Mostrando entradas con la etiqueta emergency. Mostrar todas las entradas
Mostrando entradas con la etiqueta emergency. Mostrar todas las entradas

The intense rains generated an emergency in the south and southeast of Cali.

The case occurred in the area of ​​Pasoancho avenue with 70th street with serious flooding.

(Also read: Cloromiro, the savior of the child who fell into the Cauca River with his mother)

According to the authorities, the rains that have been hitting the department will last until next April.

According to the Regional Autonomous Corporation of Valle del Cauca (CVC), the region shows a 90 percent probability of facing the La Niña phenomenon and it persists that it continues to happen until that period.

The Secretary of Risk Management of Cali, Rodrigo Zamorano, said this is the transition period between the dry season and the rainy season. It’s the first of the year.

Zamorano pointed out the importance of the population not saturating the sinks or drainage system with garbage and mattresses.

(Also: The drama for the schools that have not finished in Cali)

The manager of the Aqueduct of the Municipal Companies of Cali (Emcali), Humberto Serna, said that the Eastern channel is totally saturated by waste.

“They end up clogging the system and it doesn’t allow the water to pass to the pumping station,” said the official.

Meanwhile, the Valle del Cauca Disaster Risk Management Secretariat reported that follow-up is being carried out and actions are being carried out in the municipalities of Palmira, Caicedonia, El Cerrito, Buga, Ginebra and Dagua, where there are damages due to the rains, especially in the area rural.

CALI

“Emergency services must be well equipped for efficient patient care. The biggest criticism at this time is the insufficiency in emergency services and hospitalizationadded to the congestion at the time of requiring specialists”.

These words are from Jorge Humberto Rivas Urrea, Secretary of Health, Family and Social Integration of Rionegro who, in addition, is a doctor by profession.

The official’s words are related to the new emergency unit that the municipality of Rionegroin eastern Antioquia, is about to open.
It seeks to increase the attention of users.

“It is a social investment project that will benefit not only the local community. That is why from the previous government and ours we have proposed, not only to finish the construction, but to equip and put into operation the great emergency room”, adds the official.

In effect, the new room will double its attention span. That is, from 5 patients to 50 at the same time, approximately.

“This with emergency physicians 24 hours a day, with the respective and best staff, among which we highlight the new intensive care beds that have been acquired throughout the pandemic,” complements the mayor of Rionegro, Rodrigo Hernández Álzate.

(You may be interested in: Note: this weekend there is a closure at the José María Córdova airport)

We highlight the new intensive care beds that have been acquired throughout the pandemic

This work will directly benefit 23 municipalities that make up eastern Antioquia, but it is noteworthy that given the circumstances they will also receive patients from other departments or from the Aburrá Valley.

The work has a value of more than 10,000 million pesoshas co-financing from the National Government, the Government of Antioquia and the municipality of Rionegro.

For the local president, this investment was essential for the consolidation of the Rionegro Hospital.

“I think that the greatest impact that we can have with this large emergency room is that we are going to intensify the number of attention, which allows us to reduce waiting times when it comes to being attended, because there were times when users they came to exceed six hours without receiving attention”, he says.

overcoming the deficit

The Rionegro hospital network has services of the maximum specialization that can exist in medical care.

However, for more than 10 years there has been a lack of public and private emergency care.

According to the Municipal Administration, past mayors had been very indolent with investment in health and there was no political will and it was only until the last Administration that the resources for this new emergency room were obtained.

(Also read: This will be the peak and environmental plate for trucks and dump trucks in Medellín)

Similarly, assures the president, that at the subregional level there has been a problem of hospital beds.

“The work arrives at the right time, now we are also addressing the issue of mental health, which will be a fundamental part of the new emergency health service where we include an adequate physical space to attend to all these mental pathologies,” says Secretary Rivas Urrea.

It is estimated that, by the end of March, the work can be delivered which is 93 percent complete, since all the infrastructure and equipment work is close to being completed in accordance with the provisions of the Ministry of Health.

Only the provision of the emergency room had a value close to 1,000 million pesos.

“Despite being a priority infrastructure work, the issue of supplies, technological equipment, imports, medical gases, air conditioners and costs greatly affected the development of the project; but we knew how to cope with it and here we are on the verge of fulfilling a dream”, says Rivas.

(Also read: To prison accused of kidnapping a university student in Medellín for a month)

Pandemic and post-pandemic, a challenge

For the mayor of Rionegro, the pandemic was one of the greatest challenges he had to experience: “these were moments when we decided whether to tighten the economy or preserve life, the principle of saving life was always above”.

On the issue of Intensive Care Units (ICU), in 2020 the Mayor’s Office of Rionegro made an investment close to 1,800 million pesos for six intensive care beds plus other hospitalization.

The emergency room will make it possible to attend to all post-pandemic difficulties, because according to Dr. Rivas, there has been to a certain extent a neglect of chronic diseases in the last two years that are now demanding emergency services that could not be attended due to congestion in the services. as a result of covid-19, which includes surgeries and other types of diseases and pathologies that require emergency services.

They were moments in which we decided whether to tighten the economy or preserve life

However, they claim that the human resource in health with the pandemic has become insufficient to deal with an emergency of this magnitude, so they want to have health teams that are highly empowered in terms of quality, comprehensiveness, and continuity in patient care.

The municipality currently maintains an agreement to care for the uninsured poor population that allows for emergency services, outpatient consultation and chronic diseases.

Hernández assures that they have the resources to continue with the attention, by specialists, that the most humble people of Rionegro require and thus they do not have to travel to Medellín and can receive high-quality attention in the municipality.

Clínica Las Américas arrives in Envigado, south of the Aburrá Valley

Auna, the Latin American network of health and insurance services that originated in Peru 28 years ago, remains firm in its expansion purpose to expand coverage to more users in the country.

That is how launched its third clinic in Colombiasince his arrival in the country in 2018.

This is the southern headquarters of Clínica Las Américas Auna, a medical complex located in the municipality of Envigado, south of the Aburrá valley, in a strategic area that expands the possibilities of health care for the inhabitants of the southern metropolitan area of ​​the valley. of Aburrá.

Antioquia Clinics

Auna opens its third medical complex in the country. It has 168 beds.

This new headquarters has 168 beds (25 are for critical units -13 ICUs and 12 CSUs for adults-) and 143 are hospital units (36 shared and 107 individual), emergency units, intensive care and special care for adults, 6 operating rooms for different specialties with a angiography room for neurovascular interventionism, a consultation area with specialties such as orthopedics, neurosurgery, gynecology, cardiology, dermatology and clinical laboratory.

In addition, there will also be diagnostic support with conventional radiology, tomography, ultrasound, echocardiography, resonator and will have specialties such as otorhinolaryngology, toxicology, peripheral vascular surgery (diagnosis, treatment and surgery), endoscopy, endocrinology, nephrology, to name a few; all equipped with state-of-the-art equipment.

In addition, the Las Américas Auna Medical Laboratory, certified by the United States College of Pathology, will operate at the headquarters.

The institution will serve all patients affiliated with prepaid policy and drug plans and complementary and basic health care plans.

“During the pandemic we saw the importance and need for more facilities of this type that allow us to offer users quality health care. Auna has complied with them by expanding its installed capacity, increasing the number of beds, intensive and special care units, and with more specialized services,” said Carlos Antonio Betancur Correa, medical director of regional Auna Hospital Services.

With this new building, the organization will generate about 450 formal jobs for health personnel in its first year, and the expectation is that when the operation reaches its maximum capacity, it will exceed 600.

PABLO ZAPATA MURILLO
FOR THE TIME
MEDELLIN

“Here we are still at latent risk,” the mayor of the municipality of San Pablo, Ricardo Gómez Lasso, affirmed without hesitation, 72 hours after the avalanche occurred due to the overflow of the La Brisa ravine, leaving a girl missing and 350 homes affected.

When three days have passed since the emergency due to the winter wave in that town located north of Nariño, the municipal president already put his finger on the sore spot by warning that the danger for the community has not passed and that since winter is going to continue, then it is necessary to carry out infrastructure works in the short and medium term, to avoid a tragedy of incalculable proportions.

“Here we need infrastructure works, we need big works,” he insisted, making a clear warning to the Departmental and National Governments that with “warm water wipes” the problem cannot be solved.

And the work that he proposes is the channeling or diversion of the ravine, of which he said “we do not do that easily, we must do a large infrastructure work that allows us to solve the problem in the future.”

That is why he believes that the necessary investment is required, for which he made a vehement appeal to the professionals of the National Directorate of Risk Management who visited the municipality on Sunday, to take stock of the works that are required.

The governor of Nariño, Jhon Rojas Cabrera, also agreed with the mayor, in the sense that the inhabitants of San Pablo need substantive solutions in the face of the emergency they have been experiencing since last Friday afternoon, when the strong winter made them think at worst

“We take stock to establish what mitigation works and what mitigation actions are required here, to restore tranquility,” revealed the president, who thanked all the relief agencies that came together to attend to the emergency and provide relief to the inhabitants. .

Tragedy in Narino

Humanitarian aid to the municipality of São Paulo

Photo:

Governorate of Narino

Tragedy in Narino

Humanitarian aid the municipality of San Pablo

Photo:

Governorate of Narino

Once again he called for the solidarity of the Nariñenses, through the donation of blankets, mattresses, non-perishable food and medicines that will be delivered to the 350 affected families.

He also stressed that the search for the missing girl continues today with the participation of units from the Volunteer Fire Department, Civil Defense and the National Army. This work extends to the La Brisa creek and the Mayo River.

(Also read: Mayor of Toro (Valle) says that road tragedy was due to a hole)

Given the lack of drinking water service in the town, the liquid is being guaranteed through tanker vehicles, “we know that there are no damages in the infrastructure part of the aqueduct,” he said and recalled that the nursing home was also affected by force of the current

Since Sunday, food kits arranged by the National Risk Management Directorate have been delivered to the affected families, while in the city of Pasto, the Government of Nariño and other entities collect donations of items such as blankets, mattresses , clothing in good condition and food to be delivered to the victims.

Recommendations to communities

Relief agencies are reminding the entire Nariñense community that the current rainy season can cause phenomena such as landslides, floods, flash floods and hailstorms.

Due to the above, it is requested to clean the pipes, drains and sinks that can be blocked, also check the trees that represent a threat, repair roofs and leaks that can flood the houses, as well as not throw sticks, waste or garbage to the rivers and streams because they can produce damming.

It is also advised that while it is raining you should stay away from towers, poles, signs and metal fences, just as you should stay away from areas of possible landslides.

MAURICIO OF THE ROSE
PASTURE

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Ecopetrol attends emergency

Spill emergency in Barrancabermeja.

Photo:

Courtesy Ecopetrol.

Spill emergency in Barrancabermeja.

Environmental crews work to collect oily water in Barrancabermeja.

Last Saturday, February 19, the oily waters of Ecopetrol’s La Lizama well in Barrancabermeja overflowed.

(You may be interested in: The key man in the scandal that would splash Rodolfo Hernández)

Ecopetrol activated the contingency plan to deal with an incident due to “overflow of the oily water system at the Satellite station of the Lisama Production field, located in the Vizcaína village of San Vicente de Chucurí,” they indicated from the oil company.

The system presented an overflow after they were registered heavy rains with electrical storm for about two hours in the area.

(You may be interested in: A chef with tongue cancer: the battle of an entrepreneur from Santander)

The oily waters were contained in a floodable area where there are two emergency care crews and a fluid collection truck.

On Sunday morning, the area was inspected by the fauna and flora rescue team and the cleaning work will continue, they say from Ecopetrol.

The spill is under investigation and has already been reported to the environmental authorities.

BUCARAMANGA

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Muddy streets in the town.

Muddy streets in the town.

Muddy streets in the town.

Relief agencies work to find a minor who is missing.

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By Raquel Tome

In Madrid, the song of the sparrows was no longer drowned out by the deafening traffic noise during the state of alarm. The city had been transformed into a spectral scene, with deserted streets where before the joyous frenzy of the coming and going of people was seething. A tense calm, broken by the shrill sound of ambulances, police sirens, and hearses announcing the building where death had visited.

Meanwhile, a swarm of specialized emergency intervention personnel such as the police, civil guard, firefighters and the military emergency unit (UME) patrolled the silent streets and attended to critical situations. They were frontline workers subjected to exceptional stress conditions. They had to cope with an enormous mental, physical and emotional burden in a highly uncertain pandemic scenario.

The images of people stuffed into their “space suits” conscientiously cleaning the streets, disinfecting the residences of our elders, conditioning spaces and transferring bodies for their delicate and respectful treatment, the arrival of the first military virus trackers still survive in my retina. , the diligent vaccination teams, the complex logistics of hospitals, etc.

Police, firefighters, military emergency unit

To learn about their situation first-hand and the resources they put in place to stay positive in the face of adversity that erupted in March 2020, we spoke to two police officers who prefer to remain anonymous; with Juan Saldaña, head of the UME Personnel Section at the Torrejón de Ardoz base (Madrid), and with Ernolando Parra, firefighter from the Community of Madrid at Parque de Las Rozas.

doHow did they deal with so many challenges immersed in a threatening panorama and subjected to the enormous wear and tear of the situation?

Think of the many obstacles they went through. Immersed in hesitant beginnings of “role ambiguity” and plunged into initial confusion, lacking well-defined protocols that would explain what to do and that they had to design and outline while acting.

Psychologist Raquel Tomé
Psychologist Raquel Tomé/ Photo courtesy

They endured the heavy double shift overload while many companions fell ill, others died. The landscape was devastating. Their self-care was compromised at the same time that they suffered the stress of organizing their families without knowing very well where to leave their children or how to care for their elderly.

They faced the fear of contagion for themselves and their families in a situation where no one knew very well how the virus worked, working in contaminated environments, morgues or with infected people.

As knowledge increased, their protection was reinforced with special suits that made it difficult for them to move and breathe during exhausting days of physical work.

They sustained situations of high emotional charge because they dealt with respond to critical incidents where they had to simultaneously manage their own emotions with easily identifying with the victims.

They themselves went through similar situations in their families, but they made an effort to overcome and give support and support to others.

They also had to sort moral and ethical anguish for failing to respond to the usual standard of care under normal circumstances.

From two daily deaths in homes, to 50

Thus, one of these anonymous police officers told us about the stress he experienced constantly coordinating and receiving phone calls from people who had just lost a family member at home or from elderly people who died in nursing homes.

In the city of Madrid, it went from managing two daily deaths at home to 50 at critical moments.

He told us:

The usual protocol could not be followed because the dead were piling up in houses and residences and there were not enough police officers to wait for long hours for the physician to arrive to certify the death; In addition, the funeral homes were so saturated that it took days to go to collect the dead. These calls were difficult, full of intense and painful emotions, taking in distressed families, dealing with confused, overwhelmed or panicked nursing home staff who had lost their grandparents and no one came and many other people, already grieving, who called anguished because they did not know where the body of their relative was.”

Our policemen did their best, he tells us excitedly:

I felt powerless and frustrated that I couldn’t give more help as in normal circumstances.”

It is easy to think, perhaps because it is reassuring to us, that these people are invulnerable, since they are highly trained in the face of adverse circumstances and in activating the psychological resources that help them survive, but the reality is that they are not heroes and have also felt the emotional impact of being subjected to harsh experiences.

And our resilience, What is it the capacity that people have to adapt positively in the face of adverse and traumatic circumstances plagued by stressful elements, does not imply that, like them, we do not experience difficulties or anguish or that we feel vulnerable because, in essence, we are, and that is something inherent to our human condition.

Nor is it a single issue or certain personality traits that only a few people possess.

Courtesy image of firefighter Ernolando Parra

The fortress fluctuates

our strength is fluctuating and it’s a lot more likely to resent if we work in certain contexts.

Keeping her strong depends on:

  1. The ability of individuals and institutions to detect when our coping capacity is being exceeded.
  1. Count on the possibility of access to appropriate psychological resources and supports to stay strong, autonomous and functional.

Ernolando Parra, psychologist and firefighter at the Las Rozas fire station in Madrid, recounts the things that helped you stay positive In this threatening and highly uncertain context:

helped me put attention to task. It is not a time to go to the emotions, that is what the after is for, when you return to the Park and discuss it with your colleagues. But at the time of the intervention you have to focus your full attention on the task. So it was very important for me to trust in the training physical, know well all the equipment and trust in my colleagues and in the head of the unit who was one of the team with a flexible leadership. Sometimes he gave us orders and other times he worked like no one else. Later, if someone had to speak, the companions always they listen from the proximity and we openly discuss the performances among ourselves».

«It also helped me a lot recognition of the people, when you went out into the street and you knew that your work was important and you heard how they applauded, their encouragement and energy reached me”Add.

More psychological support

They do not have direct psychological support, but he recognizes that it would be good to have that possibility.

The reality is that their actions, as Ernolando Parra or Juan Saldaña, head of the UME personnel area, explain to us, are based on values What:

  • Solidarity
  • Protection
  • Help
  • Effort
  • Modesty

Because their mission could not be accomplished without them.

They value and recognize that all individual resilience lies in interdependence with belonging to healthy and resilient institutions.

Thus, Juan Saldaña points out that the UME has incorporated into its management model concepts that are in line with the healthy organization model. They seek to take care of the well-being of their members because they know that it affects the quality of the service they provide to society.

For them, psychological attention and counseling occupies a central place and they are incorporated into the design of operations with military psychologists.

Its philosophy is based on providing the exposed personnel «“de sources of support, both informal and formal, with specialized personnel who are integrated into their action protocols before and after any intervention”.

It would be reasonable to think that, due to the type of work within these organizations, some military, have effective resources of psychological help.

The truth is that not all reflect this philosophy and doing it timidly has repercussions on the mental health of the people who compose it.

Two obstacles combine to go to a psychologist: that people feel ashamed, guilty or that they experience it as “they are failing” due to their identification with the “role of savior”; and another from within the organization itself because it is stigmatized.

They are afraid of being “pointed out” as psychologically weak and vulnerable with the risk that it could compromise their professional advancement.

Some denounce the painful reality of neglecting psychological or emotional needs.

Thus, a medical doctor from the National Police Corps who works in the area of ​​psychosocial risks also confessed to us anonymously:

During the pandemic nothing was done. Many times there are even more basic needs that are difficult to take into account when planning operations. Rest and relief times, meal times or simply conditioning adequate spaces to go to the bathroom are not always foreseen, unfortunately there are many Piolines”.

The psychologist Raquel Tomé with Juan Saldaña/Courtesy photo

Resilience and institutions

We must understand the mutual interdependence. Institutions are a reflection of our resilience as individuals and as a society. They put us crudely in front of the mirror.

We need to better understand why people suffer emotional crises or why we get psychologically ill.

And that, in the face of difficulties, what makes us seriously vulnerable is that people do not have access to adequate help when we need them, and organizations have their share of responsibility in this. This is The foundation of all resilience.

If we want as a society, as a community, to be well attended by our emergency services, we also have a duty to support them and offer them effective responses to their real needs.

Their resilience is ours, everyone’s. Taking care of them we take care of ourselves. We owe it to them.

Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau invoked rarely used emergency powers Monday to confront protests led by truckers that have clogged streets in the capital, Ottawa, as well as several key border crossings with the United States.

Trudeau said the Emergencies Act would give authorities more power to arrest protesters and seize their trucks.

He said at a news conference, “We cannot and will not allow illegal and dangerous activities to continue.”

A woman faces off with police during a protest over pandemic health rules outside the parliament of Canada in Ottawa on February 11, 2022. (Photo by Ed JONES / AFP)

A woman faces off with police during a protest over pandemic health rules outside the parliament of Canada in Ottawa on February 11, 2022. (Photo by Ed JONES / AFP)

Deputy Prime Minister and Finance Minister Chrystia Freeland said the government would also use anti-money-laundering regulations to target crowd-funding sites that have helped finance the blockades.

Protesters in trucks and other vehicles have gathered in Ottawa for two weeks, expressing objection to vaccine mandates for truckers and other coronavirus measures.

One U.S.-Canadian border crossing was cleared Sunday after nearly a week, with police arresting dozens of people.

Some information for this report came from The Associated Press, Agence France-Presse and Reuters.

The leader of the Canadian province of Ontario, Premier Doug Ford, declared a state of emergency Friday over truckers protesting vaccine mandates.

Over the past two weeks, hundreds of truckers have snarled the streets around the parliament building in the national capital, Ottawa, and more recently blocked the Ambassador Bridge between Canada and the U.S.

Ford said he would convene the provincial cabinet on Saturday to make “crystal clear” the truckers are breaking the law by blocking critical infrastructure.

He said punishments for continuing to break the law could include fines and jail time.

“We are now two weeks into the siege of Ottawa,” Ford said. “It’s an illegal occupation. It’s no longer a protest.”

He also said he would also seek to break up the protests at the bridge, over which a large percentage of U.S-Canada trade passes.

One protester told Fox News he’d been at the Ottawa protest the entire time and was there with his wife and kids.

He said he didn’t want his kids to be forced to wear a mask or get vaccinated.

“The pressure we have to get vaccinated, there’s something about it that just don’t work,” he said. “End all the mandates, and it’s going to be all right.”

Since the protests began, several Canadian provinces have dropped or signaled they will soon drop mask and vaccine mandates.

Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau has called the truckers a “fringe” group.

On Thursday, Ford asked a court to freeze online fundraising for the protesters via a site called GiveSendGo.

In a tweet, the American company said, “Know this! Canada has absolutely ZERO jurisdiction over how we manage our funds here at GiveSendGo. All funds for EVERY campaign on GiveSendGo flow directly to the recipients of those campaigns, not least of which is The Freedom Convoy campaign.”

Some information for this report came from The Associated Press and Reuters.

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Sliding in Pereira

Landslide site in the Esneda sector, in Pereira.

Photo:

courtesy of the community

Landslide site in the Esneda sector, in Pereira.

The avalanche occurred on Avenida del Río and the total number of injured and deceased is still unknown.

In the early hours of this Tuesday there was a heavy downpour in Pereira that caused a landslide that -at the same time- caused the river to overflow and buried several homes in the La Esneda neighborhood.

At the moment, firefighters from Dosquebradas and Pereira attend to the emergency and look for the people who would have been buried under the rubble. The community in the area, where it does not stop raining, also supports the search.

Sliding in Pereira

Winter tragedy in Pereira.

News in development…

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The World Health Organization (WHO) has announced that it maintains the international emergency due to covid-19, declared since January 30, 2020, and warns that the endemic is not the solution for covid-19. On the other hand, the EMA supports the fourth dose for immunosuppressed

Covid: The WHO maintains the international emergency and warns that the endemic is not a solution

A nurse prepares a dose of the covid-19 vaccine in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil. EFE/André Coelho

Covid: The WHO maintains the international emergency and warns that the endemic is not a solution

The WHO Emergency Committee, meeting for more than four hours on January 14, advised the organization’s director general, Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus, to maintain the international emergency, who approved this proposal, said a statement issued Tuesday.

Chaired by Dr. Didier Houssin, the committee, which meets approximately every three months to analyze the evolution of the pandemic, estimated that the global risk associated with it remains high, due in part to the rise of new variants of the SARS-CoV coronavirus. -2, like the omicron, already dominant on the planet.

Among the recommendations issued by the committee at its sixth meeting, its request that the WHO speed up research on the efficacy of vaccines and the duration of immunity they provide stands out.

Also, at the international emergency level, the WHO suggests that restrictions on international travel be issued in a limited and data-based way, after last November the omicron variant alert affected global air traffic again and did not prevent the transmission of this new strain of coronavirus.

Given the uneven distribution of vaccines that persists globally and doubts about their effectiveness in curbing transmission, the committee insists that governments should not require proof of vaccination from international travelers.

The experts of the WHO They consider that, despite the fact that vaccines have lost effectiveness in preventing the spread and transmission of the coronavirus, they are still efficient in preventing serious forms of the disease, including fatal cases.

From pandemic to endemic

The transformation of the pandemic into an endemic will not necessarily be good news nor will it mean seeing the light at the end of the tunnel, said today a senior official from the World Health Organization (WHO), who recalled that the objective is “that no one has to die” of covid-19.

“People talk about pandemic versus endemic, but malaria is endemic, just like HIV, and they kill hundreds of thousands of people, so endemic is not a good thing, it just means it’s here forever. What we have to get to is low levels of incidence of the disease, with a maximum of people vaccinated and that no one has to die from this (Covid-19), “said WHO Director of Health Emergencies Mike Ryan.

“That will be the end of the health emergency, the end of the pandemic,” he explained in a talk with other experts from the pharmaceutical sector and civil society within the framework of the Davos Agenda, a virtual event organized by the World Economic Forum .

EMA does not currently see the fourth dose for the general population

The European Medicines Agency (EMA) considered this Tuesday “reasonable” to start considering the administration of a fourth dose of vaccines against COVID-19 in people with a depressed immune system, but warned that there are no data on its need in the healthy general population.

In a press conference, Marco Cavaleri, Head of Vaccination Strategy, assured that drug regulators in different regions, including the EMA, “agree that the administration of multiple booster doses with short intervals in time would not be a long-term sustainable solution.

“The repeated administration of boosters with several short time intervals could reduce the level of antibodies that can be produced in each administration, since our immune system needs a certain amount of time to show the response to the antigen that is presented to it. This will potentially make vaccination a little less efficient over time.”

Cavaleri does not include here the third dose, which is the first reinforcement -which follows the primary vaccination- and the entire European population is already being injected with the endorsement of the EMA, but rather potential future doses, including the fourth, of which “There is no evidence from clinical studies or real life of its need or value” in the general population.

However, in the population with a severely compromised immune system and, “although data are not yet available, it would be reasonable for public health authorities to start considering the administration of a fourth dose now” to increase protection.

On the other hand, the EMA highlighted on Tuesday the great evidence that the mRNA vaccines, Pfizer and Moderna, “do not cause complications” during pregnancy, neither to the women themselves nor to their babies, and warned about the risk of developing COVID -19 serious if contagion occurs during pregnancy.

who international emergency
A pregnant woman receives the vaccine against covid. EFE/Nathalia Aguilar
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