The EU continues to support the Caribbean in the fight against mosquito-borne diseases

Daniela Tramacere & Dr St. John sign the agreement

The European Union has provided the Caribbean Public Health Agency (CARPHA)with a grant of 4.1 million euro (US$4.5M) to continue supporting efforts to combat mosquito-borne diseases in the Caribbean Region.

The assistance will be channelled through a four-year health strengthening programme designed to further improve the prevention, detection and control of outbreaks of mosquito-borne diseases such as zika and dengue.

The project will involve activities to strengthen vector control programmes in CARPHA member states, in addition to the institutional capacity for detection, as well as regional coordination in response to possible related infectious outbreaks.

CARPHA is responsible for coordinating public health policy and responses to public health issues in CARICOM Member States and has recently completed a successful first phase of a similar EU-funded programme which focused on the Zika outbreak, at a cost of 700 000 euros (US$770,000).

EU Ambassador Daniela Tramacere said: “The EU remains committed to assisting the region with health security especially when mosquito-borne diseases such as Zikaand dengue threaten both the health of the regional population and general productivity, as well as the important tourism sector. This grant will ensure that CARPHA together with its member states can respond effectively to the potential threat that these diseases pose.”

Executive Director of CARPHA Dr Joy St. John, said: “As the new Executive Director of CARPHA, I am pleased that we are implementing this very important initiative which will allow CARPHA to address many of the elements of capacity building that the Caribbean needs, such as laboratory strengthening, training in integrated vector management, insecticide resistance testing and behaviour change interventions. In light of current outbreaks of dengue, this is a boost to CARPHA’s support to countries at this time.”

Copyright 2012 Dominica News Online, DURAVISION INC. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or distributed.

Disclaimer: The comments posted do not necessarily reflect the views of DominicaNewsOnline.com and its parent company or any individual staff member. All comments are posted subject to approval by DominicaNewsOnline.com. We never censor based on political or ideological points of view, but we do try to maintain a sensible balance between free speech and responsible moderating.

We will delete comments that:

  • contain any material which violates or infringes the rights of any person, are defamatory or harassing or are purely ad hominem attacks
  • a reasonable person would consider abusive or profane
  • contain material which violates or encourages others to violate any applicable law
  • promote prejudice or prejudicial hatred of any kind
  • refer to people arrested or charged with a crime as though they had been found guilty
  • contain links to "chain letters", pornographic or obscene movies or graphic images
  • are off-topic and/or excessively long

See our full comment/user policy/agreement.

3 Comments

  1. December 18, 2019

    It can be reduced but not totally solved

  2. Casio
    December 18, 2019

    waste. you will never win against the mosquitoes. Not in the caribbean.

  3. Bring back the kidnapped Dominican parrots
    December 18, 2019

    Since DDT was banned years ago what are they going to use when spraying and are they going to use aircraft for spraying. DDT was used on Dominica in the 1940’s and 1950’s for mosquito control. It was highly effective until it was found to cause cancer.

Post a Comment

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

:) :-D :wink: :( 8-O :lol: :-| :cry: 8) :-? :-P :-x :?: :oops: :twisted: :mrgreen: more »

 characters available