North American Leaders’ Declaration on H1N1 - Three Amigos Summit
August 11th, 2009 - 1:52 am ICT by admin ( Leave a comment )GUADALAJARA, Mexico (BNO NEWS) — “Building on the strong record of our trilateral cooperation during the spring of this year, we will remain vigilant and pledge to continue our close collaboration in addressing the H1N1 pandemic. We agree to work together to ensure that we have effective strategies, grounded in the best available science.
Our governments have worked closely together since the very beginning of this outbreak to protect the health of our citizens. During the onset of the H1N1 outbreak, we worked to implement science and evidence-based measures in our countries and on our borders. These measures were geared to provide an appropriate public health response. Movement across our shared borders is essential to the economic health of our countries. We recognize that highly restrictive measures such as general border closures would be unlikely to prevent the spread of this virus and could aggravate the economic and social consequences of an influenza pandemic.
We continue to study the severity and progression of the virus both here and in other parts of the world to help inform future public health decisions, including the use of vaccine, antiviral, and non-pharmaceutical interventions. Through regular communications; exchange of scientific knowledge, expert personnel, and clinical data; and shared access to laboratory facilities, we have been working to promote the health of the people of our three nations.
In anticipation of a possible fall wave of flu due to the 2009 H1N1 virus, we will look to enhance our exchange of information, ensure common understanding on the effectiveness of public health measures, and share expertise through technical assistance and capacity building. We will continue to do everything we can to ensure that our people have timely and accurate information, and that our citizens are as prepared as they can be. In this regard, we will focus our attention on mitigating the effects of the outbreak in our communities. We encourage all families in North America to learn more about the simple steps they can take to prevent the spread of the flu, including frequent hand washing with soap and water, coughing into your sleeve, and staying home when sick to help prevent illness and the spread of the virus to others.
We know that cooperation and communication between nations, governments, citizens, and domestic and international organizations are the most effective ways to ensure that we are all protected. The strong collaboration between our countries allowed us to have a more secure North America region. We are proud that our countries have collaborated so effectively to this point, and we are firmly committed to continuing to work together in the months ahead. We will continue to work collaboratively with the World Health Organization and the Pan American Health Organization and support their leadership in facilitating international and regional collaboration in addressing this global issue. “
- Landmark agreement improves global preparedness for influenza pandemics - Apr 18, 2011
- Mexican swine flu outbreak kills 29, infects nearly 1,500 - Jan 28, 2012
- Wild birds' role in bird flu outbreak - Mar 25, 2011
- WHO Declares Swine Flu Pandemic Officially Over - Aug 11, 2010
- WHO: H1N1 not over as yet - Jun 04, 2010
- Young child among eleven H1N1 flu deaths in Jordan - Jan 23, 2011
- Hand washing may limit pandemic flu transmission - Apr 30, 2010
- UN: Bird flu still poses global threat - Apr 16, 2010
- Disinfection in Meghalaya bird flu-hit area completed - Jan 22, 2012
- Boys infect boys with swine flu: Study - Feb 01, 2011
- More seizures in children with H1N1 virus than those with seasonal flu - Sep 20, 2010
- WHO declares swine flu pandemic over - Aug 11, 2010
- Scientists one step closer to universal flu vaccine - Oct 22, 2010
- Swine flu claims 10 victims in Britain - Dec 13, 2010
- Cuba to give flu shots to over 600,000 people - Nov 20, 2011
Tags: american leaders, anticipation, bno, border closures, capacity building, economic health, guadalajara mexico, influenza, influenza pandemic, knowledge expert, laboratory facilities, outbreak, public health decisions, public health measures, public health response, restrictive measures, scientific knowledge, share expertise, social consequences, trilateral cooperation