Let’s talk about protection ECDC and vaccine preventable diseases, especially measles
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Transcript of Let’s talk about protection ECDC and vaccine preventable diseases, especially measles
Let’s talk about protectionECDC and vaccine preventable diseases, especially measles
Irina Dinca Public Health Capacity and Communication Unit (PHC), ECDC
Sofia, 17 October 2014
Structure of the presentation
- About ECDC
- Measles situation in EU/EEA and WHO measles and rubella elimination targets by 2015
- Let’s talk about protection
- Conclusion
About ECDC
Expanded Europe – the five freedoms in the EU
1. Free movement of people*
2. Free movement of services*
3. Free movement of goods*
4. Free movement of monies*
5. Free movement of microbes
Adapted from Summary of Legislation — Internal Market http://europa.eu.int/scadplus/leg/en/s70000.htm
• In Stockholm, Sweden• Budget 2014: EUR 59.8 million
• Staff: 350 from all EU MS
• Epidemiology, infectious diseases, microbiology, public health
ECDC facts
Core functions of ECDC
Every working day at 11:30 a.m., a roundtable meeting in ECDC’s Emergency Operations Centre assesses threats, official alerts and epidemic intelligence.
• Disease surveillance
• Epidemic intelligence
• Risk assessments• Scientific advice
and guidance• Response support• Preparedness• Capacity support
on prevention• TrainingPhoto: ECDC
Measles situation in EU/EEA and relevant policy documents
Europe got measles! Notified cases (per million), July 2013-July 2014
Source: ECDC Measles and rubella monitoring report, July 2014
Measles images courtesy of Hardin MD/University of Iowa and CDC
Age-specific notification rate of Measles (cases per million) EU/EEA countries, July 2013 – June 2014
Source: EUVAC.NET
<1 1-4 5-9 10-14 15-19 20-24 25-29 ≥30 UNK Total0
10
20
30
40
50
60
70
Age group (years)
Cases p
er
mil
lio
n
Max, 18 year old
December 2004 October 2012
, victim of Subacute Sclerosing Pan-Encephalitis
Size is not all that matters
The issue of geographical clustering and why disaggregating data is important.
SusceptibleImmune
Measles outbreaks (clusters) associated with Roma and
Travellers 2004-10
Roma: Romania, Portugal, Spain, Italy, Bulgaria, Poland, Greece, Germany (n=8)
Travellers: UK, Slovenia, Ireland, Norway (n=4)
Source: VENICE II
The Vaccination Paradox
vaccine safety
diseaseincidence
Publictrust
Doctors’trust
vaccine coverage
WHO goals – to ELIMINATE measles and rubella
– by end 2015 to achieve regional measles and rubella elimination goals (WHO-EURO)
– by end 2020 to achieve measles and rubella elimination in at least five regions
Source: WHO Global measles and rubella strategic plan 2012-2020; Strengthening National Surveillance Systems towards Measles and Rubella Elimination in the WHO European Region Meeting Report Germany (2011)
Elimination is defined as the absence of endemic measles transmission in a defined geographic area (e.g. region) for ≥12 months in the presence of a well-performing surveillance system.
EU Council Conclusion on childhood immunisation
• Coordination of policies and programmes
• Network for epidemiological surveillance and control of CDs
• Invites MS and the Commission to act
• ECDC supports with epi surveillance, training, EWR mechanisms, foster exchange of good practices and experiences
Communication guide “Let’s talk about protection”
ECDC: measles action plan with five key-stone activities
Evidence-based communication(behaviour change communication for MMR uptake) communication toolkits and guidance awareness-raising among policy makers and
other key audiences about the threat to public health from continued measles transmission
advocacy for increased resources for achieving measles and rubella elimination in the EU.
audiovisual material for communicating both to general public and professionals (videoclips, Euronews on parent’s stories)
support to European immunization week
Cultural adaptation in pilot MS– in: Bulgaria, Czech Republic, Hungary, Romania– content and format adaptation of the guide and flip
book– + methodology of adaptation
Messages from parents and carers
1. Do what you recommend others to do.
2. Teach us about the risks of non-vaccination.
3. Tell stories as well as sharing scientific facts.
4. Take time to listen to our concerns and tell us about possible side effects and risks.
5. Don’t ignore those of us who get immunised – we need reassuring and valuing as champions.
6. Don’t be put off by our efforts to find out more.
7. Make vaccination easier to access and less stressful.
8. Redefine success (recognise that some may need more time than others to decide).
9. Help enhance our vaccination health literacy.
Messages from health promoters ,social marketers and communicators
1. Focus on behaviour and it’s determinants - not just ‘messages’.
2. Develop accessible, friendly and adapted service settings.
3. Make the discussion about ‘being protected’ rather than about vaccine safety.
4. Make those who accept vaccination more visible – build on and reinforce vaccination as a social norm.
5. Show how refusing vaccination is socially unacceptable.
6. Ensure any decision to remain unprotected is an active decision.
7. Use all media to advocate for the need to be protected and to protect.
8. Actively counter misinformation.
Messages from experts
1. Keep your immunisation knowledge current.
2. Strengthen your communication skills.
3. Use the team and other settings to provide information and address concerns.
4. Maintain your skills to ensure safe vaccine administration.
5. Guide parents to reliable information sources.
Messages from underserved groups
1. Know more about us.
2. Reframe ‘hard-to-reach’ as ‘poorly-reached’ system failures.
3. View immunisation as one part of larger health challenges.
4. Integrate us into mainstream programmes.
5. Involve us in all stages of programmes aimed at enhancing our inclusion and health.
6. Adapt governance and health systems to be more inclusive.
7. Health Mediators and other community health workers are critically important resources – they need to be supported.
8. Be accessible and respectful.
9. Beware of incentives that could be viewed as bribes for compliance.
The multifaceted intervention pilot project
in Bulgaria (1)- Raise awareness of healthcare professionals
(HCP) and health mediators (HM) on MMR related aspects- Training sessions
- Test the usefulness of “Let’s talk about protection” guide and associated materials among HCP and HM- Intervention activities
- Develop and implement an evaluation component- Pre- and post-intervention research
The multifaceted intervention pilot project
in Bulgaria (2)
The multifaceted intervention pilot project
in Bulgaria (3)
The multifaceted intervention pilot project
in Bulgaria (4)
Conclusion
• Knowledge from research can and should be used in practice
• Equally, users and producers of research should propose research priorities that will increase usable knowledge
• The collaboration among various levels of the healthcare systems and especially PHC and PH has a lot of potential for improvement in the future
Conclusion
THANK YOU!
Helping Europe to save lives