It's a problem international experts will address at a workshop starting Monday in Norway.
Published:
8 April 2001 y., Sunday
Because they can't afford the medicine, millions of people a year die of treatable diseases. It's a problem international experts will address at a workshop starting Monday in Norway.
Some 80 representatives of the World Health Organization, the World Trade Organization, drug companies and other researchers and health experts were to seek ways to ensure that drugs are sold at affordable prices and that they get to those who need them.
"The main goal is to map conditions that today prevent developing countries' access to needed medicines on reasonable terms," Norwegian Minister of Development Aid Anne Kristin Sydnes said ahead of the meeting. "In Africa alone, 25 million people are infected with HIV/AIDS."
The pharmaceutical industry has come under international pressure in recent years over the price of its patented drugs - especially treatments for HIV/AIDS - in developing countries.
The three-day workshop, called "Differential Pricing and Financing of Essential Drugs," will be closed to the public and news media. The delegates cannot make binding decisions, only suggest approaches.
The meeting, which was being held near the town of Hamar, about 60 miles north of the capital, Oslo, was organized by the Global Health Council, a U.S. non-governmental organization.
According to a WHO background paper for the workshop, 4 million lives a year could be saved by prompt diagnosis and treatment, and two-thirds of all children who die before age 15 are killed by seven treatable diseases.
Many major pharmaceutical groups have recently slashed prices, sometimes under cost, to provide HIV/AIDS medication that few African countries could previously afford, but relief agencies say they could be doing more.
Delegates to the conference also face a formidable challenges in such matters as even defining which countries are poor enough to receive cheap medication. The WHO report said, depending on criteria, anywhere from 33 countries with 654 million people to 78 countries with 2.3 billion people might qualify.
Šaltinis:
nandotimes.com
Copying, publishing, announcing any information from the News.lt portal without written permission of News.lt editorial office is prohibited.
The most popular articles
The world's first full face transplant appears in public, and thanks his doctors.
more »
China's fattest man hospitalized
China's fattest man, weighing 230 kg or 507 pounds, is hospitalised after being diagnosed with heart problems and kidney failure.
more »
A Chinese anti-smoking activist is on a one-man mission to eradicate smoking - one smoker at a time.
more »
A five-month old Siberian tiger with cataracts in both eyes becomes China's youngest animal to undergo surgery.
more »
The Commission has taken further steps against Germany for incorrectly applying EU rules on well established medicinal use when authorising medicinal products pursuant to Directive 2001/83/EC.
more »
Theold Bank today approved a US$$117.70 million IDA credit to India, designed to improve quality of and access to health services in the state of Tamil Nadu.
more »
Livestock at a farm outside of Seoul show symptoms of the highly contagious disease.
more »
A written declaration calling for EU-wide breast cancer screening for women, initiated by MEP Liz Lynne (ALDE, UK) had been signed by sufficient MEPs to qualify as having been endorsed by Parliament, announced the President, thanking those who had signed.
more »
The European Commission has earmarked €21 million for two new research projects on cancer, as part of an international research effort coordinated since 2007 by the International Cancer Genome Consortium (ICGC).
more »
To mark World Health Day, WHO is launching a global campaign to raise awareness of the impact of increasing urbanization on the health and lifestyles of people around the globe.
more »