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Breaking News Links, as part of the research project PEAH (Policies for Equitable Access to Health), aim to focus on the latest challenges by trade and governments rules to equitable access to health in resource-limited settings

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Breaking News: Link 222

 

Business leaders call for new socially focused business model that embraces SDGs 

What is Davos? 5 things to know about the World Economic Forum 

The Future of Global Risk: A View from Davos 

Davos 2017: Oxfam attacks failing global tax avoidance battle 

This might be the best alternative yet to GDP as a way to measure a country’s growth 

JUST EIGHT MEN HAVE THE SAME WEALTH AS WORLD’S POOREST HALF: OXFAM 

UN Data Forum opens in South Africa to harness power of data for sustainable development 

New Book Highlights IP Trade Law Flexibilities For Public Health 

OECD criticises ‘ineffective spending’ in healthcare 

Building The Value-Based Health Care System Of The Future Depends On Meeting Clinicians’ Data Needs 

US Biotech Industry To India’s Modi: Follow Our IP Practices, Get ‘Tidal Wave’ Of Investment 

Drugs For Rare Diseases Have Become Uncommonly Rich Monopolies 

Groups Seek Assurance Of Affordable Zika Vaccine From US Army Exclusive Licence 

Introducing rapid tests for malaria into the retail sector: what are the unintended consequences? 

A couple of global health frames & dodgy tactics for the Trump era 

Q&A: WHO candidate Flavia Bustreo 

Q&A: WHO candidate Philippe Douste-Blazy 

Q&A: WHO candidate David Nabarro 

Q&A: WHO candidate Sania Nishtar 

Q&A: WHO candidate Miklós Szócska 

Q&A: WHO candidate Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus  

EXCLUSIVE: UN humanitarian wing OCHA lays off 170, starts overhaul 

Upholding women’s and girls’ rights is an essential part of US foreign aid. Will the Trump administration agree? 

Human Rights Reader 404 

Advancing the right to health: the vital role of law 

Healthcare inequality in Vietnam: The price of a kidney 

Philanthropy Forecast, 2017: Trends and Issues to Watch 

Global food prices fall for fifth year in a row, but economic uncertainties remain for 2017 – UN 

Protectionism and the fight against climate change 

Barack Obama transfers $500m to Green Climate Fund in attempt to protect Paris deal 

Brexit can be Hazardous to our Health

...health researchers and professionals are (or should be) asking how Brexit will, and could, affect public health.  Among the questions, informed by a political economy perspective on health and its social determinants, five stand out.
One needs to remind oneself that the last word in Albert Camus’ famous essay about suicide is ‘hope’.  But it is hard to sustain in these times.

TSchrecker

By Ted Schrecker *

Professor of Global Health Policy, Durham University, UK

Brexit can be Hazardous to our Health

 

Some public policies should carry health warning labels like cigarettes or uncooked meat.  Certainly that is true for a reckless and ill-thought-out policy like the UK government’s current approach to leaving the European Union, after a close advisory referendum in which at least one of the campaigns would quickly have run afoul of trading standards law if had involved a consumer product.  As controversy rages on about exit paths – ‘strategies’ would be too kind a word – health researchers and professionals are (or should be) asking how Brexit will, and could, affect public health.  Among the questions, informed by a political economy perspective on health and its social determinants, five stand out.

  1. Whose living standards will be hit first, and worst, as sterling dives towards parity with the US dollar, or even lower? Make no mistake, it is headed that way.  What will be the direct and indirect effects on housing costs, on transport costs, on the cost of a healthy diet?
  2. What kind of job losses are likely to be associated with the shift of corporate operations to locations where they are ensured of continued access to the single European market? It is certainly plausible that the most severe losses will be concentrated among the so-called ‘unskilled’, whose mobility and options are limited by lack of formal credentials.  If you doubt that the locational shift will be substantial, ask yourself:  how much of your pension pot would you want to invest in a country with no access to any markets other than the 64 million within its borders beyond that ensured by time-consuming WTO disciplines that its government has no experience of negotiating?

I thought so.  Prime Minister May herself conceded the point during the referendum campaign.

  1. Beyond these impacts on social determinants of health are those on the NHS – where those of us without deep pockets or private insurance go when things go wrong. The most recent figures and projections from the International Monetary Fund show projected UK government spending as a percentage of GDP trending downward towards US levels – or, in historical terms, to the levels characteristic of the pre-war period, before the establishment of the NHS and the Beveridge approach to social policy.

Diapositiva1

A public sector budget of that constrained size is simply incompatible with a comprehensive health service that is free at the point of use.  The insurance industry, as shown by a tube advertisement from 2011, understood this point years ago.  Crucially, these expenditure projects do not take into account the need (at least, so we will solemnly be told) for further austerity measures as government revenues drop with slower growth in anticipation of Brexit.

Diapositiva2

  1. In a similar vein, how will economic policy respond to the challenges of Brexit? Chancellor Hammond has recently warned (or threatened) that the post-Brexit UK might need to become a tax haven to an even greater degree than is already the case in pursuit of corporate investment, abandoning ‘a recognisably European-style economy’ in favour of ‘something different’ – travelling still further down the neoliberal road that my colleague Clare Bambra and I described in 2015.  (Some of us think that was the objective of ruling class Brexiteers all along.) What is this likely to mean for public sector revenues, and for whatever solidaristic social policies have survived the post-2010 upward redistribution of income, wealth and opportunity?
  2. Finally, what will post-Brexit trade negotiations mean for the future of the NHS? A detailed legal analysis by the UK Faculty of Public Health pointed out the possible dangers of investor protections proposed as part of the Transatlantic Trade and Investment Partnership: ‘the worst case scenario for the NHS would then be that commercialisation becomes “locked in”, sealed by the threat of huge compensation claims by investors’.  TTIP is now almost certainly dead, but the UK would face post-Brexit trade negotiations with both the EU and the United States from a far weaker position that it occupied as part of the EU negotiating bloc.  It is hard to imagine that UK negotiators informed by the health system wisdom of Jeremy Hunt would resist opening up investor access to health services, in particular when dealing with a United States in which the health care industry accounts for one-sixth of the entire economy, with associated domestic political clout.  Indeed, the profit potential of a privatised NHS might be one of the most important offers available to those negotiators.

One needs to remind oneself that the last word in Albert Camus’ famous essay about suicide is ‘hope’.  But it is hard to sustain in these times.

———————

*article originally published in OurNHS openDemocracy

https://www.opendemocracy.net/ournhs/ted-schrecker/5-reasons-brexit-is-very-bad-for-our-health

 

Breaking News: Link 221

Breaking News Links, as part of the research project PEAH (Policies for Equitable Access to Health), aim to focus on the latest challenges by trade and governments rules to equitable access to health in resource-limited settings

Breaking News: Link 221

 

WHO: public health round-up 

WHO EXECUTIVE BOARD EB140/1 140th session Geneva, 23 January–1 February 2017 

Election sees WHO’s future role in question 

Partners Launch Equitable Access Initiative Report 

Tobacco control can save billions of dollars and millions of lives 

Working Together Around The World To Kick The Big Tobacco Habit 

Greenpeace: Neonicotinoids pose risks to multiple species 

Citizens’ initiative aimed at banning glyphosate gets the go-ahead 

2016: One of the worst years ever for the Venezuelan Health sector

4 major trends digital health needs to embrace in 2017 and beyond 

UN Establishes Technology Bank For Least-Developed Countries, Including An IP Bank 

Book Review: Interactions Of Climate Change And The Global IP System 

Study on the potential of green bond finance for resource-efficient investments 

Clean Energy for All Europeans – unlocking Europe’s growth potential 

How Africa is facing the energy self-sufficiency challenge 

IRIN shortlisted for funding to #innovateAFRICA 

Strengthening veterinary services to benefit the poor 

One More Reason to Love Meryl Streep: Her Active Philanthropy 

A Powerhouse Alliance: When the World’s Two Largest Foundations Join Forces 

Humanitarian priorities for the EU in 2017 

Lessons from China in ending poverty 

The equity of China’s emergency medical services from 2010–2014

Critical research findings for managing dengue 

Emergence of Rare Species of Nontuberculous Mycobacteria as Potential Pathogens in Saudi Arabian Clinical Setting 

DNDi achievements: 7 new treatments delivered, recommended, and implemented 

Expensive Medicines Increase The Pressure  

What Is the Purpose of the Orphan Drug Act? 

Integrated biological–behavioural surveillance in pandemic-threat warning systems 

The Women Driving International Development 

Gender Equality Offers Hope To Survivors Of Violence 

SHAPING THE WORLD – A pivotal moment in research and innovation for global health 16 February 2017 Brussels

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Breaking News Links, as part of the research project PEAH (Policies for Equitable Access to Health), aim to focus on the latest challenges by trade and governments rules to equitable access to health in resource-limited settings

Breaking News: Link 220

 

Climate change in 2016: the good, the bad, and the ugly 

Trends and projections in Europe 2016 – Tracking progress towards Europe’s climate and energy targets 

Environmental Giving in 2016: Trends and Hot Topics 

A year in review: Global development in 2016

2016: a Year in Review through PEAH Contributors’ Stands  

Working as one UN to address the root environmental causes of ill health 

Wins And Losses In Global Health In 2016 

Improving health-care quality in resource-poor settings 

Education, Health, And Behavioral Health: New Policy Priorities For Their Integration Emerge For 2017 

Secretary-General António Guterres cites multilateralism, teamwork as critical to achieving UN goals 

What It Really Takes to Fund Peace and Security 

Human Rights Reader 403 

7 Humanitarian Hot Spots to Watch in 2017 

‘Every migrant is a human being with human rights,’ says UN chief on International Day 

Events preview: 2017 in development cooperation  

The 3P Project: A new approach to developing better treatments for TB 

TB Alliance: Innovations 

Addressing tuberculosis in differentiated care provision for people living with HIV 

MPP’s next steps in tuberculosis: Stewardship Report  

Controlling childhood malaria in high burden African countries 

HIV prevention trials network launches HPTN 083: first study to test efficacy and safety of injectable cabotegravir for PrEP 

UNAIDS Board underlines the need for a fully funded response to HIV to allow more countries to get on the Fast-Track to ending AIDS by 2030 

Trypa-No! Partnership will accelerate elimination of sleeping sickness in Africa 

Final trial results confirm Ebola vaccine provides high protection against disease 

Now Hiring: Research Programme Manager, AntiMicrobial Resistance Benchmark 

Non-infectious diseases such as cancer rising sharply in Africa 

The WTO’s role in fisheries subsidies and its implications for Africa 

Why Food Security Matters 

Proteggere i Diritti Terrieri delle Comunità Indigene per Salvare il Pianeta 

Germany’s Model For Drug Price Regulation Could Work In The US 

Controversial ‘pharma bro’ Shkreli says ‘of course’ he’d raise drug price again 

KEI opposition to U.S. Army grant of exclusive license to Sanofi on patents for Zika virus vaccine 

Golfing, ‘girls night out’ where pharma employees allegedly fixed prices 

Proteggere i Diritti Terrieri delle Comunità Indigene per Salvare il Pianeta

‘Riconoscere i diritti terrieri delle comunità locali e indigene significa rispettare i diritti umani di circa due miliardi e mezzo di persone, e inoltre ridurre i conflitti, combattere il cambiamento climatico e proteggere ed espandere gli importanti,fragili ecosistemi di Madre Terra’

Victoria Tauli-Corpuz,UN Special Rapporteur on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples

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by Daniele Dionisio

Membro, European Parliament Working Group on Innovation, Access to Medicines and Poverty-Related Diseases

Responsabile del Progetto Policies for Equitable Access to Health – PEAH 

Proteggere i Diritti Terrieri delle Comunità Indigene per Salvare il Pianeta

 

Nel marzo 2016 Oxfam, International Land Coalition e Rights and Resources Initiative lanciarono il report  ‘Common Ground: Securing Land Rights and Safeguarding the Earth’ quale richiamo all’azione per la tutela dei diritti terrieri delle comunità locali e indigene. Esigenza quanto mai impellente in un mondo in cui, a dispetto dell’uso proprietario e abituale di oltre il 50% delle terre emerse del pianeta, due miliardi e mezzo di uomini e donne hanno diritti riconosciuti su solo un quinto di esse. I cinque miliardi di ettari rimanenti restano vulnerabili all’accaparramento/sequestro da parte di governi e potenti corporazioni.

Questa enorme disparità è tra le concause della violazione e privazione dei diritti civili e umani, della povertà, e dei focolai di conflitto nelle aree geografiche coinvolte.

Queste realtà stridono di fronte all’ evidenza del ruolo del riconoscimento dei diritti terrieri delle comunità nel preservare le diversità culturali e contrastare la povertà e la fame, l’instabilità politica e i mutamenti climatici, in linea con lo spirito dei Sustainable Development Goals delle Nazioni Unite e dell’Accordo di Parigi sul clima.

Purtroppo, nonostante alcuni progressi, gli impegni al rispetto dei diritti terrieri delle popolazioni si sono rivelati in genere vuote promesse.  E la realtà corrente insegna che le risorse forestali, idriche, di pascolo e minerarie continuano ad essere oggetto di progetti di investimento e sviluppo implicanti lo spostamento altrove delle comunità locali.

Il numero crescente di persone uccise perché difendevano la loro terra testimonia l’indicibile violenza su quanti si vedono negata ogni partecipazione in decisioni coinvolgenti le loro terre e le loro vite.

In particolare le donne risentono della violazione di questi diritti in termini di ostacolo al conseguimento di un ruolo socialmente paritario con l’uomo. Non è un caso che in Tanzania le donne con diritti sicuri sulla propria terra vantano introiti economici tre volte superiori rispetto a quelle senza; e che in India la certezza del diritto sulla terra ha mostrato una positiva correlazione con la forte riduzione dei casi di violenza domestica.

Fatti certi:

  • In Africa mancano documenti sicuri di proprietà per il 90% dei terreni rurali; di conseguenza le comunità locali sono estremamente vulnerabili alla sottrazione/accaparramento di terre.
  • Sicuri diritti terrieri sono un diritto umano, specialmente per le popolazioni indigene alle quali la legislazione internazionale riconosce il diritto di accesso e controllo sulla propria terra abituale.
  • Sicuri diritti terrieri sono un ‘sine qua non’ per lo sviluppo. Essi consentono l’aumento del reddito e un ventaglio di benefici sociali estesi oltre i confini delle singole comunità. I Paesi tesi all’implementazione dei diritti terrieri hanno positivi ritorni in termini di riduzione della fame e maggiore e più equa crescita economica.
  • L’eguaglianza di genere nella proprietà terriera darebbe maggior potere e influenza alle donne circa i modi, gli esiti e le pratiche di coltivazione. Secondo la FAO una maggiore gestione della terra da parte delle donne si tradurrebbe in maggiori raccolti (circa il 20-30% in più) con riduzione potenziale del 10-20% delle persone denutrite su scala mondiale.
  • Le foreste gestite dalle comunità indigene e locali immagazzinano 37.7 miliardi di tonnellate di carbone – più delle emissioni mondiali 2013 di CO2 da combustione di carburanti fossili e processi industriali.
  • Secondo il Programma per l’Ambiente delle Nazioni Unite (UNEP) la pastorizia è ‘one of the most sustainable food systems on the planet […] between two and 10 times more productive per unit of land than the capital-intensive alternatives that have been put forward’.
  • Sicuri diritti terrieri delle comunità locali e indigene sono in grado di prevenire l’estinzione di più di quattromila idiomi.

Raccomandazioni per l’azione

Il report in oggetto conclude con una serie di raccomandazioni, fra le quali:

  • La richiesta ai governi di implementare la UN Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples, la ILO Convention No. 169, la UN Declaration on Human Rights Defenders, e le UN Voluntary Guidelines on the Responsible Governance of Tenure of Land, Fisheries and Forests. Inoltre, di dichiarare tolleranza zero su ogni accaparramento/sequestro di terre e di includere la protezione dei diritti (soprattutto per popolazioni dipendenti dalle foreste, produttori agricoli di piccola-media scala, pescatori e pastori) quale pilastro per le strategie di sviluppo nazionale comprese quelle correlate al clima, all’agricoltura, alla tutela ambientale, alle fonti energetiche, al turismo, alla crescita economica e al commercio.
  • La richiesta ai Parlamenti di migliorare o introdurre specifiche legislazioni e di allocare adeguati budgets per garantire il diritto alla terra delle comunità indigene e locali.
  • La richiesta alle corporazioni e istituzioni finanziarie internazionali di sviluppare e implementare politiche (e meccanismi di reclamo)per evitare, ridurre, mitigare e sanare ogni impatto diretto e indiretto sulle terre e risorse naturali delle comunità locali e indigene.
  • La richiesta all’UN High Level Political Forum di adottare almeno un indicatore per la misura dei progressi di settore nel contesto dell’Agenda 2030, e di impegnarsi a sostenere i diritti delle comunità locali e indigene nell’ambito dei Sustainable Development Goals.
  • L’invito alle comunità locali e indigene a rafforzare le loro istituzioni e capacità, a sostenere la partecipazione egualitaria delle donne nella difesa della terra e delle risorse, e ad attivare alleanze per contrastare efficacemente le minacce.

 

PER APPROFONDIRE 

Common Ground: Securing Land Rights and Safeguarding the Earth https://www.oxfam.org/sites/www.oxfam.org/files/file_attachments/bp-common-ground-land-rights-020316-en_0.pdf 

The International Land Coalition (ILC) www.landcoalition.org

Oxfam www.oxfam.org

The Rights and Resources Initiative (RRI) www.rightsandresources.org

United Nations: Sustainable Development Goals http://www.un.org/sustainabledevelopment/sustainable-development-goals/

Paris Climate Agreement http://unfccc.int/paris_agreement/items/9485.php

Land grabbing https://www.oxfamamerica.org/take-action/campaign/food-farming-and-hunger/land-grabs/

2016: a Year in Review through PEAH Contributors’ Stands

Authoritative insights by 2016 PEAH external contributors added steam to debate on how to settle the conflicting issues that still impair equitable access to health by discriminated population settings worldwide

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by  Daniele Dionisio*

PEAH – Policies for Equitable Access to Health 

2016: a Year in Review through PEAH Contributors’ Stands

 

Now that 2016 just came to its end, I wish to thank the top thinkers and academics who enthusiastically contributed articles over the year. Their authoritative insights meant a lot to PEAH scope while adding steam to debate on how to settle the conflicting issues that still impair equitable access to health by discriminated population settings worldwide.

Find out below a list of summaries and relevant links:

Denis Joseph Bukenya, Human Rights Research Documentation Centre (HURIC) Kampala, Uganda, pointed out that….As a matter of life and death, governments in the LDC sector need to strive to ensure that they develop effective health policies including development of essential medicines lists in a bid to improve access to health care.  Also they need to live up their individual and collective commitments and adopt a human rights based approach to access to all medicines, not only essential medicines

As regards this, a couple of articles [here and here] by Taye Tolera Balcha, Director General Armauer Hansen Institute (AHRI), Ethiopia, reminded us that… Although Ethiopia’s health care is grounded in equity principles and health outcomes have shown considerable improvements during the past 20 years, substantial challenges persist. Indeed, though equal access to essential health services for those in equal need has been largely ensured, equal utilization of health care for them and equal health outcomes have not been attained yet. Systematic disparities in the burden of diseases, service uptake and health outcomes prevail between communities, particularly arising from differences in places of residence. In the face of this, a range of diverse initiatives have been taken by the Ministry of Health to mend the chasm in health service uptake and health outcomes between the regions…and thatExcellent partnership between the government, key stakeholders, and the community has helped Ethiopia rise to the tectonic challenge of HIV. Since 1990, more than 90% reduction in new HIV infection has been recorded. Survival of HIV-positive individuals has substantially improved. At present, about 70% of HIV-positive people in the country know their status and 65% are on treatment…

As underlined by Alex Henriquez, Msc. Health Systems and Public Policy at the University of Edinburgh,In LMICs where access to medicines is essential to guarantee the health systems’ capacity to address people’s health needs, the inefficient fragmentation of supply chains is one of the main factors that increase the costs of medicines. Introducing a pre-wholesaler could help improve this inefficiency and reduce costs…

As regards these issues, the article by Junior Bazile, Moderator of the HIV Treatment and Prevention Community on Global Health Delivery Online; Global Health Delivery Project at Harvard University, dealt with the fact that…HIV-infected women in serodiscordant partnerships in African countries experience relationship stress due to low socioeconomic status, gender-related power dynamics and pressure to have children with their current partner to ‘bind’ the relationship. These stressors may influence ART adherence. As biomedical interventions (ART, PrEP, VMMC) are scaled up, couple-focused interventions including shared decision making, risk-reduction counseling, mutual adherence support, safer conception and economic empowerment could improve relationship and treatment outcomes in serodiscordant partnerships…

What’s more, the analysis co-authored by Eloan Pinheiro, Consultant in Public Health Policy, Lucia Brum, Renata Reis and Juan-Carlos Cubides, Médecins Sans Frontières-Brazil contended that…The response to Chagas disease still needs inclusive protocols, sustainable and adequate financing and does not have a robust portfolio of investigation of new treatments and diagnosis. Beyond that, production capacity and supply of Benznidazole (BZN) medication is far from being minimally sufficient. The price factor also strongly impacts access to medication. A point deserving attention in the analysis of BZN’s prices is the need, as in the response to other diseases in general, to maintain competition as a factor of market regulation…

The article by Plaxcedes Chiwire, Deputy Director, Strategic Planning Unit at Western Cape Department of Health, South Africa, turned the spotlight on evidence that …South Africa has a lot of improvements to make in terms of population’s physical accessibility, financial protection and acceptability of the current public health care system. The National Health Insurance offers hope to the disadvantaged but it will not be ready anytime soon leaving the current health care arrangements with their own vulnerability needing continued revamping. The government may need to stop being reactive but proactive in addressing the inequality that is fuelling the lack of access for a majority of the population…

In unison, Enrique Restoy, Senior Technical Advisor: Human Rights at the International HIV/AIDS Alliance, highlighted that…The history of the Equitable Access Initiative (EAI) is so far short, but complex. It was a seemingly straight forward proposition initiated by the Global Fund to fight AIDS, Tuberculosis and Malaria to find fairer alternatives to decisions on country eligibility for external financing for health solely based on economic income. However, since its launch in 2014, the initiative has lived five draft reports, the front opposition of over 200 global civil society organisations, and a mysterious descent into near secrecy. In the meantime, the main providers of Official Development Assistance (ODA) have increased their sole reliance on economic income to justify their pulling out from an ever greater number of countries. As the numbers of poorer and marginalised people living in so called middle-income countries being abandoned by ODA skyrocket, never before were the premises behind the EAI more relevant. Yet, as the EAI has just produced what should be its final report, this op-ed enquiries the validity of the EAI proposition from the point of view of the key principle of equality in the access to health. The paper concludes that despite its stated intentions, the EAI is so far failing to deliver on proposing alternatives that guarantee equality in access to health. This added to criticism as to the lack of transparency and inclusiveness of the initiative and the limited leverage it has had to change the status quo, invite to a profound reflection as to its current validity and relevance…

As regards antimicrobial resistance, Shila Kaur, Coordinator Health Action International Asia Pacific (HAIAP), affirmed  that…The review of the Global Action Plan for Antimicrobial Resistance at the upcoming (23-28 May 2016) WHA must consider the following: 1) More attention has to be focussed on public health measures that promote conservation and restoring of existing AB effectiveness. The principles espoused at Alma Ata in the Declaration on Health For All chart the path and apply to tackling ABR. Improvements in water and sanitation cannot be overlooked as important components of the primary health care (PHC) approach; 2) Other approaches to infection control and treatment are necessary to retain the effectiveness of current and emerging AB. These include vaccines (human and animal), diagnostic technologies and complementary and alternative technologies such as bacteriophages. Sub-therapeutic use of antibiotics in animal farming and agriculture must be phased out; 3) New AB while important must be affordable and accessible in LMICs. They must be available to the poorest of the poor. Their availability only in high income countries will not help the global response…

And this occurs at a time when, as argued by Meri Koivusalo, Senior Researcher on Health Policy at National Institute for Health and Welfare, Helsinki While European citizens have been asked to trust on Commission and Member States to negotiate agreements which will not compromise health systems and social security, the reality so far falls short of this aim. In this paper the focus is on general textual parts where responsibility is mostly with Commission. Unfortunately what is promised has not been delivered and there remains substantial room for improvement. European Commission has also some explanation to do in terms of why European Unions’ own proposals have compromised so much in the sensitive areas of health services and social security… 

From a complementary perspective, Ted Schrecker, professor of Global Health Policy, and Clare Bambra, professor of Public Health Geography, Durham University, England maintained that Conditionalities attached to loans from the World Bank and IMF were among the key negative influences  on health and its social determinants between 1980 and 2000 in many of the more than 75 low- and middle-income countries in which they were applied. Best available evidence suggests that this ‘neoliberal epidemics’ era is not over. In the future, neoliberalism is likely to reflect the erosion of territorial divisions between core and periphery, or the global North and the global South, in the world economy…

To the point, Claudio Schuftan, People’s Health Movement-PHM, provided a lot of forward-looking reflections stressing that…Globalization creates wealth for the few and depresses local wages and conditions of employment for the many. Globalization has brought about a shift in power: the nation state has weakened and there is a reduction in social accountability. This makes sovereign states row rather than steer in the process of development, i.e. if countries do not intensely participate in this paradigm set by the North, they are “out”. As a consequence, the poor countries’ very right to development is threatened by this unrelenting liberalization/globalization process. Globalization has put the fate of those many in the hands of large corporations. Although the corporocracy (or corporarchy of Robin Sharp) very well knows the negative effects of Globalization, few of them are committed to change. They tend to ignore the root causes of the social problems they see as patently as everyone else, but seldom address the negative social impacts of their activities. Since they lack the openness and transparency required, they pay only lip service to change and seldom change their practices (or change them in very marginal ways)…

On a complementary wavelength, the article by Laura LeMoon, Disease Research & Intervention Specialist at King Co. Public Health Seattle USA, emphasized that …human trafficking activists want nothing to do with a sex worker’s rights based approach as they believe the existence of prostitution is to blame for the plight of forced labor, and sex worker’s want nothing to do with trafficking activists out of a need to distance themselves from anti-trafficking activists (at times) very punitive movement….these two realities are often dealt with by policy makers and activists alike as being mutually exclusive, when they are in fact, not…

On her part, Raffaella Ravinetto, Antwerp Institute of Tropical Medicine, pointed out that…The WHO and ICH (International Conference for Harmonization) GCP codes have not been updated since 1995 and 1996 respectively. Currently, a partial revision of the ICH GCP code is ongoing, but the update process does not seem sufficiently inclusive. If GCP codes are meant to set standards pertinent and applicable at global level, then a more comprehensive revision is needed, characterized by more transparency and more inclusiveness together with adequate representation of researchers, sponsors, regulators and ethical reviewers from LMICs…

Meanwhile, Fifa Rahman Policy Consultant at Malaysian AIDS Council, stressed that…Biologics is the future of medicines, and PhRMA is preparing for the next wave of IP to suit the changing medicines landscape….that it is based on the idea that maximalist IP is needed to drive innovation of new medicines.  Unfortunately, most of the public health exceptions interred in today’s trade agreements are… difficult for governments to employ in protection of their public health policies. This is because these exceptions require that the public health measures in question be ‘not more trade restrictive than necessary’ or that they are not disguised barriers to trade. The assertion that trade as is does not trump public health is disingenuous and the new biologics market exclusivity provisions indicate a new and perilous trend… to delay entry of biosimilars into the market… 

Relevantly, PEAH posted a comment by Chase Perfect, (MA, MsPH) Access to Medicines Policy Officer, HIV/HCV Drug Affordability Project Coalition Plus, and Fifa Rahman on a recent article ‘A Dose of the TPP’s Medicine – Why U.S. Trade Deals Havent Exported U.S. Drug Prices’ authored by Thomas J. Bollyky, Senior Fellow for Global Health, Economics, and Development at the U.S. Council on Foreign Relations.

To the point, Roberto De Vogli, School of Medicine, Department of Public Health Sciences, University of California, Davis, maintained thatThe recognition that the Transatlantic Trade and Investment Partnership, or TTIP, prioritized the “right to profit” of transnational corporations over the “right to health” of citizens deeply affected people’s sense of justice. It is exactly for this reason that it triggered such widespread civic protest that has been decisive in stopping the fast-track approval of the TTIP…

In this context, the article by Mohga Kamal-Yanni, Senior Health and HIV Policy Advisor, Oxfam GB, Editor ‘Global Health Check’, remarked that…The report by the United Nations (UN) High-Level Panel (HLP) on Access to Medicines went public on 14 September. Concerted efforts are now needed for the UN system and member states to adopt and implement the HLP recommendations. Otherwise the report will simply end up gathering dust on some shelves in a UN office…

Under these circumstances, the article by Iris Borowy, professor of History at Shanghai University, College of Liberal Arts, tackled the challenges to global health from a multi-pronged, entwining perspective. She alerted that… A full assessment of the SDGs, let alone of their implementation, will not be possible for some time. What is clear enough is that they differ from the MDGs and from most development efforts of the last decades in two important aspects: 1) They approach development as a global activity, involving all countries, as opposed to an area defined by deficiencies in low-income countries in the Global South; 2) They address numerous aspects where developmental improvements have been promised before but whose ongoing trends are uncertain or downright negative, such as climate change, global arms expenditures, deforestation, desertification, waste production or road traffic deaths…

From a different viewpoint, the article by Jin Hee Kim, Dalla Lana School of Public Health, University of Toronto, Michael Schwandt, College of Medicine, University of Saskatchewan, and Lawrence C. Loh, Dalla Lana School of Public Health, University of Toronto and Director of Programs at The 53rd Week Ltd, analyzed …four key areas of public health and preventive medicine practice portrayed by the film ‘Contagion’: infectious disease transmission dynamics, the role of public health physicians, the interface between clinical practice and public health, and the role of social media in health promotion. The findings presented here promote an understanding of how the film represents these topics and illustrates the potential benefits to public health as a discipline arising from popular media depictions…

Last but not least, the piece by Corie Leifer, Project and Department Assistant at Phillips-Medisize, presented  itself as…an exploration of some possible answers to the confounding question why do some American citizens not support universal health care, including some misconceptions and interesting opinions. As such, it will not explore health care as a right or pros and cons of universal health care. Rather, its scope is limited to expressing reasons given by a few people for not supporting universal health care in the United States of America…

As an useful addition to the articles featured here, PEAH was pleased to post an interview with Dr. Sumedha Kushwaha and Dr. Manasvi Bawa Behl, as the General Secretary/Founder and the President of ATTAC – Aim to Terminate Tobacco and Cancer – Society. 

PEAH also interviewed Christiane Fischer as the founder and medical managing director at MEZIS.

The contributions highlighted above add to PEAH internal articles published throughout the year. Find below the relevant links:

Secondhand Smoke in Lawless Japan

What Ebola has Taught Us to Counter Mismanagement of Epidemic Outbreaks

Female Genital Mutilation in Nigeria: is it over?

Illegal Migrant Status and the Littleness of the European Health System

Gaza Strip: the Press of War on People’s Health

Rio de Janeiro Olympic Games: Mixed Blessing in Badly Running Country

Streamlining R&D Core Areas for Global Health Reporting

International Pressure on India’s Drug Industry: The Hide-and-Seek Game of Modi’s Administration

Access to Medicines Report, Green Light to Action

Kenya in a Bad Shape about Open Defecation Free Goal

WHO Makes Headway in Hepatitis C Treatment Access Campaign

Domestic Policies for Trade to Uphold the Right to Health

 

 

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*Daniele Dionisio is a member of the European Parliament Working Group on Innovation, Access to Medicines and Poverty-Related Diseases. He is an advisor for “Medicines for the Developing Countries” for the Italian Society for Infectious and Tropical Diseases (SIMIT), and former director of the Infectious Disease Division at the Pistoia City Hospital (Italy). Dionisio is Head of the research project  PEAH – Policies for Equitable Access to Health. He may be reached at d.dionisio@tiscali.it  https://twitter.com/DanieleDionisio 

 

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For Better or Worse, Politics Define 2016 Top Global Health Moments 

Could Pfizer’s record fine for unfair prices change the industry’s practices? 

A Look At The UNAIDS Board Debate On IP And Medicines; Outcome Fell Short For Some 

SCP25: South Africa’s Experience Related to the Topic of Access to Medicines 

Universal Health Coverage—looking to the future 

Universal Health Coverage Is a Potent Vote Winner 

UHC Day in the North: sequencing the battle of hearts and minds 

E-health should not exacerbate existing inequalities, NGO warns 

PCB39: Eight hour drafting session charts future course for UNAIDS work program on Intellectual Property and the UN HLP 

António Guterres set to be sworn in as next UN Secretary-General 

EU, Canada Meet To Discuss A New Model For Investor-State Trade Disputes 

Report: Lobbyists heavily influencing TiSA negotiations 

European mayors meet in the Vatican to solve the refugee crisis 

New online portal helps World Health Organization track global access to universal health coverage 

The forgotten humanitarian crisis: What should we do with the Rohingya refugees? 

Are We Finally Making Significant Progress in the Global Refugee Crisis? 

Gates Foundation to increase humanitarian spending on refugees 

Cancer’s deadly toll grows in less developed countries as new cases increase globally 

Targeting the Young: A Corporate Funder’s Campus Giving to Cut Tobacco Use 

In the Fight against AIDS, People Who Inject Drugs Are Being Left Behind 

Progress on malaria deaths at risk without big boost in funding, UN warns 

‘Evolutions and revolutions’ in chronic disease care 

McGill Summer Institute in Infectious Diseases and Global Health:  June 12-23, 2017, McGill University Montreal, Quebec, Canada  

US: The Costs And Benefits Of Health Spending In 2015 

The US environmental movement needs a new message 

How to make a profit from defeating climate change 

EU Commission: International ocean governance: an agenda for the future of our oceans 

As the Fossil Fuel Divestment Movement Gains Steam, It’s Getting Harder for Foundations to Ignore 

Commentary: Cuba, a model of sustainable agriculture towards global food security 

Agricultural inputs remain decisive in farm profitability 

Mapped: The countries doing most to protect their land 

Why is Africa’s Civil Society under Siege? 

 

 

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Parliament committee gives CETA thumbs down 

‘TTIP may come back from the dead,’ warns expert 

TPP May Be Dead – But Its Impact Lingers 

Dominica Accepts TRIPS Health Amendment; Two More To Go?

Want “Good Pharma?” One Example of What That May Look Like 

Els Torreele Named Executive Director Of Global MSF Access Campaign 

UNAIDS Board Considers Recommendations On Access To Medicines 

RCEP trade deal negotiators must reject terms that would harm access to medicines 

RCEP IP chapter analysis 

ANDI Newsletter – December 05, 2016 

New Momentum for a Key Funder Collaborative Looking Upstream on Health 

Taking Stock Of Health Reform: Where We’ve Been, Where We’re Going 

How the U.S. should change its approach to global health 

Trump Plan To Increase Health Savings Accounts Should Ensure That They Do Not Only Benefit The Wealthy And Healthy 

India’s baseless foreign contribution bans block aid to poorest children 

How to maintain momentum on nutrition and early childhood development 

18 Diseases The World Has Turned Its Back On 

Madagascar: Halting pig-transmitted tapeworm 

How You Can Help Stamp Out A Deadly Disease 

A Zika vaccine is being developed at warp speed, but will there be a market for it? 

Yellow Fever Epidemic in Africa Shows Gaps in Vaccine Pipeline 

Kenya applies to pilot new malaria vaccine testing 

How epidemics take lives and bring global health into focus 

Promoting the sustainable development goals with “win–win” regulations in food and agricultural trade 

The Africa Free Trade Initiative: a stepping stone for sustainable development in Africa? 

African Economic Conference closes with call for agriculture to be at the centre of Africa’s development 

African policymakers get new, reliable climate data 

African Governments Urged to Aid Millions Uprooted From Homes in 2015  

UN agency urges EU to adopt stronger and more pro-active approach on refugees 

Human Rights Reader 401 

Violence against women and girls: enough is enough

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Towards Equity in Health: Researchers Take Stock 

European and Canadian civil society groups call for rejection of CETA 

Protecting health in trade agreements : a challenge to Japan’s role in global health 

Sandoz and Beximco Pharmaceuticals Join the Medicines Patent Pool’s Growing Network of Generic Manufacturing Partners 

Drug companies test out new strategies for improving access in poor countries 

World AIDS Day 2016 

WHO global health days: AIDS infographics 

UNAIDS: Get on the Fast Track: the life-cycle approach to HIV 

‘Could HIV be the Youngest Disease to be Eliminated? The Experience of Ethiopia’ by Taye Tolera Balcha 

DNDi: TOWARDS ENDING THE NEGLECT OF PAEDIATRIC HIV? 

UNICEF: More Funds Needed to Fight Teen HIV 

New analysis: large pharmaceutical companies are developing five HIV/AIDS medicines for children 

At last, an HIV prevention tool women can control? 

Why Can’t We Bring Down The Number Of New HIV Cases? 

UN health agency issues new guidelines on HIV self-testing 

Can Investing in Rapid Self-Testing Disrupt the HIV/AIDS Mortality Curve? 

Time to be efficient: HIV/AIDS in the Latin America and the Caribbean 

Martin Shkreli: Australian boys recreate life-saving drug 

A Killer Disease Might Be Nearing The End Of Its Deadly Run 

In Bolivia, health workers use cell phones to eradicate Chagas disease 

Will 10 Million People Die a Year due to Antimicrobial Resistance by 2050? 

‘Kenya in a Bad Shape about Open Defecation Free Goal’ by Pietro Dionisio 

Analysis: A paradigm change at the IMF? 

UNPO newsletter: November 2016 edition 

Analysis: Who will now lead the fight on climate change? 

Climate change and the coming ‘humanitarian crisis of epic proportions’ 

Why the EIB should not deal with the migration crisis 

UN chief apologises for Haiti cholera, six years later 

President-Elect Trump Selects Price For HHS And Verma For CMS 

Fiscal Devolution and Health Financing Reform: Lessons for India from Brazil, China, and Mexico 

Could HIV be the Youngest Disease to be Eliminated? The Experience of Ethiopia

Excellent partnership between the government, key stakeholders, and the community has helped Ethiopia rise to the tectonic challenge of HIV. Since 1990, more than 90% reduction in new HIV infection has been recorded. Survival of HIV-positive individuals has substantially improved. At present, about 70% of HIV-positive people in the country know their status and 65% are on treatment

Taye Balcha

by Taye Tolera Balcha, MD, MPH, PhD

Director General, Armauer Hansen Institute (AHRI)

Could HIV be the Youngest Disease to be Eliminated? The Experience of Ethiopia

 

About 100 million people live in Ethiopia. Of these, three-quarters of a million are HIV-positive. National HIV prevalence among pregnant women showed significant decline, from 5.3% in 2005 to less than 1% today. Implementation of combination of interventions at community and health facility levels is the driving force for this unprecedented drop. Even now, there is a wide variation in HIV prevalence between different geographies and population groups in the country. Regions like Gambella and population groups including female sex workers have substantially higher rate of the disease than the rest of the regions and population groups in the country, respectively. Further, some diseases are traditionally used as surrogate markers of HIV infection. About 10% of tuberculosis patients nationwide, for instance, are HIV-positive. While the major behavioral driver of the epidemic is unsafe sexual practice, young women and girls are excessively affected.

What worked well in Ethiopia?

A combination of tailored HIV prevention strategies were implemented among diverse population groups. Early on, regular sessions of community conversations were conducted at each village in the country. The core messages in the late 90s and early 2000s were HIV prevention, voluntary counseling and testing, and fighting stigma and discrimination among positives. As treatment was practically out of reach, clinicians were able to treat only few opportunistic infections as the disease progresses ensuing mostly death.

Concurrent with major global advances in the field of HIV, however, HIV messages in Ethiopia showed significant evolution. The Health Extension Workers (HEWs), anchored within each community since 2004, repurposed the messages adding the newfound benefits of getting tested and linkage to care and treatment for positives. This was a monumental development in the field which turned HIV from a capital punishment to a chronic disease. It not only dented the upward spiral of the pandemic, but assured citizens that HIV was no more considered a national anxiety.

While the development of HIV treatment was a game changer in its own right, we are far from ending AIDS for good. Recently, an organized community movement, Health Development Army (HDA), took charge of their own health, fighting public health threats including HIV. Several communities in the country established Community Care Coalition (CCC) as a mechanism for nutritional and other support for HIV-positive members of their communities. CCC is a component of broader Solidarity Fund established by HDAs aiming at covering everyone in the community with available health and related interventions.

Since community systems are not robust in urban settings, health facilities play crucial role in HIV prevention and early care and treatment. Also, the roles of HIV-positive individuals and associations in HIV prevention, care and treatment is much more amplified in urban settings. Matching an accelerated industrialization, development projects are heavily engaged in HIV prevention and treatment efforts targeting their workforce. In this regard, a dynamic partnership between the health sector and an array of sectors engaged in development has been proved vital to intercept HIV transmission and provide treatment for positives, and as a consequence minimize productivity loss due to the disease.

HIV care and treatment

Like several other low-income countries, Ethiopia scaled up antiretroviral treatment (ART) in 2005. In 2006, the access to treatment was further expanded involving hundreds of health centres mainly staffed by non-physician clinicians. Concurrently, Ethiopia rolled out coordination and networking mechanisms for HIV treatment monitoring laboratory facilities to track disease progression and response to treatment. Free diagnosis and treatment of all HIV-associated conditions was included in the essential health service package of the country to ensure unhindered access to comprehensive services to everyone in need.

To maximize healthy and productive retention in care and treatment, the health sector established sustained partnership with HIV-positive individuals and associations. Associations of HIV-positive individuals have been in charge of treatment adherence counseling, early tracing and encouraging re-engagement into care and treatment in cases of loss to follow up. Similar efforts have been made to bridge the chasm in recommendations by modern providers and religious platforms and traditional healers. The health sector has been effective in convincing major religions in the country that medical and spiritual treatments are not incompatible. The case of co-administering HIV medicines and Holy Water is seen as one of the most successful strategies for treatment adherence and retention in care in the country. Holy Water is considered ‘a cure for major diseases’ among followers of the major religious denomination in Ethiopia.

Achievements to date and new initiatives

Since 1990, more than 90% reduction in new HIV infection has been recorded. Survival of HIV-positive individuals has substantially improved. At present, about 70% of HIV-positive people in the country know their status and 65% are on treatment. Globally, 60% of HIV-positive individuals know their status and 46% of positives receive treatment.

The UNAIDS three 90s (identifying 90% of HIV-positives, linking 90% of the positives to treatment and viral suppression in 90% of those on treatment) by 2020 and the global commitment to end AIDS by 2030 has spurred the progress. Coherent with these global commitments, there are several revitalization efforts dealing with both prevention and treatment. With determined focus to end AIDS as public health threat in 2030, the health sector has intensified inter-sectoral collaboration, mayoral forums and expanded media campaign.  In partnership with key stakeholders, the Ministry of Health recently launched HIV Catch up Campaign to accelerate testing the right people and link all positives to treatment. A total of 178 towns and cities have been selected for targeted testing and treatment strategies including rights-based partnership with index cases.

Other potentially game changing initiatives include instituting regular surveillance targeting workforce of large development projects to tailor prevention efforts, to understand active transmission dynamics and promote early and sustained treatment for positives. Ethiopia has also adopted the new paradigm of treating all HIV-positive people. Further, a new national compassionate and respectful care initiative will minimize stigma and discrimination and boost retention on treatment.

Conclusion

Excellent partnership between the government, key stakeholders particularly the US President’s Emergency Plan for AIDS Relief and the Global Fund, and the community has helped the country rise to the tectonic challenge of HIV. The Ethiopian experience shows that we have to accelerate our efforts to end AIDS for good. Although we might be far from new discoveries like HIV vaccine or cure, it is possible that the battle against AIDS could be won using the weapons we have. It is also possible that HIV could be the youngest disease to be eliminated in the history of humankind.