
http://www.immunize.org/catg.d/p3072a.pdf
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4. |
CDC issues an update on U.S. and worldwide influenza activity in 2006-07 and
on composition of 2007-08 influenza vaccine
CDC published "Update: Influenza Activity--United
States and
Worldwide, 2006-07 Season, and Composition of the 2007-08
Influenza Vaccine" in the August 10 issue of MMWR. Portions of
the article are reprinted below.
During the 2006-07 season, influenza activity peaked in mid-February in the United States and was associated with less
mortality and lower rates of pediatric hospitalizations than
during the previous three seasons. In the United States,
influenza A (H1) viruses predominated overall, but influenza A
(H3) viruses were isolated more frequently than influenza A (H1)
viruses late in the season. Although influenza A (H1), A (H3),
and B viruses co-circulated worldwide, influenza A (H3) viruses
were the most commonly reported type in Europe and Asia.
Sporadic cases of avian influenza A (H5N1) virus infections
associated with severe illness or death were reported among
humans in Cambodia, China, Egypt, Indonesia, Laos, Nigeria, and
Viet Nam. This report summarizes influenza activity in the
United States and worldwide during the 2006-07 influenza season
(October 1, 2006-May 19, 2007) and describes the composition of
the 2007-08 influenza vaccine.
UNITED STATES
The national percentage of respiratory specimens testing
positive for influenza and the proportion of outpatient visits
to sentinel providers for influenza-like illness (ILI) peaked in
mid-February. Although influenza A (H1) viruses were most
commonly isolated overall, influenza A (H3) viruses were more
frequently identified than influenza A (H1) viruses from early
March through May. A small number of influenza B viruses also
were identified. . . .
COMPOSITION OF THE INFLUENZA VACCINE FOR THE 2007-08 SEASON
The Food and Drug Administration's Vaccines and Related
Biological Products Advisory Committee recommended that the
2007-08 trivalent influenza vaccine for the United States
contain A/Solomon Islands/3/2006-like (H1N1),
A/Wisconsin/67/2005-like (H3N2), and B/Malaysia/2506/2004-like
viruses. This represents a change only in the influenza A (H1N1)
component. A/Solomon Islands/3/2006 is a recent antigenic
variant of the 2006-07 vaccine strain A/New Caledonia/20/99. The
influenza A (H3N2) and influenza B components remain the same.
These recommendations were based on antigenic analyses of
recently isolated influenza viruses, epidemiologic data,
postvaccination serologic studies in humans, and the
availability of candidate vaccine strains and reagents. . . .
PNEUMONIA- AND INFLUENZA-RELATED MORTALITY
During the 2006-07 influenza season, the percentage of deaths
attributed to pneumonia and influenza (P&I) did not exceed the
epidemic threshold in the 122 Cities Mortality Reporting System.
The percentage of P&I deaths peaked three times, once at 7.5%
during the week ending January 20, 2007 (week 3), once at 7.7%
during the week ending February 24, 2007 (week 8), and again at
7.5% during the week ending March 24, 2007 (week 12). During the
previous three influenza seasons, the peak percentage of P&I
deaths ranged from 7.8% to 10.4%, and the total number of weeks
above the epidemic threshold ranged from one to 16.
INFLUENZA-ASSOCIATED PEDIATRIC MORTALITY
As of August 6, 2007, among persons aged <18 years, a total of
68 deaths associated with influenza infection occurring during
October 1, 2006-May 19, 2007, were reported to CDC. These deaths
were reported from 26 states (Alabama, Alaska, Arizona,
California, Colorado, Connecticut, Florida, Georgia, Illinois,
Indiana, Kansas, Louisiana, Minnesota, North Carolina, Nebraska,
Nevada, New Mexico, New York, Ohio, Oklahoma, South Dakota,
Tennessee, Texas, Virginia, Washington, and Wisconsin). All
patients had laboratory-confirmed influenza virus infection.
Age-specific information was available for all 68 persons; 10
were aged <6 months, 10 were aged 6-23 months, nine were aged
2-4 years, and 39 were aged 5-17 years. Of the 63 patients for
whom influenza virus type was known, 47 had influenza A and 16
had influenza B viruses. Of the 53 patients aged >=6 months for
whom vaccination status was known, 50 (94%) had not been
vaccinated against influenza. These data are provisional. . . .
HUMAN INFECTIONS WITH AVIAN INFLUENZA A (H5N1) VIRUSES
From December 1, 2003, through July 25, 2007, a total of 319
human cases of avian influenza A (H5N1) infection were reported
to WHO. Of these, 192 (60%) were fatal. All cases were reported
from Asia (Azerbaijan, Cambodia, China, Indonesia, Iraq, Laos,
Thailand, Turkey, and Viet Nam) and Africa (Djibouti, Egypt, and
Nigeria). To date, no human case of avian influenza A (H5N1)
virus infection has been identified in the United States.
EDITORIAL NOTE
During the 2006-07 influenza season, influenza activity in the
United States peaked in mid-February, and the percentage of
deaths resulting from pneumonia and influenza remained below
baseline levels for the entire influenza season. In the United
States, influenza A (H1) viruses predominated during most of the
season, but influenza A (H3) viruses were more frequently
identified than influenza A (H1) viruses since early March.
Worldwide, influenza A (H3) viruses predominated in many
European and Asian countries.
In the United States, the majority of influenza A (H1) viruses
were characterized as A/New Caledonia/20/99, the recommended
influenza A (H1N1) component of the 2006-07 influenza vaccine.
Fifty percent of the influenza B viruses characterized as
belonging to the B/Victoria lineage were further characterized
as B/Ohio/01/2005, the antigenic equivalent of B/Malaysia/2506/2004, the recommended influenza B component for the 2006-07
influenza vaccine. In the early months of the season, the
majority of influenza A (H3) isolates matched the A/Wisconsin/67/2005 strain, the recommended influenza A (H3N2) component for
the 2006-07 vaccine. Beginning in late February 2007, the
majority of the influenza A (H3) isolates indicated reduced
titers with antisera produced against A/Wisconsin/67/2005.
States are requested to submit a subset of their summer
influenza isolates and any samples that cannot be subtyped by
standard methods or are unusual to CDC for further antigenic
characterization.
In May 2007, a Health Alert Network advisory was issued by CDC
regarding an increase in the number of influenza-associated
pediatric deaths and co-infections with Staphylococcus aureus
during the 2006-07 season. Only one pediatric death with
influenza and S. aureus co-infection had been reported during
2004-05, and three had been reported during the 2005-06 season.
Of the 68 reported deaths among children associated with
influenza infections during October 1, 2006-May 19, 2007, a
total of 21 had co-infections with influenza and either
methicillin-resistant or sensitive S. aureus. State health
departments have been asked to ensure that all influenza-associated pediatric deaths from the 2006-07 influenza season
are reported to CDC.
At the June 2007 Annual Meeting of the Council of State and
Territorial Epidemiologists (CSTE), members voted to ratify a
position statement adopted by the CSTE Executive Committee in
January 2007 that adds human infections with novel influenza A
viruses to the list of nationally notifiable diseases and
conditions reportable to the National Notifiable Disease
Surveillance System. Novel influenza A viruses are defined as
those isolated from a human but subtyped as nonhuman, or those
that cannot be subtyped by standard methods. Human infections
with novel influenza A viruses that can be transmitted from
person-to-person might signal the beginning of an influenza
pandemic. Rapid reporting of human infections with novel
influenza A viruses will facilitate prompt detection and
characterization of influenza A viruses with pandemic potential
and accelerate implementation of effective public health
responses. In addition, influenza-associated pediatric deaths
were maintained as a nationally notifiable disease reportable to
the National Notifiable Disease Surveillance System.
In May 2007, health authorities in the United Kingdom identified
four persons, two in Wales and two in northwest England, who
were infected with a low pathogenic avian influenza A (H7N2)
virus. All four persons had been exposed to infected poultry at
a farm in Wales; limited evidence of human-to-human transmission
has been associated with low pathogenic avian influenza viruses
such as influenza A (H7N2) virus. The United Kingdom incident
underscores the importance of submission and identification of
unusual influenza isolates.
In collaboration with local and state health departments, CDC
continues to recommend enhanced surveillance for possible avian
influenza A (H5N1) infection among travelers who have severe
unexplained respiratory illness and are returning from influenza
A (H5N1)-affected countries. Additional information regarding
influenza, including avian influenza, is available at
http://www.cdc.gov/flu Updates on the worldwide avian influenza
situation are available from WHO at
http://www.who.int/csr/disease/avian_influenza/en
To access a web-text (HTML) version of the complete article, go
to: http://www.cdc.gov/mmwr/preview/mmwrhtml/mm5631a2.htm
To access a ready-to-print (PDF) version of this issue of MMWR,
go to: http://www.cdc.gov/mmwr/PDF/wk/mm5631.pdf
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5. |
JAMA study finds community strategies can prevent deaths during influenza
pandemic
On August 7, CDC issued a press release titled
Community
Measures Prevent Deaths During Pandemic, New Study Finds.
Portions of it are reprinted below.
School closures and other community strategies designed to
reduce the possibility of spreading disease between people
during an epidemic can save lives, particularly when the
measures are used in combination and implemented soon after an
outbreak begins in a community, according to a new study based
on public records from the 1918-1919 influenza pandemic.
The findings, which are published in the August 8 issue of the
Journal of the American Medical Association [JAMA], provide
vital clues to help public officials planning for the next
influenza pandemic and highlight the importance of community
strategies. These strategies are particularly important because
the intervention most likely to provide the best protection
against pandemic influenza--a vaccine--is unlikely to be
available at the outset of a pandemic. Community strategies that
delay or reduce the impact of a pandemic (also called non-pharmaceutical interventions) may help reduce the spread of
disease until a vaccine that is well-matched to the virus is
available. . . .
"Communities that were most successful during the 1918 pandemic
quickly enacted a variety of measures," said Dr. Martin Cetron,
director of CDC's Division of Global Migration and Quarantine
and senior author of the study. "Those planning for the next
pandemic need to carefully consider how to best use these
strategies to protect people and decrease the potential impact
of the next pandemic in their communities. . . ."
To access the complete press release, go to:
http://www.cdc.gov/od/oc/media/pressrel/2007/r070807.htm
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6. |
CDC net conferences coming soon--New Influenza Vaccine Recommendations and
Travel Health Issues Including Malaria
CDC has scheduled two Current Issues in
Immunization Net
Conferences for the near future. New Influenza Vaccine
Recommendations is scheduled for September 13; speakers will be
Dr. Anthony Fiore and Alan Janssen. Travel Health Issues
Including Malaria is scheduled for October 11; the speaker will
be announced in the future. Dr. Andrew Kroger will moderate both
net conferences, and both are scheduled for noon-1PM, ET. Both
events require online pre-registration.
Registration for the September 13 event will close at midnight
September 11 or when the course is full. To pre-register, go to:
http://www2.cdc.gov/nip/isd/ciinc
Registration for the October 11 event will close at midnight
October 10 or when the course is full. To pre-register, go to:
http://www2.cdc.gov/nip/isd/ciinc2
These are live net conferences designed to provide clinicians
with the most up-to-date immunization information. They combine
a telephone audio conference with simultaneous online visual
content and feature a Q&A segment both by telephone and
Internet. Internet access and a separate phone line are needed
to participate. On-demand replays and presentations will be
available shortly after each event.
For additional information, go to:
http://www.cdc.gov/vaccines/ed/ciinc
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7. |
August 9 issue of IAC's Hep Express electronic newsletter now available
online
The August 9 issue of Hep Express, an electronic
newsletter
published by IAC, is now available online. It is intended for
health professionals, program planners, and advocates involved
in prevention, screening, and treatment of viral hepatitis.
IAC Express has already covered some of the information
presented in the August 9 Hep Express; titles of articles we
have not yet covered follow.
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2007 Perinatal Hepatitis B and HIV Grantees' Meeting
presentations available online
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MedPage Today offers teaching brief about treating HBV
[hepatitis B virus] and HIV co-infections
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Hepatitis B Foundation's webcast on HIV and hepatitis B
available online
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Hepatitis B Foundation International hosting Atlantic Regional
Hepatitis Coordinators' Meeting on September 17-18
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HEP DART meeting scheduled for December 9-13 in Maui
To access the August 9 issue, go to:
http://www.hepprograms.org/hepexpress/issue59.asp
To sign up for a free subscription to Hep Express, go to:
http://www.immunize.org/subscribe
To access previous issues of Hep Express, go to:
http://www.hepprograms.org/hepexpress
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8. |
Support the National Viral Hepatitis Roundtable
[The following is cross posted from IAC's Hep
Express electronic
newsletter, 8/9/07.]
The National Viral Hepatitis Roundtable (NVHR) is a coalition of
public, private, and voluntary organizations dedicated to
reducing the incidence of infection, morbidity, and mortality
from viral hepatitis in the United States through strategic
planning, leadership, coordination, advocacy, and research.
You can support NVHR in its mission by listing your organization
as supporting its hepatitis elimination strategy as detailed in
the publication "Eliminating Hepatitis: A Call To Action."
To read this document, go to:
http://www.nvhr.org/pdf/NVHR_CalltoAction.pdf
For sign up as an organizational supporter of this plan, go to:
http://www.nvhr.org/calltoaction.htm
In addition, NVHR is creating a web-based toolkit to aid in its
collective lobbying and advocacy efforts. This new resource will
communicate the National Hepatitis Elimination Strategy in a
consistent and powerful way to policymakers. If your
organization has any fact sheets, testimonials, success stories,
talking points, model legislation, or other information that you
think would be helpful, please share these resources with NVHR
by August 15.
For more information about the NVHR lobbying and advocacy
toolkit, including information on submitting resources, go to:
http://www.nvhr.org/e_toolkit.htm
For more information about NVHR, go to http://www.nvhr.org
If your organization is interested in becoming a member of NVHR,
please contact Dick Conlon at rconlon@nvhr.org
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9. |
Asian Liver Center publishes 2007 edition of its Physician's Guide to Hepatitis
B
[The following is cross posted from IAC's Hep
Express electronic
newsletter, 8/9/07.]
The Asian Liver Center at Stanford University recently published
its 2007 Physician's Guide to Hepatitis B. This 20-page document
provides an excellent summary of HBV infection and liver cancer
with a special emphasis on the Asian Pacific Islander
communities.
Of all the people with chronic HBV infection in the world,
approximately two-thirds live in Asia. In the United States, the
incidence of hepatitis B and liver cancer constitutes the
greatest health disparity that exists between Asians and Pacific
Islanders (APIs) and the general U.S. population. As many as one
in 10 APIs is chronically infected with HBV compared with one in
1,000 in the general population.
The guide provides straightforward information on preventing,
diagnosing, and managing chronic HBV infection; monitoring for
liver damage; and screening for liver cancer.
To download this valuable resource, go to:
http://liver.stanford.edu/files/2007Handbook.pdf
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10. |
Asian Liver Center operates an information health line
[The following is cross posted from IAC's Hep
Express electronic
newsletter, 8/9/07.]
The Asian Liver Center (ALC) at Stanford University offers many
services for Asian and Pacific Islander communities and
individuals. One such service is an information help line in
English, Mandarin, and Cantonese. To call toll free, dial (888)
311-3331.
To visit the ALC website, which features hepatitis B educational
materials in multiple languages, go to: http://liver.stanford.edu
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11. |
National Task Force on Hepatitis B: Focus on Asian and Pacific Islander
Americans works to eliminate hepatitis B-related mortality and morbidity
[The following is cross posted from IAC's Hep
Express electronic
newsletter, 8/9/07.]
The National Task Force on Hepatitis B: Focus on Asian and
Pacific Islander Americans brings together scientists, health
professionals, not-for-profit organizations, and concerned
citizens in a concerted effort to eliminate hepatitis B-related
mortality and morbidity over the next generation.
The group's mission is to support national, state, and local
efforts to prevent new hepatitis B virus infections through
vaccination, to identify chronically infected individuals, and
to offer appropriate treatment and cancer screening.
Please visit the group's website at http://www.hepbtaskforce.org
to learn more about the task force or to be added to their
listserv or monthly conference call. The task force has
collected useful resources for those working with Asian Pacific
Islander Americans and made them available on their website at
http://www.hepbtaskforce.org/resources.htm
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12. |
National Viral Hepatitis Training Center offers training in San Diego
The National Viral Hepatitis Training Center at
the New York
State Department of Health (NYSDOH) is offering "It's Time:
Integrate viral hepatitis into your work" in San Diego,
California, in September. NYSDOH will be delivering both its
"It's Time! Training" and its "It's Time! Training of Trainers"
courses.
"It's Time! Training" prepares staff working in settings that
serve people at high risk for viral hepatitis, including
substance use programs, HIV/AIDS programs, correctional
settings, and public health/STD clinics to address viral
hepatitis in their work with clients. These sessions will take
place on September 25-26.
"It's Time! Training of Trainers" prepares individuals to
deliver the "It's Time! Training" to health and human services
providers. These sessions will take place on September 27-28.
For more information on registering for a training or becoming
an authorized training agency, please contact
mag20@health.state.ny.us or visit the NYSDOH website at
http://www.health.state.ny.us/diseases/aids/training/viralhepatitis.htm
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13. |
Fifth International Bird Flu Summit scheduled for September 27-28 in Las
Vegas
The Fifth International Bird Flu Summit will be
held in Las
Vegas on September 27-28. For comprehensive information,
including the event brochure, go to:
http://www.new-fields.com/birdflu5
For additional information, contact New Fields Exhibitions at
(202) 536-5000 or http://www.new-fields.com/page.php?p=Contact%20Us
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