.Sign up to get our FREE email news bulletins.  

 
 

Merseyside Newsbites


 

News Update   on this section are published live, offering you breaking news alerts and other useful information form Merseyside and the wider Liverpool City Region. The news covered on this section include things like:- breaking news, local events, important time sensitive announcements and emergency notices.  For more in-depth news coverage head down to our weekly online newspaper Southport Reporter, or surf through our News Archive, if you want to read an old, backdated news report. Please note that currently the old news archive does not contain reports from this section. This section is updated regularly and is regulated by the Standards Code set down by the UK Press Regulator IMPRESS


 

News Script PHP Pro 2.4 - Admin
Learning the lessons of Monkeypox to prepare for future Pandemics
By Newsroom
News  |  Fri - April 26, 2024 12:19 pm  |  Article Hits:999  |  A+ | a-
TARGETED support for marginalised communities, strong public messaging, and a properly coordinated Government approach led by Ministers are among the recommendations contained in a new evidence based article examining how the UK should respond to future Pandemics.

Published by The University of Manchester’s Policy Engagement Unit, Policy@Manchester, Dr Maurice Nagington, Dr Jeremy Williams and Dr Jaime Garcia-Iglesias set out key findings from their research on how the country tackled the 2022 outbreak of Mpox, formerly known as Monkeypox.

Their conclusions were informed by interviews and focus groups with stakeholders including affected communities and healthcare workers.   

The academics have discovered:-- “shortcomings in national leadership, stark local and regional inequalities in relation to vaccine access, and inadequate communication infrastructures.”

They offer advice to policymakers and public health officials in four key areas for addressing future infectious disease outbreaks, beginning with reflections on how mpox disproportionately affected marginalised communities.

“People from BAME backgrounds appeared to have lower levels of accessing the vaccine, while those from lower-income populations faced additional barriers to engaging with health and care services,” they observe.  “Some individuals also faced challenges in self isolation such as financial or emotional difficulties.”

They advise:- “Public health teams need to be empowered to give additional support (such as financial) where necessary so people can self isolate.”

The team argue that the needs of marginalised individuals merit equally important consideration when developing effective communications strategies, a second area examined in their article.

“We note social media emerged as a powerful tool in the response to the Mpox outbreak, facilitating rapid dissemination of information, promoting awareness, and helping collaboration of a wide range of actors involved in the Mpox response,” Nagington, Williams, and Garcia-Iglesias write.  “The reliance on social media also poses challenges, particularly in terms of equitable access to information.”

In their view:- “additional forms of communication that can reach individuals who are marginalised should also be simultaneously developed during outbreaks.” They add:- “Community organisations play an important role in developing and distributing information that is suitable and impactful.”

Addressing a 3rd area where they believe action is needed, the academics call for Government agencies; primarily the Department for Health and Social Care; to produce guidance for local public health teams to follow, backed by additional financial support.

They have recommended that:- “Governments should provide Ministerial level co-ordination to ensure all relevant professionals, policymakers and community representatives work together to proactively address any emerging inequalities in the immediate outbreak and plan for future outbreaks. And, with knowledge gained from their research of the “pivotal role” played by sexual health services during the Mpox outbreak, Nagington, Williams and Garcia-Iglesias call for policymakers and legislators to “secure adequate funding and support for sexual health services to enhance their capacity to address the demands of outbreaks."

‘Did the UK fail in its management of mpox? Lessons for future pandemics’ by Dr Maurice Nagington, Dr Jeremy Williams, and Dr Jaime Garcia Iglesias can be read free of charge on the Policy@Manchester website.
Top

 

Please support local businesses like:-

 

 

 

This online newspaper and information service is regulated by IMPRESS, the independent monitor for the UK's press.

This online newspaper and information service is regulated by
IMPRESS the independent monitor for the UK's press.

This is our process:-  Complaints Policy - Complaints Procedure - Whistle Blowing Policy


We are a local independent business like you...
Help keep our access to our websites free by advertising your business.

Click
here for more information!

Help us to continue to support the community...

This is a live image that reloads every 30 seconds.

Post Office Ave - Southport - Merseyside - England

 

 
Tracking & Cookie Usage Policy - Terms & Conditions
 
 
 

All rights reserved - Copyright © 2013- PBT Media Relations Ltd.  Data Protection Registration number:- ZA091469