[Ip-health] AFP: Kenya, Brazil Press for Funds for Neglected Diseases
Mike Palmedo
mpalmedo@cptech.org
Wed May 17 14:07:00 2006
http://www.todayonline.com/articles/118794print.asp
Kenya, Brazil press for funds for neglected diseases
May 17, 2006
Agence France Presse
Kenya and Brazil joined forces to press donors and wealthy governments
for more funds to develop treatments for neglected diseases that mostly
affect poor people.
The two nations said they would co-sponsor a resolution calling for such
action at a meeting next week of the World Health Assembly (WHA) in
Geneva at which global health priorities are to be addressed.
"Developing countries have the capacity to provide new solutions for old
diseases," said Davy Koech, director of the Kenya Medical Research
Institute (KEMRI).
"But every day we see how difficult it is to get support for research
and development into diseases that affect the poor for which there is no
profitable market," he told reporters here.
"We must put public health above private profit," said Ahmed Ogwel of
Kenya's health minstry.
Guilherme Patriota, a representative of Brazil's foreign ministry, said
the resolution would give governments the "opportunity to wake up from
their slumber on essential health research and development."
"We have begun to move in the right direction but it is essential that
we develop better and new health tools to improve the long-term health
both of patients and economies of developing countries," he said.
While global spending on health research has increased from 30 billion
dollars (23 billion euros) in 1986 to 105.9 billion dollars in 2004,
only about 10 percent of that is spent on diseases which affect 90
percent of the world's population, according to the Global Forum for Health=
.
Those diseases include kala-azar, sleeping sickness, malaria,
tuberculosis and HIV/AIDS and the World Health Organisation (WHO) says
at least three billion dollars (2.3 billion euros) should be directed
annually at health priorities of the poor.
The Drugs for Neglected Diseases Initiative, an independent non-profit
organisation founded in 2003, hailed the Kenya-Brazil partnership as an
important step to publicize the need.
"It is time for the world governments to heed the call from Kenya and
Brazil ... and to take a leading role in defining health priorities,"
said the group's executive director Bernard Pecoul.
More than six million people die every year from neglected diseases, 97
percent of them in impoverished developing countries, according to the
group that aims to develop new, improved and field-relevant drugs to
treat them.
Sleeping sickness threatens 60 million people in sub-Saharan Africa who
have few treatment options. Kala-azar kills 60,000 people each year but
the most common treatment was developed back in the 1930s. =97 AFP