The meetings and dates are as follows:
Guinea Worm Eradication Program (Wednesday, March 1 – Friday, March 3, 2023)
Trachoma Control Program (Monday, March 6 – Tuesday, March 7, 2023)
River Blindness, Lymphatic Filariasis, and Schistosomiasis Programs (Wednesday, March 8 - Friday, March 10, 2023)
Hispaniola Initiative (Tuesday, March 14, 2023)
Special Health Programs (Wednesday, March 15, 2023)
Mental Health Program (Thursday, March 16 - Friday, March 17, 2023)
To login you will need to use the email address you have registered with and the reference number for your registration.
Thursday, March 16 - Friday, March 17, 2023
Please note you will be able to click on the "Join" button 10 minutes prior to start of the meeting and you will be taken a Zoom waiting room. At the start time we will let you into the meeting.
Wednesday, March 1 – Friday, March 3, 2023
Since 1986, The Carter Center has led the international campaign to eradicate Guinea worm disease, working closely with ministries of health and local communities, the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, the World Health Organization, UNICEF, and many others.
Guinea worm disease could become the second human disease in history, after smallpox, to be eradicated. It would be the first parasitic disease to be eradicated and the first disease to be eradicated without the use of a vaccine or medicine.
Monday, March 6 – Tuesday, March 7, 2023
As a global leader in the fight against trachoma, The Carter Center and partners implement the World Health Organization endorsed SAFE strategy (Surgery, Antibiotics, Facial Cleanliness, and Environmental Improvement) for trachoma control. The Carter Center's Trachoma Control Program was established in 1998, the same year in which the World Health Assembly adopted resolution WHA51.11 targeting the global elimination of trachoma as a public health disease. Currently, the Carter Center’s Trachoma Control Program assists ministries of health in five African countries to eliminate trachoma as a public health problem, Ethiopia, Mali, Niger, South Sudan, and Sudan.
Wednesday, March 8 - Friday, March 10, 2023
The Carter Center works with national ministries of health in Latin America and Africa to eliminate river blindness, one of the leading causes of preventable blindness worldwide.
The Carter Center also works with national ministries of health to eliminate the debilitating parasitic disease lymphatic filariasis — a leading cause of permanent and long-term disability worldwide — from areas of Ethiopia, Nigeria, and Sudan.
The Carter Center undertakes one of the longest-running initiatives in providing health education and treatment for schistosomiasis in Nigeria, the world's most endemic country for this preventable but devastating disease.
Tuesday, March 14, 2023
The Carter Center's Hispaniola Initiative works with the ministries of health in Haiti and the Dominican Republic to eliminate malaria and lymphatic filariasis from the countries' shared island, Hispaniola.
Wednesday, March 15, 2023
Special Health Programs (SHP) fosters cross-programmatic efforts, new initiatives, and special projects to support the Health Program vision of advancing human rights by leveraging expertise in disease control, elimination, and eradication as well as mental health, collaborating with Peace and across Health Programs, and building the capacity of health systems where we work.
Thursday, March 16 - Friday, March 17, 2023
Under the leadership of former First Lady Rosalynn Carter, a longtime champion for the rights of people with mental illnesses, we envision a world where mental health is valued, promoted and protected as a human right and where everyone has equal access to mental health supports and services.