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ISAC is delighted to invite you to its next free educational webinar on "Dissemination of viral infections during mass gatherings" on 24 October 2022 at 15.00 (CET)* which is organised by ISAC's Viral Infections Working Group.
Mass gatherings (such as sporting events, concerts or religious pilgrimages) are high profile occasions, often attended by tens of thousands of individuals. They can pose public health challenges and strain public health resources of the host community, city or country. Mass gatherings, like the Hajj, Olympics or musical festivals, necessitate significant preparedness and response planning on the part of the host. There is plentiful evidence that mass gatherings can be the focus of the spread of pathogens causing infectious diseases. Of particular importance are viral infections, particularly in the context of current outbreaks: COVID-19 and monkeypox. Such infections can be transmitted at the event itself, during transport to and from the event, and in participants’ home communities upon their return.
The purpose of this webinar is to outline the most significant viral infections currently associated with mass gatherings, suggest key planning considerations for the organisers of mass gatherings in the context of novel viral outbreaks and provide general advice on the public health aspects of mass events.
We look forward to your participation.
Participants will be able to download a certificate of attendance during the webinar. *Find your start time by timezone.
Speakers Prof. Fatma Amer is a professor of medical microbiology and immunology at Zagazig Faculty of Medicine, Egypt. Prof. Amer is Chair of ISAC's Viral Infections Working Group and a committee member of International Society of Infectious Diseases (ISID). She formulated and chaired Arab Alliance for the Prudent Use of Antibiotics for 10 years and is the co-editor of the International Arabic Journal of Antimicrobial Agents (IAJAA). She has published numerous virology manuscripts in high-ranked journals and has supervised and evaluated several MSc and PhD theses nationally and internationally.
Dr Jaffar A. Al-Tawfiq is a consultant of internal medicine and infectious diseases at Johns Hopkins Aramco Healthcare. He is a professor of medicine and infectious diseases at the Indian University School of Medicine, USA. Since 2012, he has been involved in the management and control of the emerging MERS-CoV and was involved in Mass Gatherings as it relates to Hajj pilgrimage. His current interests include: mass gatherings, hospital epidemiology, healthcare associated infections, antimicrobial resistance, antibiotic stewardship and emerging respiratory pathogens including MERS-CoV and COVID-19.
Dr Rodriguez-Morales is an expert in tropical and emerging diseases, particularly in zoonotic and vector-borne diseases (especially arboviral diseases), now including COVID-19. He is President of the Publications and Research Committee of the Pan-American Infectious Diseases Association (API), as well as President of the Colombian Association of Infectious Diseases (ACIN). He is member of the Committee on Tropical Medicine, Zoonoses and Travel Medicine of ACIN. He is Vice President of the Latin American Society for Travel Medicine (SLAMVI) and Member of the Council of the International Society for Infectious Diseases (ISID).
Dr Rehab Tash is an associate professor of medical microbiology and immunology at Zagazig University, Egypt and an infection control consultant and auditor. Dr Tash is a certified associate trainer (International Board of Certified Trainers) and CIPT (Certified International Professional Trainer ) and has a diploma of health professions education (DHPE/SCU). She shared in designing and conducting a Masters degree of infection prevention and control (IPC) at Zagazig School of Medicine, and training programs for health care workers in IPC & quality. She is an author and editor of infection control books (Arabic and English).
Dr Syed Ghulam Mogni Mowla is an associate professor at the Department of Medicine, Dhaka Medical College Hospital (DMCH). He completed his MBBS in 1999 and got his post graduate Fellowship in Medicine from Bangladesh College of Physicians and Surgeons in 2008. He is a dedicated internist with a special interest in infectious diseases. He was the Chief Consultant of the 200-bedded Special Dengue unit of DMCH during the last Dengue Outbreak in 2019 and is a contributor on the National COVID-19 Guideline of Bangladesh. He is an honorary fellow of American College of Physicians and Royal College of Physicians, (Edinburgh), a life member of Bangladesh Society of Infectious & Tropical Diseases and Secretary for International Affairs of Bangladesh Society of Medicine.
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