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Solomon Islands + 2 others
Health specialists to help Solomons dengue fight

Posted 15 April 2013, 7:23 AEST

A team of health specialists from Australia and Fiji has arrived in Solomon Islands to tackle an outbreak of dengue fever.

Since the first case was reported four months ago, the virus has continued to spread quickly.

Three people have died and there are at least 2,500 suspected cases of dengue fever, mostly in the capital Honiara.

However Dr Yvan Souarès, who manages the Health Protection program at the Secretariat of the Pacific Community, says the virus could easily spread to other regions.

Australian Broadcasting Corporation:

© ABC

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World + 42 others
Global emergency overview snapshot, 10-17 December 2012

Tropical cyclone Evan hit Samoa and Fiji on 13 and 16 December. As a category 4 storm, Evan caused significant damage to homes and infrastructure on both islands.

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World + 30 others
Disaster Risk Reduction in School Curricula: Case Studies from Thirty Countries

Executive Summary

This document reports the findings of a UNICEF/UNESCO Mapping of Global DRR Integration into Education Curricula consultancy. The researchers were tasked with capturing key national experiences in the integration of disaster risk reduction in the curriculum, identifying good practice, noting issues addressed and ones still lacking and reviewing learning outcomes.
The methodology employed has been one of meta-research of available literature and case study documentary research into the experiences of thirty countries.

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Outbreak of typhoid in Fiji

A public health emergency has been declared for two villages in Fiji - after an outbreak of typhoid in the Western Division.

Under the ban - which will be reassessed after 30 days - mass gatherings and the slaughtering of animals are forbidden.

World Health Organisation communicable diseases leader in Fiji, Dr Jacob Kool, told Radio Australia's Pacific Beat, typhoid is always a problem in Fiji.

"Fiji has one of the highest rates in the world of typhoid fever," he said.

"But we know it always gets worse when there is a natural disaster."

Australian Broadcasting Corporation:

© ABC

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Fiji health officials move to control typhoid outbreak

Updated December 13, 2011 09:24:21

A month-long publich health emergency has been declared at Fiji's Nanoka Village, due to the typhoid outbreak Pacific Beat reported last week.

The Fiji Interim Government's Ministry of Health have deployed soldiers and police to monitor the situation and enforce a ban on mass gatherings and movement of the villagers. as well a national health team has been deployed to help the divisional team contain the disease.

Presenter: Geraldine Coutts

Fiji Health Ministry spokesman Peni Namotu

Australian Broadcasting Corporation:

© ABC

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Fiji + 6 others
Red Cross and AusAID team up to help vulnerable communities

Australian Red Cross and AusAID have signed an historic Partnership Agreement to pool their expertise, experience and capacity to benefit vulnerable communities across the Asia/Pacific and around the world.

The Agreement, which was signed at the weekend, is the first of its kind between Australian Red Cross and AusAID. It will guide cooperation between the two organisations over the next three years.

"The aim of this agreement is to enhance Australian Red Cross and AusAID's contribution to the provision of humanitarian support worldwide. In a nutshell it's about helping the

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Cook Islands + 10 others
Pacific Region: Appeal No. MAA55001 Mid-Year Report

Report
IFRC
This report covers the period 01/01/10 to 30/06/10.

In brief

Programme summary:

Cross sectoral initiatives during this period include:

- A dialogue with the Pacific Island Forum on potential cooperation initiatives.

- Delivery of the regional Community Resilience Forum, aimed at improving understanding of members in integrated approaches to working with communities.

- A monthly regional newsletter contributed to sharing best practice and improved coordination between Pacific members and Red Cross Red Crescent Movement partners.

- A monthly roster of travel by all

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Australia + 7 others
Pacific: Sub-Zonal Plan 2009-2010 (MAA55001) Annual report

Report
IFRC
This report covers the period 1 January to 31 December 2009

In brief

Programme summary: The Pacific region experienced both large and small disasters in 2009. In the first two months of the year, Pacific Red Cross national societies responded to flooding in Fiji caused by a tropical depression; flooding caused by sea swells in Papua New Guinea and Kiribati; and devastating bushfires in Australia. Later in the year, teams were mobilized to provide immediate relief and ongoing psychological support to survivors of the sinking of the Princess

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Cook Islands + 7 others
Pacific: Appeal No. MAA55001 Programme Update

Report
IFRC
This report covers the period 1 July 2009 to 31 December 2009

In brief

Programme summary:

The last six months have been marked by a number of small and large scale disasters in the Pacific region. The Red Cross Societies of Samoa, Tonga, Papua New Guinea, Vanuatu and Fiji have responded to the needs of communities affected by a devastating earthquake and tsunami, a sunken Ferry, a triple epidemic (cholera, dysentery and influenza), a volcano eruption, floods and a cyclone. Pre-positioned emergency relief items in each country meant that help was immediately at hand for

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WHO to give free H1N1 vaccines to the Pacific

Kate McPherson

The World Health Organisation office in Fiji has confirmed it will begin distributing free swine flu vaccines next month.

The office says it's currently waiting on the H1N1 flu vaccines to arrive from donor countries, and will then begin shipping them around the region.

It is hoped that there will be enough of the vaccine to be provided free of charge to about ten percent of Pacific Islanders.

However, the World Health Organisation's Representative to the South Pacific, Doctor Ken Chen, told Radio Australia's

Australian Broadcasting Corporation:

© ABC

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Afghanistan + 20 others
Asia Pacific Zone: Plan 2010 - 2011(MAA50001)

Report
IFRC
Executive summary

The Asia Pacific region is home to more than half of the world's population, the majority of whom are poor and among the most disadvantaged in the world. Some 600 million women, men and children in the region live below the USD 1 a day poverty line, while 1.8 billion survive on less than USD 2 a day. Compounding the situation, the region is also highly disaster-prone. The diversity, scale and frequency of natural disasters across the region are daunting. Set along numerous fault lines, many countries in the region are often hit by major earthquakes

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Cook Islands + 11 others
Pacific region: Plan 2010-2011 (MAA55001)

Report
IFRC
Executive summary

In the context of the Asia Pacific zone, its demographic, socio-economic and environmental trends, and the International Federation's strategic priorities, the Pacific region covers a vast geographical area comprising thousands of islands and atolls. The majority of Pacific island countries contend with the challenges of smallness and geographic isolation. The Pacific island countries are the most heavily aid-assisted part of the world on a per capita basis. The high rates of migration in the region are primarily a response to real and perceived inequalities

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Australia + 21 others
New Zealand, Australia warn Pandemic (H1N1) 2009 will stretch health system

MANILA, 15 July 2009, 1600 hrs - Health authorities in New Zealand and Australia warned of an increased strain on intensive care units over the next few weeks as cases of Pandemic (H1N1) 2009 continued to grow significantly.

New Zealand Health Minister, Tony Ryall, said the visits to health clinics would put more pressure on the health system as flu season peaked. "The public can expect to see full intensive care units and some surgery being cancelled at various public hospitals around the country over the next few weeks," Mr Ryall said.

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Australia + 20 others
New analysis points to risk of severe disease from Pandemic (H1N1) 2009

MANILA, 14 July 2009, 1600 hrs - Almost 100 Australians are currently in hospital with Pandemic (H1N1) 2009, health authorities said, as a new analysis of hospitalized cases in the state of Victoria found that young and healthy people had been severely sickened by the virus.

Australia is one of a number of countries in the Western Pacific Region to have shifted to a mitigation phase in its response to the disease and is no longer testing all suspected cases. Also, some countries are not reporting new cases on a daily basis. As a

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Australia + 20 others
Early summer break called for Hong Kong (China) schools to cut flu risk

MANILA, 10 July 2009, 1600 hrs - The summer holidays have been brought forward for 43 secondary schools in Hong Kong (China) in an effort to curtail the spread of Pandemic H1N1 2009, health authorities said, as 57 new infections were detected in the territory. The Department of Health called on parents to pay attention to the health of their children, and to ensure they practiced good personal hygiene.

On 9 July, New Zealand announced its sixth death linked to Pandemic H1N1, that of a woman with underlying health conditions. The number of reported cases in New Zealand now exceed 1 500.

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Australia + 20 others
Australia announces new research into Pandemic H1N1

MANILA, 9 July 2009, 1600 hrs - As its case numbers approached the 7000 mark, Australia announced AU$7 million (US$5.45 million) in funding for research projects to learn more about Pandemic H1N1 2009 and to help produce better responses to future outbreaks.

Health authorities in Australia, which has the highest number of cases in the Western Pacific Region, said the funding would be provided for 41 projects to help national authorities tailor their responses to the virus. The research to be supported will examine, among other topics, why some people develop more severe symptoms

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Australia + 20 others
WHO advises countries with large H1N1 caseloads to curtail lab testing

MANILA, 8 July 2009, 1600 hrs-The World Health Organization said it would ask countries hardest hit by Pandemic (H1N1) 2009 to move away from laboratory testing of individual cases and towards collecting broader data about the disease. Meanwhile, new infections in most parts of the Western Pacific Region lifted the caseload to beyond 15 000, as Australia reported another death linked to the virus.

Keiji Fukuda, interim assistant director-general of WHO, said updated surveillance advice would be issued to countries within

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Pacific: Appeal No. MAA55001 - Programme update

Report
IFRC
This report covers the period 1 January 2009 to 30 June 2009.

In brief

Programme summary:

The Pacific regional office works with and supports a total of 12 national societies and two in formation in the region, including Australia, Cook Islands, Federated States of Micronesia, Fiji, Kiribati Islands, Marshall Islands, New Zealand, Palau, Papua New Guinea, Samoa, Solomon Islands Tonga, Tuvalu and Vanuatu.

In this reporting period, the regional office continues to engage with national societies in the region on disaster

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Bangladesh + 32 others
Millions face hunger as seasons disappear

Report
Oxfam
As Prime Minister Kevin Rudd heads off to major international meetings with climate change high on the agenda this week, a new report reveals that seasons which were once distinct are shifting, destroying harvests and causing widespread hunger.

This is just one of the multiple impacts of climate change taking their toll on the world's poorest people, according to the Oxfam report 'Suffering the Science - Climate Change, People and Poverty'.

The report's release comes ahead of the