Guest guest Posted October 13, 2005 Report Share Posted October 13, 2005 Funding in Africa is concentrating too heavily on the " big three " Klaus Morales Certain tropical diseases are being unjustly ignored in Africa because funding is so heavily concentrated on the " big three " diseases—HIV/AIDS, tuberculosis, and malaria—says a new study by Molyneux and colleagues (PLoS Medicine, doi: 10.1371/journal.pmed.0020336). The neglected tropical diseases, including schistosomiasis, onchocerciasis, trachoma, lymphatic filariasis, and the soil-transmitted helminth infections, are responsible for as many as 500 000 deaths a year. But the international health community gives priority to the big three. " Instead of 95% of funding being addressed to the big three, give them 90% and we will be able to do a lot of cost effective treatment with the extra 5%. We don't need research; we just need funds to sustain the implementation of control programmes, and we urge policy makers and donors to rethink policies, and address the neglected diseases, " said Alan Fenwick, professor of tropical parasitology at Imperial College, London and one of the co-authors of the paper. These diseases can be effectively treated with a minimum budget, estimated at $0.40 (£0.23; {euro}0.33) a year. The proposed rapid impact package includes four drugs—praziquantel, albendazole, ivermectin, and azithromycin—with the three last being donated by multinational pharmaceutical companies, the paper says. " Compared to a minimum of $200 per person per year to treat HIV/AIDS, $200 to treat a single episode of tuberculosis and $7-10 to treat a single episode of malaria, the cost of the package would be negligible. It is equivalent to the costs of 12 condoms for HIV prevention and a quarter of the price of an antimalarial bednet, " the paper says. Professor Molyneux, director of the Lymphatic Filariasis Support Centre at the Liverpool School of Tropical Medicine, added, " For the big three, transmission would still continue at the present rate. For example, treating three million people until the end of this year as stated in the `3 by 5' target for HIV would still leave 90% of HIV infected individuals untreated and actively transmitting. " There are currently six public-private partnerships working in Africa linked to specific neglected tropical diseases, each reaching a large number of people. " Our plan is to bring all of them together to complete the job we have started, and reach half a billion people annually for five years. In doing so, we would take morbidity due to these diseases out of the burden of disease equation for Africa. " If donors would just get the funding more evenly balanced, we can put forward this emergency treatment package through these integrated programmes, " said Professor Molyneux. Implementing these goals, however, might be not as simple as it sounds. " The final costs of an integrated package may need to include the costs of drug use monitoring and of developing new tools for neglected disease control. Additional costs must therefore be considered in order to promote ongoing research and development for new neglected diseases control tools, " the article says. http://bmj.bmjjournals.com/cgi/content/full/331/7521/866-a Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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