overview
This map shows the countries in the Southeast Asia region. CDC involvement is limited to countries with which the United States has diplomatic relations.
The Southeast Asia region is home to more than 657 million people and is comprised of a variety of CDC assets, including the CDC Regional Office in Hanoi, Vietnam, and seven bilateral CDC country offices.
CDC's investment in the region began with malaria technical assistance in the early 1950s, followed by successful smallpox eradication efforts and the establishment of country offices throughout the region to help strengthen public health workforces.
Countries across the region are leveraging health security systems strengthened through longstanding collaboration with CDC, including data collection through established respiratory surveillance systems, and the deployment of trained epidemiologists, researchers, risk communicators, and public health emergency managers to effectively respond to the COVID-19 pandemic.
The SEA Regional Office works closely with seven bilateral offices, CDC staff embedded in international organizations, headquarters-based programs, and agency counterparts and partners throughout the region to build core public health capacity and respond to public health threats. Apart from core bilateral partnerships with host government ministries and U.S. embassy departments and agencies, CDC also works with several regional U.S. government agencies, multilateral organizations such as the Association of Southeast Asian Nations, and nongovernmental actors to implement public health programs. In addition to regional staff, experts from CDC Headquarters in Atlanta, Georgia, provide technical support to these offices and partners throughout the region.
Priority Areas
Mirroring the U.S. CDC's Global Health Strategy, the SEA focuses on responding to local health threats by building core public health capacity in the following areas:
Antimicrobial resistance Border health and migrant health Disease elimination Infectious disease prevention and control Laboratory systems One Health Pandemic preparedness and vaccine planning Public health emergency management Surveillance and response Human resource development
Regional Goals
U.S. CDC and partners are working together to:
Strengthen existing partnerships and develop new ones to advance health security priorities; Strengthen and expand the public health workforce; Strengthen government capacity to respond effectively to public health emergencies; Enhance partners' use of data to improve public health response and policy development; Strengthen standardized surveillance systems to better understand and predict disease trends; Promote science and innovation in public health; Strengthen public health laboratories; Improve the capacity of countries in the region to address vaccine-preventable diseases; Work to eliminate diseases of public health importance.
resource
Fact Sheet
Download the SEA Regional Office fact sheet.
Related links
Learn about CDC's work in Burma.
May 15, 2024
Learn about CDC's work in Cambodia.
July 1, 2024
Learn about CDC's work in Indonesia
May 15, 2024
Learn about CDC's work in Laos.
May 15, 2024
Learn about CDC's work in the Philippines.
May 15, 2024
Learn about CDC's work in Thailand.
May 15, 2024
Learn about CDC's work in Vietnam.
July 10, 2024
Find out more about DGMH-Asia's activities.
September 7, 2022
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