CIDRAP News
reports on a two-day meeting at the National Institutes of Health
during which "researchers, biosecurity experts, and others" discussed
the "crafting [of] a framework for funding H5N1 avian influenza
gain-of-function studies." The meeting "is the latest chapter in an
intense scientific controversy
that was triggered by the publication of two recent studies involving
lab-engineered H5N1 strains that showed signs of being transmissible in
mammals," according to the news service. "The global scientific
community is closely watching the framework discussions, because the
U.S. Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) is one of the world's
biggest funders of H5N1 research, including the two studies that
sparked the controversy," CIDRAP writes, adding, "Studies on H5N1 are
considered a key pandemic preparedness step, and research findings have
been used to help governments guide the development of vaccine and
antiviral countermeasures." According to the news service, "The HHS will
post a summary and video of the meeting at a later date for those who
weren't able to attend, and it is encouraging people to submit written
comments by Jan 10, 2013" (Schnirring, 12/17).
http://globalhealth.kff.org/Daily-Reports/2012/December/18/GH-121812-H5N1-Meeting.aspx
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