Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
Download as PDF; Printable version; In other projects ... became the Vaccination Risk Awareness Network in 1994 and ... This page was last edited on 16 February 2025, ...
First week in February every year in the United States National Wildlife Week [185] National Dark-Sky Week: Week of new moon in April Bike to Work Week Victoria: National Pollinator Week [186] Third Week in June Mosquito Awareness Week: June 22–28 [187] Plastic Free July [188] July 1–31 National Clean Beaches Week [citation needed] July 1–7
Download as PDF; Printable version; ... Pages in category "Awareness weeks in Canada" ... Text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 ...
March 3, 2025 – World Wildlife Day, founded by the United Nations in 2013, is a day to raise awareness of the importance of every creature on earth from the tiniest insect to the ocean’s ...
Lyme Disease Awareness Month is observed during May in Canada [9] and the United States, [2] [10] [3] [8] and also in other countries where Lyme disease is common. [11] [1] Lyme Disease Awareness Day is also observed on May 1 every year. [12] During May, Lyme disease prevention, awareness or research may also be discussed in parliaments or ...
The World Health Assembly endorsed World Immunization Week during its May 2012 meeting. [3] Previously, Immunization Week activities were observed on different dates in different regions of the world. Immunization Week was observed simultaneously for the first time in 2012, with the participation of more than 180 countries and territories ...
OCD Awareness Week was launched in 2009 by the International OCD Foundation. [2] Its goal is an international effort to raise awareness and understanding about Obsessive–compulsive disorder (OCD) and related disorders and to help get more people access to treatment for the condition. [2] It takes place in the second week of October each year.
The goal of Aboriginal AIDS Awareness Week is getting to zero. [11] Despite different methods used by aboriginal communities to try to decrease the prevalence of AIDS, populations like the First Nation tribes in Saskatchewan in Canada, have about 3.5 times more cases of AIDS than other areas in Canada, as well as higher than most third world countries.