Declaration of Cuernavaca
Salud Publica de Mexico
; 65(3):297-299, 2023.
Article
Dans Espagnol
| CAB Abstracts | ID: covidwho-20235494
ABSTRACT
The National Public Health Institutes (NPHI), members of the Latin American Regional Network of the International Association of National Institutes of Public Health, met face to face at the headquarters of the National Institute of Public Health of Mexico, in the City of Cuernavaca, from October 5 to 7, 2022, with the participation of the directors or their representatives of the NPHIs of Bolivia, Brazil, Colombia, Costa Rica, El Salvador, Mexico, Peru and Suriname and representatives of the South American Sub regional Program (SAM), and the Central American Sub regional Program (CAM) of the Pan American Health Organization (PAHO), the Organization of the Amazon Cooperation Treaty (OTCA), the Andean Health Agency/Hipolito Unanue Agreement (ORAS/CONHU) and the Central American Integration System (SICA/COMISCA), analyzing the role of the NPHI in combating health inequities;in confronting the global climate and environmental crisis;combating hunger, food insecurity and malnutrition;successes and challenges in responding to the Covid-19 pandemic;strengthening and continuous improvement of integrated disease surveillance and preparedness for health emergencies;as well as the various existing regional and sub-regional health cooperation programs, noticing that 1. In the current scenario, the dominating development model is a generator of growing social inequalities, which determine serious inequities in the health conditions of our peoples. 2. Likewise, the current model of production and consumption, adopted at the global level, has increased hunger, food insecurity and malnutrition that possibly constitute nowadays the main health problem in our region. 3. The environmental crisis, which is also a product of the current global development model, has a significant impact on human and animal health and the interaction between both. 4. The NPHIs have played a role of major relevance in confronting the Covid-19 pandemic, not fully applying, however, their full potential for research and for proposing national plans for the disease control. 5. Health surveillance systems, in most of our countries, suffer from significant fragmentation between various sectors and within the health sector itself, implying, in any case, reactive actions that do not allow for anticipating the emergence of new pathologies or health emergencies. 6. The various regional and sub regional cooperation agencies and programs offer an enormous capacity for synergies and mutual cooperation.
Health Services [UU350]; Prion; Viral; Bacterial and Fungal Pathogens of Humans [VV210]; Human Health and the Environment [VV500]; Social Psychology and Social Anthropology [UU485]; Physiology of Human Nutrition [VV120]; Nutrition related Disorders and Therapeutic Nutrition [VV130]; animal health; coronavirus disease 2019; environmental health; health care; health inequalities; health services; human diseases; hunger; malnutrition; monitoring; public health; social inequalities; surveillance; viral diseases; man; Severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2; Bolivia; Brazil; Central America; Colombia; Costa Rica; El Salvador; Latin America; Mexico; Peru; South America; Suriname; Andean Group; high Human Development Index countries; America; lower-middle income countries; Community of Portuguese Language Countries; upper-middle income countries; CACM; very high Human Development Index countries; medium Human Development Index countries; Homo; Hominidae; primates; mammals; vertebrates; Chordata; animals; eukaryotes; APEC countries; North America; OECD Countries; Severe acute respiratory syndrome-related coronavirus; Betacoronavirus; Coronavirinae; Coronaviridae; Nidovirales; positive-sense ssRNA Viruses; ssRNA Viruses; RNA Viruses; viruses; ACP Countries; Caribbean Community; Salvador; health disparities; SARS-CoV-2; Surinam; viral infections
Texte intégral:
Disponible
Collection:
Bases de données des oragnisations internationales
Base de données:
CAB Abstracts
Type d'étude:
Étude observationnelle
langue:
Espagnol
Revue:
Salud Publica de Mexico
Année:
2023
Type de document:
Article
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