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Corporate Social Responsibility
News
4.05.2006 ET
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GM Fleet Mobilizes CDC's Global Health Force in Asia and Africa
GM Vehicles to Help Centers for Disease Control and Prevention Fight Public Health Threats
(CSRwire) ATLANTA - With increasing threats to public health around the world,
particularly in hard-to-reach locations, today the Centers for Disease
Control and Prevention Foundation (CDC Foundation) and the GM Foundation
announced a partnership that will provide CDC with vehicles for
transporting critical supplies, personnel and equipment to regions where
they are needed most.
Through the partnership, announced in conjunction with World Health Day on
April 7, CDC will acquire sport utility vehicles and light trucks in eight
countries − Cambodia, Thailand, Kenya, Angola, Tanzania, Uganda,
South Africa and Laos.
"Easy movement of resources plays a crucial role in efficiently delivering
health services and monitoring for outbreaks in countries where serious
health threats are common," says Stephen Blount, M.D., M.P.H., director of
CDC's Coordinating Office for Global Health. "The GM vehicles will provide
reliable transportation to help CDC and our partners overseas address
existing health challenges like HIV/AIDS and detect and respond to
emerging threats like avian flu."
CDC is actively engaged in addressing public health challenges around the
world. Currently, the agency has field stations and programmatic
activities in 43 countries. In partnership with health officials and
healthcare providers in host countries, CDC scientists work to protect and
promote health through disease surveillance, epidemiology, laboratory
research and outbreak response.
"When the CDC Foundation requested our help in meeting the CDC's pressing
need for transportation in the field, we saw a natural opportunity," says
Rod Gillum, GM vice president Corporate Responsibility and Diversity and
Chairman, GM Foundation. "The GM Foundation doesn't treat or cure
infectious diseases around the world, but we can help mobilize those who
do."
The CDC Foundation will purchase 16 GM vehicles, including light trucks
like the Chevrolet Colorado, in-country and deliver them to CDC field
stations and regional sites during 2006 and 2007. Programs in Cambodia,
Thailand and Kenya will receive the first nine vehicles this year to
support activities in CDC's highest priority areas of influenza, refugee
health, HIV/AIDS, emerging infectious diseases detection and response and
community-based disease surveillance.
At CDC's busy Thailand field station, the GM vehicles will boost capacity
to transport biological specimens and laboratory supplies to and from 20
different hospitals and clinics in support of ongoing programs and
research related to the President's Emergency Plan for AIDS Relief,
emerging infections and TB. CDC staff will use the vehicles daily to meet
with Thai counterparts in outlying provinces. During outbreak
investigations, including avian influenza and other public health threats,
the vehicles will be critical lifelines.
In Kenya, where CDC also implements the President's Emergency Plan for
AIDS Relief, vehicles will immediately be used to deliver antiretroviral
drugs safely and securely to clinics and hospitals treating patients who
have HIV. Replacing existing open pickups, the new vehicles will protect
boxes of supplies and drugs from sun, rain or possible theft.
CDC teams in Cambodia will use the vehicles to rapidly and safely
transport laboratory supplies and equipment necessary for diagnosing
HIV/AIDS and emerging infections. The vehicles will also provide critical
capacity to move personnel and supplies during outbreak investigations.
"With the health of U.S. citizens increasingly linked to the health of
populations around the world, enhancing CDC's ability to carry out disease
detection and control activities overseas is vitally important," says
Charles Stokes, president and CEO of the CDC Foundation. "Through this
partnership, the GM Foundation is leading the way in mobilizing crucial
CDC resources and expertise to help protect us all."
Established by Congress, the CDC Foundation helps the Centers for Disease
Control and Prevention do more, faster by forging effective partnerships
between CDC and individuals, corporations and foundations to fight threats
to health and safety.
The GM Foundation was established in 1976 to support the philanthropic
interests and business priorities of General Motors Corporation. In 2004,
worldwide contributions by GM and the GM Foundation totaled $68 million.
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