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Fast track development of Ebola Vaccines

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Principles and target product criteria

THE CENTER FOR INFECTIOUS DESEASE AND POLICY                                              Jan 12, 2015

The unprecedented morbidity and mortality from the 2013- 2015 Ebola virus disease (EVD) epidemic in West Africa has challenged every aspect of our global ability to effectively detect, respond to, and control such a rapidly emerging infectious disease crisis.

 As the epidemiology of the EVD epidemic has become more apparent over recent months, it is clear that
Ebola virus transmission can be reduced by employing traditional public health measures such as
contact tracing and infection control practices aimed at barrier protection. Nonetheless, the
potential for this epidemic to become an endemic situation, where ongoing virus transmission in
West Africa occurs in the foreseeable future, is a real and very concerning possibility.
As long as the Ebola virus continues to be transmitted to humans by humans in these countries, the potential for
sudden bursts of localized virus transmission will exist, and the risk of the Ebola virus expanding its range to other countries must be considered. 
To support the ongoing international effort, the Wellcome Trust and the Center for Infectious Disease Research and Policy (CIDRAP) at the University of Minnesota established an Ebola Vaccine Team B in November 2014. Team B was created to put fresh eyes on the same issues being addressed byvaccine manufacturers, government regulatoryauthorities, government public health agencies, non-governmental organizations, and global, national, and local leaders
.

Read complete report.
http://www.cidrap.umn.edu/sites/default/files/public/downloads/wellcome_trust-cidrap_ebola_vaccine_team_b_interim_report-final.pdf

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