10 resultsfor “International Aids Vaccine Initiative”
initial vaccine research, evaluation and tests could take years, while production can take several months. Here is what we know about the three different vaccines: - The International AIDS
International Aids Vaccine Initiative (IAVI), which is working on one vaccine, said the outbreak was threatening
international concern, requiring a coordinated response. Resources were being rushed to two affected provinces near Uganda. Parts of eastern Congo are in the hands of armed rebels, complicating sending aid. The head
aid cuts](/news/2026/4/9/us-led-historic-foreign-aid-decline-in-2025-amid-trump-cuts-oecd) by major international donors, [particularly the United States](/news/2025/12/29/us-slashes-un-humanitarian-aid-to-2bn-huge-cut-as-trump-demands-reforms). The WHO has said late detection, the [absence of a vaccine](/news/2026/5/21/ebola-outbreak-when-will-a-vaccine-be-developed-for-the-new-strain) or virus-specific therapeutics, widespread armed violence and high mobility among
Initiative, said the attacks may reflect the “built-in skepticism and anger” of people in eastern Congo over how the region has been treated, with years of violence from foreign-linked rebel groups
vaccines or treatments. "Some of the initial testing that was done didn't pick up this Bundibugyo virus," she says, since those tests were designed for more common versions of Ebola. As a result, samples
Aids, or other virus outbreaks. During the previous Ebola outbreak in 2014, online posts – some picked up by Infowars’ Alex Jones – held that Ebola victims were returning as zombies. But that was during the fourth
initial agreement regarding the Strait.  Vessels are anchored off the coast of Sharjah
International Rescue Committee's deputy regional director for Asia. Miftahul Zannat's family knows how strained the healthcare system is firsthand. The 2-year-old developed classic symptoms of measles — including a fever and rash
International Council of Nurses (ICN) warned of shortages, saying nurses in DR Congo are "scared for their safety because they do not have the equipment to protect themselves". The Ebola virus spreads from one person