Skip to Global Health Institute Full Site Menu Skip to main content
April 12, 2019

Global Health Diplomacy and Security: The Role of Vaccines in Global Health Security

Event Series: Global Public Health Seminars

Showing the Global Health Diplomacy and Security: The Role of Vaccines in Global Health Security Video

Long before global health security became a term of art, vaccines were protecting communities from infectious diseases and outbreaks, and their disruptive effects on health and society. Whenever there is an infectious disease outbreak the first question is, invariably, “where is the vaccine?”  In an interconnected world microbes are propelled across oceans and borders by travel, migration and trade. Whether they are introduced into communities by forces of nature, by accidents, or by intention, the impact and potential for harm is magnified as they have the potential to land in dense megacities and among vulnerable populations where they can take root and spread. In addition, the pressure of development encroaches on habitats, and increases the opportunities for microbes to explore new territories on both sides of the human animal interface.

Vaccines and global health security have always been co-travelers. This seminar took a look at that journey – where it’s been, where it is now, and what may be around the bend on the road ahead.

Dr. Bruce Gellin is president of Global Immunization at the Sabin Vaccine Institute in Washington, DC. With a focus on low- and middle-income countries, his work helps countries make evidence-based decisions about vaccine introduction and implementation and strengthens policy, financing and political will for country ownership of immunization.

This event was part of the Global Health Security Seminar Series, co-sponsored by Georgetown’s Center for Global Health Science and Security and the Global Health Initiative. Over the course of the 2018-2019 academic year, speakers in the series addressed critical issues in global health in an effort to promote greater dialogue regarding pandemic preparedness across the university and the wider Washington D.C. community.

7:30 - 8:00 A.M. Registration & Coffee
8:00 - 9:00 A.M. Seminar followed by Q&A