logo
Africa Centres for Disease Control and Prevention (Africa CDC) and European Commission Launch New Initiative to Strengthen Mpox Testing and Sequencing Across Africa

Africa Centres for Disease Control and Prevention (Africa CDC) and European Commission Launch New Initiative to Strengthen Mpox Testing and Sequencing Across Africa

Zawya4 days ago
The Africa Centres for Disease Control and Prevention (Africa CDC) and the European Commission today announced the launch of the Partnership to Accelerate Mpox Testing and Sequencing in Africa (PAMTA), a landmark initiative to boost diagnostics and outbreak response capabilities in Mpox-affected African countries.
Co-funded under the EU4Health 2024 Work Programme, PAMTA reflects the growing momentum of Africa–EU health cooperation and aims to reinforce the continent's resilience against current and future health threats. The initiative will accelerate testing, sequencing, capacity building, and local manufacturing efforts for mpox and other priority pathogens across Africa through a €9.4 million to Africa CDC and the African Society for Laboratory Medicine (ASLM), managed by the European Health and Digital Executive Agency (HaDEA). The project officially began on 1 June 2025 and will be implemented over three years.
Africa CDC Director General, H.E. Dr Jean Kaseya, welcomed the initiative as a timely and strategic intervention to close the diagnostic gap for Mpox and other outbreaks in Africa. 'This partnership reflects our commitment to working with trusted partners to build agile and self-reliant public health systems across Africa. Together with the EU and our technical partners, we are setting a new benchmark for outbreak detection and response.'
The PAMTA initiative focuses on four key objectives: scaling up Mpox testing with the goal of supporting over 150,000 tests across the continent; strengthening genomic sequencing capacity to track viral evolution and spread; building human resource capacity in molecular diagnostics, genomics, bioinformatics and data interpretation; and promoting the production and validation of locally developed testing kits within Africa.
'PAMTA marks a historic milestone as the first initiative jointly signed between the European Commission and Africa CDC,' said Deputy Head of DG HERA, Laurent Muschel. 'Building on HERA's earlier donation of Mpox vaccines, this action enables a critical next step: strengthening diagnostic capacities as part of a broader medical countermeasures approach. It reflects our shared commitment to reinforcing epidemic preparedness across Africa — from vaccines to diagnostics, from innovation to manufacturing. This action shows that, together, the African Union and the European Union can deliver tangible results to protect lives.'
The launch of PAMTA builds on broader efforts by the EU and its partners to address the Mpox outbreak. By mid-2025, more than 600,000 vaccine doses had been delivered to African countries through HERA and Team Europe. Simultaneously, research initiatives such as MPX-RESPONSE and EDCTP3 continue to explore new therapeutic options, while the Africa Pathogen Genomics Initiative (PGI)—also funded through EU4Health—is enhancing public health laboratory networks and genomic surveillance across the continent through public private partnerships.
PAMTA marks a significant milestone in EU–Africa collaboration for health resilience. By supporting comprehensive diagnostics and fostering local innovation, the initiative is helping to lay a strong foundation for Africa's long-term pandemic preparedness and response capabilities.
Distributed by APO Group on behalf of Africa Centres for Disease Control and Prevention (Africa CDC).
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

UK taskforce set up to bring injured children from Gaza
UK taskforce set up to bring injured children from Gaza

The National

time5 hours ago

  • The National

UK taskforce set up to bring injured children from Gaza

The UK will bring injured children from Gaza to NHS hospitals for treatment, after more than a year of campaigning by doctors. As many as 300 children could be taken from Gaza and treated in NHS hospitals, according to reports, with a government representative confirming on Monday they were 'taking plans forward'. Doctors and Palestinian families in the UK have campaigned for injured children to be taken to the UK since 2023 and were ready to pay for the treatment. Three children have made the journey, with the third, 15-year old Majd Al Shagnobi, arriving last week for privately-funded facial reconstruction surgery at Great Ormond Street Hospital. Existing blueprint The government's plan builds on the work of Project Pure Hope, a UK charity which brought those three children from Gaza. The charity had raised enough money to bring up to 50 Gazan children to the UK for treatment, but faced obstacles under the UK's slow moving visa process. Instead, they began moving children from Gaza to hospitals in Italy and other parts of Europe. It took 17 months for the charity to bring its first two children from Gaza to the UK. Project Pure Hope will become part of the Foreign Commonwealth and Development Office task force. Omar Din, a co-founder of Project Pure Hope, said the charity's experience of triage in Gaza and co-ordinating evacuations with international agencies could help the government speed up cases, medical clearances and safe transfers. 'We've done a of groundwork already and we'll be sharing those details. We're asking them to take it as a blueprint,' he told The National. 'We'd be keen to share what worked well, what didn't work well.' UK hospitals are likely to be sought for treating severe burns, limb salvage surgery, trauma centres and conditions that have gone unmanaged for a long time such as diabetes, Mr Din said. The UK also has world leading centres for neuro-rehabilitation. Doctors and hospitals across the UK have long called for children from Gaza to come for treatment, and many UK-based medical professionals are travelling to the strip to support the work of hospitals there. 'We get several people contacting us every day, across communities in the UK, saying they want to help,' Mr Din said. The full details of the plan will be announced in the coming weeks, but it has been suggested that the children would be treated on the NHS, with one parent or guardian accompanying them, and with security checks made by the Foreign Office. Treatment on the NHS would also allow the patients to access treatment across the health system. 'When it's the NHS you've got the entire force available to you,' Mr Din said. Project Pure Hope's privately-funded evacuations will continue in parallel with the government scheme. Fast-tracking required It comes amid overwhelming public pressure for the government to take strong measures to end the war in Gaza, and address the famine. Prime Minister Keir Starmer said last week that the UK was 'urgently accelerating' efforts to bring injured children to the UK, days after he announced terms for the conditional recognition of a Palestinian state sometime in September. More than 50,000 children are estimated to have been killed or injured in Gaza since October 2023, according to Unicef. There are concerns as to whether the UK can ask quickly enough to take evacuate children from Gaza who have urgent needs. Majd spent a year in Gaza with his injuries before he could be moved to Egypt in February of this year. The Israeli tank shell that shattered his jaw has left him unable to smile, talk or eat properly in that time. It was common for children on evacuation lists to die of their injuries or to be killed in a later attack before they had the chance to travel, Mr Din said. The UK had responded to calls in May to evacuate two children, Hatem, a two-year-old orphan with 35 per cent burns, and Karam, aged one, who suffered from an easily treatable birth defect. But they acted too slowly and Italy offered to take the two children, alongside 15 others, in an emergency evacuation on 11 June, Mr Din said. Scottish First Minister John Swinney welcomed the reported plans, but he said he regretted the action did not come sooner. The SNP leader said he had written to Mr Starmer on July 9 urging such action to be taken. 'If the UK government is prepared to evacuate Palestinians for medical treatment it would be entirely welcome. 'My only regret is the UK government has taken this long to act. 'I urge the UK government to do everything in its power to move swiftly so that lives can be saved. And Scotland will play our part.' Labour MP Stella Creasy, who also wrote a letter to the Prime Minister last month urging the treatment of Palestinian children in the UK, said: 'Nobody can see the plight of these children and not be moved, and therefore they need us to move now to provide life-saving and life-changing treatment – the sooner we treat them the more chance of good outcomes. A UK government representative said: 'We are taking forward plans to evacuate more children from Gaza who require urgent medical care, including bringing them to the UK for specialist treatment where that is the best option for their care. 'We are working at pace to do so as quickly as possible, with further details to be set out in due course.'

Africa speaks out: World Health Organization (WHO) consultations bring urgency and hope to health worker migration crisis
Africa speaks out: World Health Organization (WHO) consultations bring urgency and hope to health worker migration crisis

Zawya

time7 hours ago

  • Zawya

Africa speaks out: World Health Organization (WHO) consultations bring urgency and hope to health worker migration crisis

When health experts across the WHO African region, logged into the virtual WHO consultation on 30 July 2025, they knew the stakes were high. Across the continent, hospitals are losing nurses to overseas recruiters, clinics are short-staffed, and young medical graduates face the dilemma of staying to serve or leaving in search of better pay. This isn't just policy—it's personal. From Praia to Port Louis, governments and health professionals are sounding the alarm: Africa is losing too many of its trained health workers to international migration. And while global demand for medical personnel has soared in the wake of the COVID-19 pandemic, African countries are bearing the cost. In response, the World Health Organization's Regional Office for Africa has launched a series of consultations with its 47 Member States to revisit the WHO Global Code of Practice on the International Recruitment of Health Personnel. First adopted in 2010, the Code was designed to ensure fairness in how countries recruit health workers across borders. But fifteen years on, it needs a refresh—and Africa is determined to shape it. Dr Adelheid Werimo Onyango, Director of Health Systems and Services at the WHO Regional Office for Africa underscored said: 'These consultations represent a critical opportunity for African countries to ensure the Code truly reflects our regional realities and priorities,' noting that 'ultimately, our goal is to ensure that the Code remains not just a document on a shelf, but a living, actionable instrument that guides international recruitment in ways that strengthen Africa's health systems.' The consultation brought together representatives from 30 countries. Their goal: to make sure Africa's voice is heard loud and clear when the final report goes to the 156th WHO Executive Board. The consultation was guided by three key objectives: (1) to review the findings and recommendations of the Expert Advisory Group on the Code's current relevance and effectiveness; (2) to provide concrete recommendations for strengthening the Code's effectiveness in addressing both current and emerging health workforce challenges in Africa and globally; and (3) to build consensus on regional priorities and peculiarities that must be reflected in the revised Code. For many participants, the discussion hit close to home. Several spoke of empty clinics in rural districts, of experienced doctors, laboratory experts and nurses departing overnight for contracts in Europe or the Gulf, of overstretched systems trying to do more with less. 'Through your recommendations and suggestions, you are laying a solid foundation for a stronger and more equitable health workforce across Africa,' said Dr James Avoka Asamani, Health Workforce Team Lead at the WHO Regional Office for Africa stressing the importance of providing feedback. Many referenced the Africa Health Workforce Investment Charter, which recognizes that effective migration management is vital to addressing the region's looming shortfall of 6.1 million health workers by 2030. Countries stressed that the revised Code must go beyond principles and offer enforceable guidance, especially in the face of aggressive international recruitment. The heart of the consultations, however, wasn't just policy reform—it was about people. It was about an African midwife who has trained hundreds of birth attendants, only to watch them leave for better-paying jobs abroad. It was about a young doctor torn between duty and ambition. And it was about families across Africa who deserve quality care—delivered by professionals who stay. In the coming weeks, WHO will continue gathering input from across the region. But one thing is clear—the African region is not sitting this one out. It's leading the conversation. Because when it comes to health worker migration, the region knows the human cost all too well—and is ready to chart a new path forward. Distributed by APO Group on behalf of WHO Regional Office for Africa.

Love Heals what shame tried to hide
Love Heals what shame tried to hide

Zawya

time12 hours ago

  • Zawya

Love Heals what shame tried to hide

Three-year-old Armane from rural Madagascar can now smile without shame, thanks to a life-changing cleft lip surgery provided by international charity Mercy Ships ( For his mother, Roseline, the day of Armane's birth was filled with both relief and fear. After a long and difficult labor in a remote rice field, she was handed her baby, but only after the birth attendants tried to hide his face. 'I gave birth to many children, but none of them were like him,' Roseline said. 'When I finally saw him, I kissed him and cried. I was worried. People in the village said he was cursed, not human.' In her village, no one had ever seen a cleft lip before. The condition, a birth defect that occurs when the lip doesn't form fully in the womb, left Armane struggling to eat, speak, and be accepted. Globally, an estimated 4.1 million people live with orofacial clefts, contributing to more than 400,000 lost disability-adjustment life years (DALYs). According to a study published by the Global Burden of Disease Study 2021 ( most of the children affected live in low-and middle-income countries. In many high-income settings, babies with cleft lip are diagnosed before birth and receive corrective surgery within the first three months of life. But in low- income countries, access to safe, affordable surgery remains out of reach for thousands of families. Roseline tried everything she could: 'I had to lie down on one side when I needed to breastfeed him because he could not suck on the cleft lip, he wouldn't get any milk,' she said. 'He was very weak; we had to give him vitamins, and he struggled to speak too.' Despite the stigma, Roseline and her husband never gave up hope. When she later encountered Mercy Ships volunteers and saw photos of other children with cleft lips, children who looked just like Armane, hope ignited. After a four-day journey to the Africa Mercy®, they reached the floating hospital ship docked in Toamasina. There, Armane would finally receive the free surgery that would transform his life. 'This is a surgery that takes just one hour, but changes everything,' said American nurse Mollie Felder, who cared for Armane after his operation. 'It's not just about appearance, it's about dignity, confidence, being seen.' At the hospital's HOPE Center, a safe recovery space for patients and caregivers, Armane and his sister found a second family. 'No one stared. Everyone was accepted,' said Denise Gorissen, a Dutch volunteer leading the center. 'That environment of love helps healing begin before the surgery even starts.' Armane's recovery was smooth. And when he returned to his village, the transformation left neighbors stunned. 'Many people came to see him,' said Roseline. 'They couldn't believe it. They had thought this couldn't be fixed.' When Armane's father first saw him, he held him in his arms and kissed him. 'My worry is gone from now on,' he said with relief. For Roseline and her husband, the surgery didn't just restore their son's face, it restored their hope. Once surrounded by shame and whispers, Armane is now surrounded by love, laughter, and a future full of promise. 'I'm so happy, so happy,' says Roseline, her eyes shining. 'My son will no longer be mocked. He will always be loved.' Distributed by APO Group on behalf of Mercy Ships. For more information about Mercy Ships, contact: ABOUT MERCY SHIPS: Mercy Ships operates hospital ships that deliver free surgeries and other healthcare services to those with little access to safe medical care. An international faith-based organization, Mercy Ships has focused entirely on partnering with nations in Africa for the past three decades. Working with in-country partners, Mercy Ships also provides training to local healthcare professionals and supports the construction of in-country medical infrastructure to leave a lasting impact. Each year, more than 2,500 volunteer professionals from over 60 countries serve on board the world's two largest non-governmental hospital ships, the Africa Mercy and the Global Mercy. Professionals such as surgeons, dentists, nurses, health trainers, cooks, and engineers dedicate their time and skills to accelerate access to safe surgical and anesthetic care. Mercy Ships was founded in 1978 and has offices in 16 countries as well as an Africa Service Center in Dakar, Senegal. For more information, visit and follow @ MercyShips on social media.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store