The Covid gives way to the flu. Like every week, the Ministry of Health in charge of prevention released its Covid-19 epidemiological bulletin on Wednesday. In it, it is indicated that the Covid-19 is in sharp decline. The number of cases fell from 163 to 97 while the growth rate fell by 7%. A figure which is always to be qualified, since the number of tests carried out during the week is also very low (358). Two patients are currently hospitalized at the CHPF. Tahiti concentrates the majority of patients, although low numbers of positive cases are reported in all the archipelagos. In addition, the ministry also warned once morest the beginning of circulation of the flu whose rapid epidemic is to be feared.
news from tahiti
At Marama Nui, a new record for hydroelectric production has been recorded. During the week of December 12 to 18, no less than 7.04 GWh of energy was produced. The old record of 6.9 GWh was recorded in January 2019.
These very good results are due, among other things, to the very heavy rains that occurred last week. But the “numerous improvements made during the work carried out on the structures” and the “total availability of the hydroelectric park” are also in question. In addition, another record is worth noting. On Saturday December 17, the renewable energy penetration rate reached the record figure of 80% over 24 hours with 69% hydro and 11% photovoltaic.
In its press release, EDT indicates that its teams will “continue their efforts in 2023 to support the country in its desire for energy transition”.
According to CP
After three years of Covid, preparing for the next pandemic
“We are not doing enough to be ready for the next pandemic,” said William Rodriguez, head of Find, a UN-sponsored foundation that seeks to improve access to testing. screening around the world.
Among the crucial tools to avoid the emergence of a new pandemic like that of Covid are tests, which help to curb the spread of a disease.
Other devices: the identification of viruses or bacteria that might cause the next pandemic, the discovery of vaccines or emergency treatments, the production and distribution of these products, etc.
The goal? Avoiding a new pandemic following three years of Covid. The first case of this disease was diagnosed in China in December 2019. Less than three months later, the World Health Organization (WHO) formalized the pandemic that shook the world.
Last week, it was within the framework of the WHO that international negotiations began on the fight once morest future pandemics. The World Bank has launched a fund dedicated to the subject and fed by the G20 countries (currently up to 1.6 billion dollars).
“A few mutations”
The initiatives are also private. In Australia, businessman Geoffrey Cumming has spent $170 million to fund a research center run by infectious disease specialist Sharon Lewin.
His team will look into technologies that might serve as the basis for rapidly adaptable treatments once morest new pathogens. Model to follow: messenger RNA vaccines once morest Covid. The center will be “operational” within six months, Professor Lewin told AFP.
The objective here is to know how to respond urgently to an unknown pathogen. But anticipation also involves identifying known risks.
The WHO is thus working on updating a list of risk microbes. To be watched in particular: other coronaviruses as well as the flu virus, of course, but also Ebola and Zika.
“For each of these viruses, only a few mutations” might increase their spread, warns epidemiologist Jennifer Nuzzo, of the American University Brown.
Other pathogens are under surveillance, such as arenaviruses, paramysoviruses – the measles and mumps family – or the Marburg virus.
“Many Crises”
Will these research efforts be sufficient? Many experts and activists fear above all a lack of political will. Which translates into the issue of funding. Thus, the CEPI organization (co-founded by several states and the Bill and Melinda Gates foundation to deal with epidemics) is seeking 800 million dollars to complete a five-year plan.
Decision-makers should not forget the pandemic issue even if they are “focused on the many current crises”, in a difficult geopolitical and economically context, said Richard Hatchett, head of CEPI, to AFP.
And how can we ensure that all countries, including the poorest, have access to a vaccine or a treatment? “For me, the tragedy of Covid will have been the uneven distribution of vaccines, even once available,” says the epidemiologist.
Experts interviewed by AFP agree. It will be impossible to respond well to the next pandemic if large regions such as Africa, South America, South Asia or the Middle East do not have access to treatments, in particular by producing them themselves. same.
For many activists, it would already be necessary to plan to lift the patents of possible treatments of major importance. But the idea seems unrealistic in the face of opposition from the pharmaceutical sector and a large part of the developed countries.
And there is little development to expect: the tone adopted by these countries in the context of the current discussions at the WHO is “extremely worrying”, estimates Mohga Kamal-Yanni, representative of the NGO People’s Vaccine Alliance.
Bora Bora, September 22, 2022 – The Department of Health is currently deploying a filariasis prevalence survey in Bora Bora among CP and CE1 students at Faanui elementary school. Samples will be taken to detect the possible presence of the disease. At the same time, health professionals held an information meeting on this tropical disease. This campaign is part of the health program developed in the long term to eradicate the disease from the territory.
The World Health Organization (WHO), the Polynesian Health Department and the General Directorate of Education and Teaching (DGEE) have set up a school prevalence survey, a real awareness campaign among the population on the effects of lymphatic filariasis, a now rare disease, more commonly known as elephantiasis. On Tuesday, Émilie, a nurse at the Bora Bora dispensary, was at Faanui elementary school to launch this campaign with parents of CP and CE1 classes at the Pearl of the Pacific. Under the benevolent gaze of Adèle, director of the establishment, around thirty parents of students and a few teachers came to listen to the health professional. She started this meeting by explaining that Filariasis is a disease contracted by mosquito bites. It can occur years later, that is to say that for ten years, the subject may have no symptoms, then, all of a sudden, see a ganglion appear in the armpits or in the groin. “