Abstracts and Education
Presenter Resources
Poster
Presentation Instructions
Audio-Visual
Instructions
The Abstract Book has gone
green!
The book, which includes the full text of abstracts
presented at the meeting, is available here as one file and as six
smaller files for quicker, convenient downloading. Printed copies of the
Abstract Book will NOT be distributed at the conference in
Philadelphia. If you require a printed copy, print the book before
the conference. Please
note that the meeting rooms at the Philadelphia Marriott Downtown and
Pennsylvania Convention Center will NOT have Wi-Fi accessibility.
Each attendee will receive a Program Schedule Book which contains the
schedule of all conference sessions, session descriptions, presentation
titles, abstract titles, presenters and authors.
- Abstracts 1-250
- Abstracts 251-500
- Abstracts 501-750
- Abstracts 751-1000
- Abstracts 1001-1250
- Abstracts 1251-1606
- Complete Abstract Book
Abstracts
Download the Call for Abstracts.
Download the abstract submission guidelines.
Late Breaker Abstracts
Submission deadline: September 14,
2011
Late breaker abstract
notices were sent in early November.
Call for
Symposium Proposals
Submission deadline: March
2, 2011
Download the symposium
submission guidelines.
Symposium notices were sent in early May.
Symposium Organized in Honor of Gerald Keusch:
Global Health: Digging Deeper into Its Breadth
Monday, December 5, 10:15 am - Noon
Presenters:
Gerald Keusch, Boston University
Zulfiqar Bhutta, Aga Khan University
Maria Freire, Albert and Mary Lasker Foundation
Nancy Kass, Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health
Jeffrey Koplan, Emory University
Harold Varmus, National Cancer Institute
Pre-Meeting
Courses:
Basic Science Pre-Meeting Course
December 3,
2011
Download the course
agenda.
New Approaches for Immunologic Intervention in Tropical Infectious Diseases
Despite an enormous need and decades of effort, there have been few successes in the rationale design of vaccines and other forms of immunologic intervention in parasitic and other tropical infectious diseases. The repeated failures in this area have underscored the need to better understand the immune response to specific pathogens , to determine what type of responses are protective, and how they can be specifically triggered and maintained for long periods of time. This 1-day course, designed for both graduate and post-graduate audiences, will highlight recent advances in the field of basic immunology that suggest new strategies for achieving these critical goals of vaccine development. In addition, the course will summarize the status of current major tropical vaccine efforts and discuss the use of immunologic intervention in the treatment of infection. The faculty consists of leaders in the field of fundamental immunology as well as experts engaged in vaccine development.
Clinical Pre-Meeting Course
December 3-4,
2011
Download the course
agenda.
Management of Challenging Diseases
from the Tropics
This 1.5-day course will target tropical medicine practitioners, infectious disease consultants, epidemiologists, clinical microbiologists, graduate students, public health physicians, medical educators and other health care professionals with an interest in clinical tropical medicine. This course will be an audience participation-based case-series of challenging clinical questions from the tropics presenting unknowns covering major diagnostic and therapeutic challenges that clinicians face in the returning traveler or immigrant from overseas. A panel of expert speakers will discuss the diagnosis and management of tropical viral infections, tropical ophthalmology, tropical dermatology, filariasis, leishmaniasis, traveler’s diarrhea and other travel related issues and vaccines.
Global Health Pre-Meeting Course
December 4,
2011
Download the course
agenda
The Role, Coordination and Impact of Global Health Development
Organizations at the Country Level – A Tanzania
Perspective
The scope and
intensity of global health challenges ensures that no single country,
agency, or initiative can work alone to combat these issues. In
countries where bilateral, multilateral, non-governmental, and private
sector global health organizations have a presence, their staff must
regularly interact with each other and with the host-government to
ensure harmonization of efforts to fund, plan, implement, and evaluate
programs. This 1-day course for graduate students, public health
practitioners, global health policy makers and donors will examine and
discuss the complex, in-country dynamics among multiple aid partners,
using Tanzania as a case-study. The impact of health investments
in Tanzania over the past decade will be highlighted. Faculty will
include aid organization and host government representatives from
Tanzania.

