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USAID to give $26m to help control infectious diseases

FE REPORT | Wednesday, 1 May 2024



The United States Agency for International Development (USAID) is launching its new USAID One Health Project to improve infectious disease prevention and control in Bangladesh.
Working with the US Congress, USAID will provide up to $26 million over five years and work closely with the Ministry of Health and Family Welfare; the Ministry of Fisheries and Livestock; and the Ministry of Environment, Forest, and Climate Change to coordinate prevention, detection, and response to infectious diseases among humans and animals, and mitigate other pandemic threats more effectively.
"We are pleased to continue our partnership with Bangladesh to protect people from infectious diseases like avian flu or other animal-borne illnesses, and ultimately improve human, animal, and environmental health as a whole," said USAID Mission Director Reed Aeschliman.
Earlier this month, Bangladesh was named as one of 50 partner countries under the US government's new Global Health Security Strategy 2024, according to press release issued on Tuesday.
The USAID One Health Project will develop the One Health workforce at national and local levels to improve disease detection and surveillance, and strengthen laboratory systems to improve diagnostic capacity.

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