Nidhi Bouri, Deputy Assistant Administrator, USAID Bureau for Global Health: on mpox, anti-microbial resistance, Marburg virus in Rwanda, and money headaches
Description
Nidhi Bouri, DAA at USAID Bureau for Global Health, joined us to speak to the U.S. response to the dangerous mpox outbreak (clade 1b) centered in the Democratic Republic of Congo, boosted by President Biden’s commitment at UNGA to $500m in support, including 1 million vaccine doses. Much better data is urgently needed on the needs for diagnostics and vaccines. Tensions remain high among Africa CDC, WHO, and other key institutions with proven response capability, most notably Gavi, UNICEF and the Global Fund. Much is not known about modes of transmission, and the durability and efficacy of the Jynneos vaccine for clade 1b. As the virus inevitably lands in the United States, communications will be critical. Some important progress was seen in the High Level Meeting on anti-microbial resistance. The Marburg outbreak in Rwanda is of acute concern for multiple reasons: no vaccine, little testing, little knowledge of the pattern of spread. It is crunch time, as multiple replenishments converge. “Let’s be clear, there is not enough money.”