Search Results for keywords:"global health emergencies"

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Search Results: keywords:"global health emergencies"

  • Type:Notice
    Citation:89 FR 106483
    Reading Time:about 3 minutes

    The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), part of the Department of Health and Human Services, has announced four awards to health organizations in Guinea, Indonesia, Pakistan, and Tanzania. These awards aim to boost public health efforts, including disease surveillance, outbreak response, and laboratory development, over a five-year period from 2025 to 2030. The total funding for these projects amounts to approximately $31 million, with specific allocations for each country's agency. This initiative seeks to strengthen global health readiness and the ability to respond quickly to health emergencies.

    Simple Explanation

    The CDC is giving money to help health groups in Guinea, Indonesia, Pakistan, and Tanzania get better at finding diseases and keeping people safe when outbreaks happen. The goal is to help them be ready and respond quickly if any health problems come up in the future.

  • Type:Notice
    Citation:89 FR 106484
    Reading Time:about 2 minutes

    The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) is awarding around $1.5 million, with a total of about $7.5 million expected over five years, to the University of Oslo. This funding will help improve global health by enhancing public health surveillance and response systems worldwide, building capacity to better detect and respond to disease outbreaks. The project focuses on improving the DHIS2 software, a critical tool for public health data management, which is uniquely maintained by the University of Oslo. The award period runs from September 2025 to September 2030.

    Simple Explanation

    The CDC is giving a big amount of money to a place called the University of Oslo so they can help make sure people stay healthy all over the world. They're doing this because the University of Oslo has a special tool called DHIS2 that helps watch for and stop diseases from spreading.