GCTF Training Camps.Dec 27
In view of the fact that dengue fever, Zika and Quebec disease continue to threaten global human health and safety in recent years, and these infectious diseases are transmitted by mosquito vectors and have similar clinical symptoms, in order to improve the differential diagnosis of the three kinds of mosquito-borne diseases in national laboratories, Since today (April 25), China and the United States have organized a four-day international training camp on the differential diagnosis of dengue fever, Zika and Qugong for 18 countries including new southward countries. VIPs include Vice President Chen Jianren, Administrative Committee Member of the Executive Yuan Economic and Trade Negotiation Office Deng Zhenzhong, Minister of Health and Welfare Chen Shizhong, Deputy Director of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs Li Chengran, Chairman of the American Association of Taiwan Mo Jian and Director Mei Jianhua, and Singapore, Indonesia, Australia, etc. The representative of the country stationed in Taiwan came.
The workshop was conducted under the "Global Cooperation and Training Framework" jointly signed by Taiwan and the United States. For the first time, the three-in-one experimental diagnostic technology developed by the Department of Disease Control, "Multivariate Quantitative Polymerase Chain Reaction, Rapid Screening of Dengue NS1 Antigen and Multivariate The enzyme immunoassay platform, shared with senior laboratory officials in Asian and Caribbean countries, hopes to help New South to establish a rapid identification of dengue fever, typhoid and Zika in a day through technology transfer. The epidemic spreads epidemic, ensuring people's health and safety.
The camp has 18 countries including Australia, Bangladesh, Cambodia, Haiti, India, Indonesia, Japan, Malaysia, Myanmar, Nepal, New Zealand, Papua New Guinea, Pakistan, Philippines, Singapore, Sri Lanka, Thailand and Vietnam. A laboratory professional came to Taiwan to participate, and invited the internationally renowned US military medical research unit AFRIMS virus laboratory and the National Institute of Infectious Diseases experts as lecturers to jointly improve the diagnostic and diagnostic skills of mosquito-borne viruses and effectively improve regional infectious diseases. Joint prevention and control of energy, strengthen global health and safety, and jointly prevent the global threat of infectious diseases.