Chief medical officers from across the Caribbean to meet in Trinidad and Tobago

The chief executive director of the Trinidad-based Caribbean Public Health Agency (CARPHA), Dr. Joy St. John Wednesday praised regional chief medical officers (CMO) for the role they played during the coronavirus (COVID-19) pandemic that killed and infected thousands of people in the Caribbean.

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“This is my first opportunity to tell you CMOs to your faces, how proud I am of the world-class achievement in public health that the CARICOM region has attained and demonstrated repeatedly in these two harrowing years,” Dr. St. John said at the opening ceremony of the two-day Chief Medical Officers COVID-19 Meeting.

CARPHA said that the high-level meeting will seek to provide an update on the regional and national COVID-19 response. Additionally, it will discuss safe and sustainable strategic initiatives in the new era of COVID-19 and advise on optimal ways of working and responding to the ongoing challenges of COVID-19 and the resultant effects on the health status of their countries.

The CARPHA executive director told the meeting that she was pleased with the turnout for the event saying the meeting was taking place in Trinidad and Tobago “because it is safe”.

She said that the CARICOM region remains one of the most tourism and travel dependent regions in the world and the economic fall-out from the COVID-19 pandemic “would have placed extra pressure on you to find the right balance between lives and livelihoods in dealing with the SARS-CoV-2 virus and all of its variants”.

She said the pandemic allowed the Caribbean to engage in regional solidarity adding “your reliance on each other at many critical points was necessary to help overcome the unrelenting pressures. CARPHA was pleased to be of service to you

Dr. St. John said that over the next two days, delegates will focus on COVID-19 by providing updates on the international, regional and national COVID-19 response; discussing safe and sustainable strategic initiatives in the new era of COVID-19 and advising on optimal ways of working and responding to the ongoing challenges of the pandemic.

“This is in order to provide the foundation for the CMOs’ decision making on the public health recommendations on the way forward to avoid and mitigate resultant negative effects on the health status of CARICOM.

The meeting is being funded by the European Union and in his address, Trinidad and Tobago Health Minister Terrance Deyalsingh said while the region has not escaped unscathed, “the monumental threat of COVID-19 to the people, economies and our way of life in the Caribbean has been significantly reduced due to the diligent leadership of the region’s CMOs.

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“The progress made in the fight against COVID19 by individual countries and as a region is in no small measure due to these men and women born and bred in this region. The people of this region truly owe you and your teams a great debt of gratitude,” Deyalsingh added.

He told the meeting that the vaccine inequity that afflicted the Caribbean should never occur again.

“As CARICOM attempts to recover from the financial impact of the virus, CMOs are now being called upon to go a step further by providing clinical guidance to their country’s leadership as they navigate a safe transition out of the pandemic, toward COVID-19 endemicity and the prospect of living with the virus.”

Deyalsingh said that the health of a region remains a fundamental determinant of the quality of life of its people and directly influences expenditure, productivity, and the achievement of sustainable development goals.

CMC/

 

 

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