CIDRAP RELEASES INFLUENZA VACCINES R&D ROADMAP TO IMPROVE FLU VACCINES
Future Medicine India|October 2021
The Center for Infectious Disease Research and Policy (CIDRAP) at the University of Minnesota, has released an Influenza Vaccines Research and Development Roadmap (IVR) to accelerate the development of improved seasonal influenza vaccines and the generation of broadly protective or universal influenza vaccines that could mitigate the impact of future influenza pandemics.
CIDRAP RELEASES INFLUENZA VACCINES R&D ROADMAP TO IMPROVE FLU VACCINES

The IVR, prepared by an international team of experts, provides a focused blueprint for action that will allow the global influenza community to apply the lessons learned from COVID-19 vaccine development as a springboard for launching a new era for influenza vaccine research and development.

Threats from seasonal and pandemic influenza persist in a world still battling the COVID-19 pandemic. As another highly contagious respiratory virus, influenza causes a spectrum of disease, ranging from mild to fatal. Globally, influenza kills up to 650,000 people every year and causes serious illness in some 5 million. In addition to causing respiratory problems, the flu can also significantly increase risks of suffering a heart attack or stroke. Novel influenza strains also periodically emerge to cause devastating pandemics. According to some models, nearly 33 million people could be killed within the first 6 months of a severe flu pandemic. CIDRAP is a global leader in addressing public health preparedness and emerging infectious disease response. This IVR effort, funded by Wellcome, also involved extensive input from an expert task force and engagement of more than 100 stakeholder organizations in 29 countries around the globe through extensive discussions, document review, and consensus-building.

L’Oréal-UNESCO Awards for women goes to pioneering work in environmental and life sciences

UNESCO and the L’Oréal Foundation have unveiled the winners of this year’s International Prize for Women in Science, which honours five eminent women scientists with exceptional careers from the five regions of the world, as it has done annually since 1998.

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