WHO Report On Cancer Medicines Pricing: Detailed Info On Findings 02/05/2019 David Branigan The World Health Organization held an information session with member states and non-state actors last week to present the detailed findings of its 2018 report on cancer medicines pricing. It then posted the 72 detailed slides from the information session on its website.Continue reading -> Image Credits: WHO. Lack Of Funding Takes Major Toll On Ebola Response 01/05/2019 Divya Schlesinger A festering civil conflict fueling rampant fear and distrust has been a major obstacle in the World Health Organization’s efforts to end the Ebola outbreak in the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC). But now, funding shortages could further cripple the already strained response – unless the global community steps up quickly, Director-General Dr Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus warned yesterday.Continue reading -> Image Credits: WHO. Human Rights, Inclusiveness – Key Themes At UN Multi-Stakeholder Meeting On UHC 30/04/2019 David Branigan New York – Strengthening references to sexual and reproductive health and rights, marginalised people, and public-private partnerships that ensure rights and inclusion, were among the core proposals pitched yesterday at a United Nations multi-stakeholder meeting on Universal Health Coverage (UHC), involving representatives of government, UN agencies, civil society and the private sector. The milestone meeting set the tone for the next steps in the UHC process leading up to the UN High Level Meeting on Universal Health Coverage on 23 September, where heads of states are expected to approve a declaration on the issue.Continue reading -> Image Credits: UN, Women in Global Health. Drug Price Transparency: 10 Countries Back World Health Assembly Resolution 30/04/2019 Elaine Ruth Fletcher Ten countries, including five European Union (EU) member states, have now lined up in support of a landmark resolution to increase transparency of drug prices globally, which is expected to be a key focus of deliberations by WHO member states as they convene for the 72nd World Health Assembly (WHA), May 20-28 in Geneva.Continue reading -> Image Credits: WHO. “No Time To Wait” – AMR Could Cause 10 Million Deaths Annually By 2050, Warns UN Report 29/04/2019 Elaine Ruth Fletcher Deaths from infections resistant to common antibiotics, antivirals and anti-parasitic drugs could increase more than ten-fold to 10 million deaths annually by 2050, warns a ground-breaking United Nations report released today.Continue reading -> Image Credits: WHO/Quinn Mattingly, UN. New Study Maps Vaccine Coverage Disparities, Helps Explain Why Targets Are Being Missed 26/04/2019 Maina Waruru Child vaccination targets of at least 80 percent coverage in low- and middle-income countries, are regularly being missed. To better understand why this is happening, a new study created high resolution maps of vaccine coverage to identify disparities within countries and to inform effective strategies to increase coverage and access.Continue reading -> Image Credits: WHO. Stepping Up The Fight Against Severe Malaria In Zambia: An Innovative Approach Scales Up 25/04/2019 David Branigan As leaders from across the globe met in Paris today to renew commitments against malaria on World Malaria Day, a Geneva-based group announced the scale-up of a project in rural Zambia that reduced severe malaria fatality by 96 percent. The innovative project administers life-saving drugs to children with malaria in rural communities, and provides immediate rapid transport via bicycle ambulance to health centres. On World Malaria Day today, Medicines for Malaria Venture (MMV) announced that they will expand their innovative project in collaboration with Transaid to further reduce fatality due to severe malaria through rapid community-based treatment in rural Zambia, according to a press release. Rabbecca Chisenga, an emergency transport system (ETS) rider and community health volunteer (CHV) in the village of Mupola, Serenje, Zambia. Also for World Malaria Day, leaders from across the globe met in Paris today for a high-level conference organised by Roll Back Malaria (RBM) Partnership “to renew commitments and announce new initiatives to accelerate the global movement to end malaria in our lifetime,” according to an RBM Partnership news release. Among the speakers at the conference were Dr Abdourahmane Diallo, CEO of RBM Partnership; Peter Sands, executive director of The Global Fund to Fight AIDS, Tuberculosis and Malaria; and Anne Hidalgo, mayor of the city of Paris. This year’s World Malaria Day is particularly significant because it “comes ahead of the Sixth Replenishment Conference of the Global Fund to Fight AIDS, Tuberculosis and Malaria which takes place in Lyon on 10th October,” at which the Global Fund “seeks to raise at least US$14 billion to step up the fight against AIDS, Tuberculosis and Malaria,” the RBM Partnership release said. “2019 presents a crucial opportunity for celebrating and continuing to commit to ending malaria,” David Reddy, CEO of MMV, said at a World Malaria Day event yesterday in Geneva organised by the Swiss Malaria Group. “We are working closely with the Global Fund to support its funding efforts in countries by developing innovative tools to broaden impact and helping make these tools available to the people in need.” “Most importantly,” he said, “access and uptake of innovative medicines has still to be considerably scaled up, including in remote communities: innovative partnerships for access is now part of our vision and an important component of our business model.” Scaling Up Community-Based Malaria Treatment in Zambia The MMV project, MAMaZ against Malaria, effectively reduced severe malaria fatality by 96 percent, from 8 percent to only .25 percent of cases resulting in death, according to the MMV release. “This was achieved through effective community engagement, a functioning drug supply chain, implementing an innovative emergency transport system for patients using bicycle ambulances and increased access to key medicines for severe malaria,” it said. The project administers rectal artesunate suppositories (RAS) to children at the community-level as soon as severe malaria is suspected, and transports these children to health centres using bicycle ambulances to receive the remaining doses of artesunate. See also: (HPW, MMV: Zambia Pilot Project, 3 September 2018). The pilot project reached a population of 54,000, and the expanded project will now reach around 200,000 people. “Children under 5 years of age are one of most vulnerable groups affected by malaria. In Africa, about 285,000 children died before their fifth birthdays in 2016,” the World Health Organization website states. “Because the clinical condition of children with malaria can deteriorate rapidly,” it says, there should be a “low threshold” for treating children as soon as possible with non-oral artesunate. “Malaria can become deadly all too quickly, especially for children under 5 living far from health facilities,” George Jagoe, head of Access & Product Management at MMV, said in the release. “The dramatic 96% reduction in case fatality achieved by the pilot project,” he said, “demonstrates not only the undeniable benefit of using RAS and emergency transport in tandem but also the incredible life-saving impact this project could have at full scale in Zambia as well as other high-burden malaria countries.” The new project, MAMaZ against Malaria at Scale, will be implemented by a consortium of partners including Development Data, DAI Global Health, Disacare, Transaid and MMV, and will work closely with the National Malaria Elimination Centre (NMEC) in Zambia. MMV, “a leading product development partnership (PDP) in the field of antimalarial drug research and development,” has secured the funds for this expansion and will provide the technical malaria expertise for the new project, the release said. Image Credits: MMV. Revise Biosimilar Guidelines, Scientists Demand; WHO Says Not Now 25/04/2019 William New Scientists from a range of countries are calling for an update to World Health Organization guidelines on biosimilar products in order to help national authorities better implement policies to make biosimilars less costly. Current guidelines are outdated and are being misused, they say. But a WHO official told Health Policy Watch the guidelines document should not be made “over-prescriptive”, and that a thorough assessment by an expert group last year found a revision unnecessary but will keep considering it. Continue reading -> Image Credits: Louis Reed/Unsplash. WHO Recommends Young Children Play More, Watch Screens Less, Get Plenty Of Sleep 24/04/2019 David Branigan For children under five years, increasing active play and reducing sedentary screen-time, while getting sufficient sleep, is critical for healthy physical and cognitive development, which impacts life-long health, according to new World Health Organization guidelines.Continue reading -> Image Credits: WHO. Ghana launches the world’s largest vaccine drone delivery network 24/04/2019 Editorial team [Gavi, The Vaccine Alliance, Press Release] With support from Gavi, The UPS Foundation and other partners, Zipline drones will serve up to 2,000 health facilities and 12 million people in Ghana. Omenako, Ghana, 24 April 2019 – Gavi, the Vaccine Alliance today announced support for the expansion of a medical drone network into Ghana. Zipline, a California-based automated logistics company, will use drones to make on-demand, emergency deliveries of high priority products including emergency and routine vaccines and other health products.Continue reading -> Image Credits: Gavi/2019/Tony Noel. Posts navigation Older postsNewer posts This site uses cookies to help give you the best experience on our website. Cookies enable us to collect information that helps us personalise your experience and improve the functionality and performance of our site. By continuing to read our website, we assume you agree to this, otherwise you can adjust your browser settings. Please read our cookie and Privacy Policy. Our Cookies and Privacy Policy Loading Comments... You must be logged in to post a comment.
Lack Of Funding Takes Major Toll On Ebola Response 01/05/2019 Divya Schlesinger A festering civil conflict fueling rampant fear and distrust has been a major obstacle in the World Health Organization’s efforts to end the Ebola outbreak in the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC). But now, funding shortages could further cripple the already strained response – unless the global community steps up quickly, Director-General Dr Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus warned yesterday.Continue reading -> Image Credits: WHO. Human Rights, Inclusiveness – Key Themes At UN Multi-Stakeholder Meeting On UHC 30/04/2019 David Branigan New York – Strengthening references to sexual and reproductive health and rights, marginalised people, and public-private partnerships that ensure rights and inclusion, were among the core proposals pitched yesterday at a United Nations multi-stakeholder meeting on Universal Health Coverage (UHC), involving representatives of government, UN agencies, civil society and the private sector. The milestone meeting set the tone for the next steps in the UHC process leading up to the UN High Level Meeting on Universal Health Coverage on 23 September, where heads of states are expected to approve a declaration on the issue.Continue reading -> Image Credits: UN, Women in Global Health. Drug Price Transparency: 10 Countries Back World Health Assembly Resolution 30/04/2019 Elaine Ruth Fletcher Ten countries, including five European Union (EU) member states, have now lined up in support of a landmark resolution to increase transparency of drug prices globally, which is expected to be a key focus of deliberations by WHO member states as they convene for the 72nd World Health Assembly (WHA), May 20-28 in Geneva.Continue reading -> Image Credits: WHO. “No Time To Wait” – AMR Could Cause 10 Million Deaths Annually By 2050, Warns UN Report 29/04/2019 Elaine Ruth Fletcher Deaths from infections resistant to common antibiotics, antivirals and anti-parasitic drugs could increase more than ten-fold to 10 million deaths annually by 2050, warns a ground-breaking United Nations report released today.Continue reading -> Image Credits: WHO/Quinn Mattingly, UN. New Study Maps Vaccine Coverage Disparities, Helps Explain Why Targets Are Being Missed 26/04/2019 Maina Waruru Child vaccination targets of at least 80 percent coverage in low- and middle-income countries, are regularly being missed. To better understand why this is happening, a new study created high resolution maps of vaccine coverage to identify disparities within countries and to inform effective strategies to increase coverage and access.Continue reading -> Image Credits: WHO. Stepping Up The Fight Against Severe Malaria In Zambia: An Innovative Approach Scales Up 25/04/2019 David Branigan As leaders from across the globe met in Paris today to renew commitments against malaria on World Malaria Day, a Geneva-based group announced the scale-up of a project in rural Zambia that reduced severe malaria fatality by 96 percent. The innovative project administers life-saving drugs to children with malaria in rural communities, and provides immediate rapid transport via bicycle ambulance to health centres. On World Malaria Day today, Medicines for Malaria Venture (MMV) announced that they will expand their innovative project in collaboration with Transaid to further reduce fatality due to severe malaria through rapid community-based treatment in rural Zambia, according to a press release. Rabbecca Chisenga, an emergency transport system (ETS) rider and community health volunteer (CHV) in the village of Mupola, Serenje, Zambia. Also for World Malaria Day, leaders from across the globe met in Paris today for a high-level conference organised by Roll Back Malaria (RBM) Partnership “to renew commitments and announce new initiatives to accelerate the global movement to end malaria in our lifetime,” according to an RBM Partnership news release. Among the speakers at the conference were Dr Abdourahmane Diallo, CEO of RBM Partnership; Peter Sands, executive director of The Global Fund to Fight AIDS, Tuberculosis and Malaria; and Anne Hidalgo, mayor of the city of Paris. This year’s World Malaria Day is particularly significant because it “comes ahead of the Sixth Replenishment Conference of the Global Fund to Fight AIDS, Tuberculosis and Malaria which takes place in Lyon on 10th October,” at which the Global Fund “seeks to raise at least US$14 billion to step up the fight against AIDS, Tuberculosis and Malaria,” the RBM Partnership release said. “2019 presents a crucial opportunity for celebrating and continuing to commit to ending malaria,” David Reddy, CEO of MMV, said at a World Malaria Day event yesterday in Geneva organised by the Swiss Malaria Group. “We are working closely with the Global Fund to support its funding efforts in countries by developing innovative tools to broaden impact and helping make these tools available to the people in need.” “Most importantly,” he said, “access and uptake of innovative medicines has still to be considerably scaled up, including in remote communities: innovative partnerships for access is now part of our vision and an important component of our business model.” Scaling Up Community-Based Malaria Treatment in Zambia The MMV project, MAMaZ against Malaria, effectively reduced severe malaria fatality by 96 percent, from 8 percent to only .25 percent of cases resulting in death, according to the MMV release. “This was achieved through effective community engagement, a functioning drug supply chain, implementing an innovative emergency transport system for patients using bicycle ambulances and increased access to key medicines for severe malaria,” it said. The project administers rectal artesunate suppositories (RAS) to children at the community-level as soon as severe malaria is suspected, and transports these children to health centres using bicycle ambulances to receive the remaining doses of artesunate. See also: (HPW, MMV: Zambia Pilot Project, 3 September 2018). The pilot project reached a population of 54,000, and the expanded project will now reach around 200,000 people. “Children under 5 years of age are one of most vulnerable groups affected by malaria. In Africa, about 285,000 children died before their fifth birthdays in 2016,” the World Health Organization website states. “Because the clinical condition of children with malaria can deteriorate rapidly,” it says, there should be a “low threshold” for treating children as soon as possible with non-oral artesunate. “Malaria can become deadly all too quickly, especially for children under 5 living far from health facilities,” George Jagoe, head of Access & Product Management at MMV, said in the release. “The dramatic 96% reduction in case fatality achieved by the pilot project,” he said, “demonstrates not only the undeniable benefit of using RAS and emergency transport in tandem but also the incredible life-saving impact this project could have at full scale in Zambia as well as other high-burden malaria countries.” The new project, MAMaZ against Malaria at Scale, will be implemented by a consortium of partners including Development Data, DAI Global Health, Disacare, Transaid and MMV, and will work closely with the National Malaria Elimination Centre (NMEC) in Zambia. MMV, “a leading product development partnership (PDP) in the field of antimalarial drug research and development,” has secured the funds for this expansion and will provide the technical malaria expertise for the new project, the release said. Image Credits: MMV. Revise Biosimilar Guidelines, Scientists Demand; WHO Says Not Now 25/04/2019 William New Scientists from a range of countries are calling for an update to World Health Organization guidelines on biosimilar products in order to help national authorities better implement policies to make biosimilars less costly. Current guidelines are outdated and are being misused, they say. But a WHO official told Health Policy Watch the guidelines document should not be made “over-prescriptive”, and that a thorough assessment by an expert group last year found a revision unnecessary but will keep considering it. Continue reading -> Image Credits: Louis Reed/Unsplash. WHO Recommends Young Children Play More, Watch Screens Less, Get Plenty Of Sleep 24/04/2019 David Branigan For children under five years, increasing active play and reducing sedentary screen-time, while getting sufficient sleep, is critical for healthy physical and cognitive development, which impacts life-long health, according to new World Health Organization guidelines.Continue reading -> Image Credits: WHO. Ghana launches the world’s largest vaccine drone delivery network 24/04/2019 Editorial team [Gavi, The Vaccine Alliance, Press Release] With support from Gavi, The UPS Foundation and other partners, Zipline drones will serve up to 2,000 health facilities and 12 million people in Ghana. Omenako, Ghana, 24 April 2019 – Gavi, the Vaccine Alliance today announced support for the expansion of a medical drone network into Ghana. Zipline, a California-based automated logistics company, will use drones to make on-demand, emergency deliveries of high priority products including emergency and routine vaccines and other health products.Continue reading -> Image Credits: Gavi/2019/Tony Noel. Posts navigation Older postsNewer posts This site uses cookies to help give you the best experience on our website. Cookies enable us to collect information that helps us personalise your experience and improve the functionality and performance of our site. By continuing to read our website, we assume you agree to this, otherwise you can adjust your browser settings. Please read our cookie and Privacy Policy. Our Cookies and Privacy Policy Loading Comments... You must be logged in to post a comment.
Human Rights, Inclusiveness – Key Themes At UN Multi-Stakeholder Meeting On UHC 30/04/2019 David Branigan New York – Strengthening references to sexual and reproductive health and rights, marginalised people, and public-private partnerships that ensure rights and inclusion, were among the core proposals pitched yesterday at a United Nations multi-stakeholder meeting on Universal Health Coverage (UHC), involving representatives of government, UN agencies, civil society and the private sector. The milestone meeting set the tone for the next steps in the UHC process leading up to the UN High Level Meeting on Universal Health Coverage on 23 September, where heads of states are expected to approve a declaration on the issue.Continue reading -> Image Credits: UN, Women in Global Health. Drug Price Transparency: 10 Countries Back World Health Assembly Resolution 30/04/2019 Elaine Ruth Fletcher Ten countries, including five European Union (EU) member states, have now lined up in support of a landmark resolution to increase transparency of drug prices globally, which is expected to be a key focus of deliberations by WHO member states as they convene for the 72nd World Health Assembly (WHA), May 20-28 in Geneva.Continue reading -> Image Credits: WHO. “No Time To Wait” – AMR Could Cause 10 Million Deaths Annually By 2050, Warns UN Report 29/04/2019 Elaine Ruth Fletcher Deaths from infections resistant to common antibiotics, antivirals and anti-parasitic drugs could increase more than ten-fold to 10 million deaths annually by 2050, warns a ground-breaking United Nations report released today.Continue reading -> Image Credits: WHO/Quinn Mattingly, UN. New Study Maps Vaccine Coverage Disparities, Helps Explain Why Targets Are Being Missed 26/04/2019 Maina Waruru Child vaccination targets of at least 80 percent coverage in low- and middle-income countries, are regularly being missed. To better understand why this is happening, a new study created high resolution maps of vaccine coverage to identify disparities within countries and to inform effective strategies to increase coverage and access.Continue reading -> Image Credits: WHO. Stepping Up The Fight Against Severe Malaria In Zambia: An Innovative Approach Scales Up 25/04/2019 David Branigan As leaders from across the globe met in Paris today to renew commitments against malaria on World Malaria Day, a Geneva-based group announced the scale-up of a project in rural Zambia that reduced severe malaria fatality by 96 percent. The innovative project administers life-saving drugs to children with malaria in rural communities, and provides immediate rapid transport via bicycle ambulance to health centres. On World Malaria Day today, Medicines for Malaria Venture (MMV) announced that they will expand their innovative project in collaboration with Transaid to further reduce fatality due to severe malaria through rapid community-based treatment in rural Zambia, according to a press release. Rabbecca Chisenga, an emergency transport system (ETS) rider and community health volunteer (CHV) in the village of Mupola, Serenje, Zambia. Also for World Malaria Day, leaders from across the globe met in Paris today for a high-level conference organised by Roll Back Malaria (RBM) Partnership “to renew commitments and announce new initiatives to accelerate the global movement to end malaria in our lifetime,” according to an RBM Partnership news release. Among the speakers at the conference were Dr Abdourahmane Diallo, CEO of RBM Partnership; Peter Sands, executive director of The Global Fund to Fight AIDS, Tuberculosis and Malaria; and Anne Hidalgo, mayor of the city of Paris. This year’s World Malaria Day is particularly significant because it “comes ahead of the Sixth Replenishment Conference of the Global Fund to Fight AIDS, Tuberculosis and Malaria which takes place in Lyon on 10th October,” at which the Global Fund “seeks to raise at least US$14 billion to step up the fight against AIDS, Tuberculosis and Malaria,” the RBM Partnership release said. “2019 presents a crucial opportunity for celebrating and continuing to commit to ending malaria,” David Reddy, CEO of MMV, said at a World Malaria Day event yesterday in Geneva organised by the Swiss Malaria Group. “We are working closely with the Global Fund to support its funding efforts in countries by developing innovative tools to broaden impact and helping make these tools available to the people in need.” “Most importantly,” he said, “access and uptake of innovative medicines has still to be considerably scaled up, including in remote communities: innovative partnerships for access is now part of our vision and an important component of our business model.” Scaling Up Community-Based Malaria Treatment in Zambia The MMV project, MAMaZ against Malaria, effectively reduced severe malaria fatality by 96 percent, from 8 percent to only .25 percent of cases resulting in death, according to the MMV release. “This was achieved through effective community engagement, a functioning drug supply chain, implementing an innovative emergency transport system for patients using bicycle ambulances and increased access to key medicines for severe malaria,” it said. The project administers rectal artesunate suppositories (RAS) to children at the community-level as soon as severe malaria is suspected, and transports these children to health centres using bicycle ambulances to receive the remaining doses of artesunate. See also: (HPW, MMV: Zambia Pilot Project, 3 September 2018). The pilot project reached a population of 54,000, and the expanded project will now reach around 200,000 people. “Children under 5 years of age are one of most vulnerable groups affected by malaria. In Africa, about 285,000 children died before their fifth birthdays in 2016,” the World Health Organization website states. “Because the clinical condition of children with malaria can deteriorate rapidly,” it says, there should be a “low threshold” for treating children as soon as possible with non-oral artesunate. “Malaria can become deadly all too quickly, especially for children under 5 living far from health facilities,” George Jagoe, head of Access & Product Management at MMV, said in the release. “The dramatic 96% reduction in case fatality achieved by the pilot project,” he said, “demonstrates not only the undeniable benefit of using RAS and emergency transport in tandem but also the incredible life-saving impact this project could have at full scale in Zambia as well as other high-burden malaria countries.” The new project, MAMaZ against Malaria at Scale, will be implemented by a consortium of partners including Development Data, DAI Global Health, Disacare, Transaid and MMV, and will work closely with the National Malaria Elimination Centre (NMEC) in Zambia. MMV, “a leading product development partnership (PDP) in the field of antimalarial drug research and development,” has secured the funds for this expansion and will provide the technical malaria expertise for the new project, the release said. Image Credits: MMV. Revise Biosimilar Guidelines, Scientists Demand; WHO Says Not Now 25/04/2019 William New Scientists from a range of countries are calling for an update to World Health Organization guidelines on biosimilar products in order to help national authorities better implement policies to make biosimilars less costly. Current guidelines are outdated and are being misused, they say. But a WHO official told Health Policy Watch the guidelines document should not be made “over-prescriptive”, and that a thorough assessment by an expert group last year found a revision unnecessary but will keep considering it. Continue reading -> Image Credits: Louis Reed/Unsplash. WHO Recommends Young Children Play More, Watch Screens Less, Get Plenty Of Sleep 24/04/2019 David Branigan For children under five years, increasing active play and reducing sedentary screen-time, while getting sufficient sleep, is critical for healthy physical and cognitive development, which impacts life-long health, according to new World Health Organization guidelines.Continue reading -> Image Credits: WHO. Ghana launches the world’s largest vaccine drone delivery network 24/04/2019 Editorial team [Gavi, The Vaccine Alliance, Press Release] With support from Gavi, The UPS Foundation and other partners, Zipline drones will serve up to 2,000 health facilities and 12 million people in Ghana. Omenako, Ghana, 24 April 2019 – Gavi, the Vaccine Alliance today announced support for the expansion of a medical drone network into Ghana. Zipline, a California-based automated logistics company, will use drones to make on-demand, emergency deliveries of high priority products including emergency and routine vaccines and other health products.Continue reading -> Image Credits: Gavi/2019/Tony Noel. Posts navigation Older postsNewer posts This site uses cookies to help give you the best experience on our website. Cookies enable us to collect information that helps us personalise your experience and improve the functionality and performance of our site. By continuing to read our website, we assume you agree to this, otherwise you can adjust your browser settings. Please read our cookie and Privacy Policy. Our Cookies and Privacy Policy Loading Comments... You must be logged in to post a comment.
Drug Price Transparency: 10 Countries Back World Health Assembly Resolution 30/04/2019 Elaine Ruth Fletcher Ten countries, including five European Union (EU) member states, have now lined up in support of a landmark resolution to increase transparency of drug prices globally, which is expected to be a key focus of deliberations by WHO member states as they convene for the 72nd World Health Assembly (WHA), May 20-28 in Geneva.Continue reading -> Image Credits: WHO. “No Time To Wait” – AMR Could Cause 10 Million Deaths Annually By 2050, Warns UN Report 29/04/2019 Elaine Ruth Fletcher Deaths from infections resistant to common antibiotics, antivirals and anti-parasitic drugs could increase more than ten-fold to 10 million deaths annually by 2050, warns a ground-breaking United Nations report released today.Continue reading -> Image Credits: WHO/Quinn Mattingly, UN. New Study Maps Vaccine Coverage Disparities, Helps Explain Why Targets Are Being Missed 26/04/2019 Maina Waruru Child vaccination targets of at least 80 percent coverage in low- and middle-income countries, are regularly being missed. To better understand why this is happening, a new study created high resolution maps of vaccine coverage to identify disparities within countries and to inform effective strategies to increase coverage and access.Continue reading -> Image Credits: WHO. Stepping Up The Fight Against Severe Malaria In Zambia: An Innovative Approach Scales Up 25/04/2019 David Branigan As leaders from across the globe met in Paris today to renew commitments against malaria on World Malaria Day, a Geneva-based group announced the scale-up of a project in rural Zambia that reduced severe malaria fatality by 96 percent. The innovative project administers life-saving drugs to children with malaria in rural communities, and provides immediate rapid transport via bicycle ambulance to health centres. On World Malaria Day today, Medicines for Malaria Venture (MMV) announced that they will expand their innovative project in collaboration with Transaid to further reduce fatality due to severe malaria through rapid community-based treatment in rural Zambia, according to a press release. Rabbecca Chisenga, an emergency transport system (ETS) rider and community health volunteer (CHV) in the village of Mupola, Serenje, Zambia. Also for World Malaria Day, leaders from across the globe met in Paris today for a high-level conference organised by Roll Back Malaria (RBM) Partnership “to renew commitments and announce new initiatives to accelerate the global movement to end malaria in our lifetime,” according to an RBM Partnership news release. Among the speakers at the conference were Dr Abdourahmane Diallo, CEO of RBM Partnership; Peter Sands, executive director of The Global Fund to Fight AIDS, Tuberculosis and Malaria; and Anne Hidalgo, mayor of the city of Paris. This year’s World Malaria Day is particularly significant because it “comes ahead of the Sixth Replenishment Conference of the Global Fund to Fight AIDS, Tuberculosis and Malaria which takes place in Lyon on 10th October,” at which the Global Fund “seeks to raise at least US$14 billion to step up the fight against AIDS, Tuberculosis and Malaria,” the RBM Partnership release said. “2019 presents a crucial opportunity for celebrating and continuing to commit to ending malaria,” David Reddy, CEO of MMV, said at a World Malaria Day event yesterday in Geneva organised by the Swiss Malaria Group. “We are working closely with the Global Fund to support its funding efforts in countries by developing innovative tools to broaden impact and helping make these tools available to the people in need.” “Most importantly,” he said, “access and uptake of innovative medicines has still to be considerably scaled up, including in remote communities: innovative partnerships for access is now part of our vision and an important component of our business model.” Scaling Up Community-Based Malaria Treatment in Zambia The MMV project, MAMaZ against Malaria, effectively reduced severe malaria fatality by 96 percent, from 8 percent to only .25 percent of cases resulting in death, according to the MMV release. “This was achieved through effective community engagement, a functioning drug supply chain, implementing an innovative emergency transport system for patients using bicycle ambulances and increased access to key medicines for severe malaria,” it said. The project administers rectal artesunate suppositories (RAS) to children at the community-level as soon as severe malaria is suspected, and transports these children to health centres using bicycle ambulances to receive the remaining doses of artesunate. See also: (HPW, MMV: Zambia Pilot Project, 3 September 2018). The pilot project reached a population of 54,000, and the expanded project will now reach around 200,000 people. “Children under 5 years of age are one of most vulnerable groups affected by malaria. In Africa, about 285,000 children died before their fifth birthdays in 2016,” the World Health Organization website states. “Because the clinical condition of children with malaria can deteriorate rapidly,” it says, there should be a “low threshold” for treating children as soon as possible with non-oral artesunate. “Malaria can become deadly all too quickly, especially for children under 5 living far from health facilities,” George Jagoe, head of Access & Product Management at MMV, said in the release. “The dramatic 96% reduction in case fatality achieved by the pilot project,” he said, “demonstrates not only the undeniable benefit of using RAS and emergency transport in tandem but also the incredible life-saving impact this project could have at full scale in Zambia as well as other high-burden malaria countries.” The new project, MAMaZ against Malaria at Scale, will be implemented by a consortium of partners including Development Data, DAI Global Health, Disacare, Transaid and MMV, and will work closely with the National Malaria Elimination Centre (NMEC) in Zambia. MMV, “a leading product development partnership (PDP) in the field of antimalarial drug research and development,” has secured the funds for this expansion and will provide the technical malaria expertise for the new project, the release said. Image Credits: MMV. Revise Biosimilar Guidelines, Scientists Demand; WHO Says Not Now 25/04/2019 William New Scientists from a range of countries are calling for an update to World Health Organization guidelines on biosimilar products in order to help national authorities better implement policies to make biosimilars less costly. Current guidelines are outdated and are being misused, they say. But a WHO official told Health Policy Watch the guidelines document should not be made “over-prescriptive”, and that a thorough assessment by an expert group last year found a revision unnecessary but will keep considering it. Continue reading -> Image Credits: Louis Reed/Unsplash. WHO Recommends Young Children Play More, Watch Screens Less, Get Plenty Of Sleep 24/04/2019 David Branigan For children under five years, increasing active play and reducing sedentary screen-time, while getting sufficient sleep, is critical for healthy physical and cognitive development, which impacts life-long health, according to new World Health Organization guidelines.Continue reading -> Image Credits: WHO. Ghana launches the world’s largest vaccine drone delivery network 24/04/2019 Editorial team [Gavi, The Vaccine Alliance, Press Release] With support from Gavi, The UPS Foundation and other partners, Zipline drones will serve up to 2,000 health facilities and 12 million people in Ghana. Omenako, Ghana, 24 April 2019 – Gavi, the Vaccine Alliance today announced support for the expansion of a medical drone network into Ghana. Zipline, a California-based automated logistics company, will use drones to make on-demand, emergency deliveries of high priority products including emergency and routine vaccines and other health products.Continue reading -> Image Credits: Gavi/2019/Tony Noel. Posts navigation Older postsNewer posts This site uses cookies to help give you the best experience on our website. Cookies enable us to collect information that helps us personalise your experience and improve the functionality and performance of our site. By continuing to read our website, we assume you agree to this, otherwise you can adjust your browser settings. Please read our cookie and Privacy Policy. Our Cookies and Privacy Policy Loading Comments... You must be logged in to post a comment.
“No Time To Wait” – AMR Could Cause 10 Million Deaths Annually By 2050, Warns UN Report 29/04/2019 Elaine Ruth Fletcher Deaths from infections resistant to common antibiotics, antivirals and anti-parasitic drugs could increase more than ten-fold to 10 million deaths annually by 2050, warns a ground-breaking United Nations report released today.Continue reading -> Image Credits: WHO/Quinn Mattingly, UN. New Study Maps Vaccine Coverage Disparities, Helps Explain Why Targets Are Being Missed 26/04/2019 Maina Waruru Child vaccination targets of at least 80 percent coverage in low- and middle-income countries, are regularly being missed. To better understand why this is happening, a new study created high resolution maps of vaccine coverage to identify disparities within countries and to inform effective strategies to increase coverage and access.Continue reading -> Image Credits: WHO. Stepping Up The Fight Against Severe Malaria In Zambia: An Innovative Approach Scales Up 25/04/2019 David Branigan As leaders from across the globe met in Paris today to renew commitments against malaria on World Malaria Day, a Geneva-based group announced the scale-up of a project in rural Zambia that reduced severe malaria fatality by 96 percent. The innovative project administers life-saving drugs to children with malaria in rural communities, and provides immediate rapid transport via bicycle ambulance to health centres. On World Malaria Day today, Medicines for Malaria Venture (MMV) announced that they will expand their innovative project in collaboration with Transaid to further reduce fatality due to severe malaria through rapid community-based treatment in rural Zambia, according to a press release. Rabbecca Chisenga, an emergency transport system (ETS) rider and community health volunteer (CHV) in the village of Mupola, Serenje, Zambia. Also for World Malaria Day, leaders from across the globe met in Paris today for a high-level conference organised by Roll Back Malaria (RBM) Partnership “to renew commitments and announce new initiatives to accelerate the global movement to end malaria in our lifetime,” according to an RBM Partnership news release. Among the speakers at the conference were Dr Abdourahmane Diallo, CEO of RBM Partnership; Peter Sands, executive director of The Global Fund to Fight AIDS, Tuberculosis and Malaria; and Anne Hidalgo, mayor of the city of Paris. This year’s World Malaria Day is particularly significant because it “comes ahead of the Sixth Replenishment Conference of the Global Fund to Fight AIDS, Tuberculosis and Malaria which takes place in Lyon on 10th October,” at which the Global Fund “seeks to raise at least US$14 billion to step up the fight against AIDS, Tuberculosis and Malaria,” the RBM Partnership release said. “2019 presents a crucial opportunity for celebrating and continuing to commit to ending malaria,” David Reddy, CEO of MMV, said at a World Malaria Day event yesterday in Geneva organised by the Swiss Malaria Group. “We are working closely with the Global Fund to support its funding efforts in countries by developing innovative tools to broaden impact and helping make these tools available to the people in need.” “Most importantly,” he said, “access and uptake of innovative medicines has still to be considerably scaled up, including in remote communities: innovative partnerships for access is now part of our vision and an important component of our business model.” Scaling Up Community-Based Malaria Treatment in Zambia The MMV project, MAMaZ against Malaria, effectively reduced severe malaria fatality by 96 percent, from 8 percent to only .25 percent of cases resulting in death, according to the MMV release. “This was achieved through effective community engagement, a functioning drug supply chain, implementing an innovative emergency transport system for patients using bicycle ambulances and increased access to key medicines for severe malaria,” it said. The project administers rectal artesunate suppositories (RAS) to children at the community-level as soon as severe malaria is suspected, and transports these children to health centres using bicycle ambulances to receive the remaining doses of artesunate. See also: (HPW, MMV: Zambia Pilot Project, 3 September 2018). The pilot project reached a population of 54,000, and the expanded project will now reach around 200,000 people. “Children under 5 years of age are one of most vulnerable groups affected by malaria. In Africa, about 285,000 children died before their fifth birthdays in 2016,” the World Health Organization website states. “Because the clinical condition of children with malaria can deteriorate rapidly,” it says, there should be a “low threshold” for treating children as soon as possible with non-oral artesunate. “Malaria can become deadly all too quickly, especially for children under 5 living far from health facilities,” George Jagoe, head of Access & Product Management at MMV, said in the release. “The dramatic 96% reduction in case fatality achieved by the pilot project,” he said, “demonstrates not only the undeniable benefit of using RAS and emergency transport in tandem but also the incredible life-saving impact this project could have at full scale in Zambia as well as other high-burden malaria countries.” The new project, MAMaZ against Malaria at Scale, will be implemented by a consortium of partners including Development Data, DAI Global Health, Disacare, Transaid and MMV, and will work closely with the National Malaria Elimination Centre (NMEC) in Zambia. MMV, “a leading product development partnership (PDP) in the field of antimalarial drug research and development,” has secured the funds for this expansion and will provide the technical malaria expertise for the new project, the release said. Image Credits: MMV. Revise Biosimilar Guidelines, Scientists Demand; WHO Says Not Now 25/04/2019 William New Scientists from a range of countries are calling for an update to World Health Organization guidelines on biosimilar products in order to help national authorities better implement policies to make biosimilars less costly. Current guidelines are outdated and are being misused, they say. But a WHO official told Health Policy Watch the guidelines document should not be made “over-prescriptive”, and that a thorough assessment by an expert group last year found a revision unnecessary but will keep considering it. Continue reading -> Image Credits: Louis Reed/Unsplash. WHO Recommends Young Children Play More, Watch Screens Less, Get Plenty Of Sleep 24/04/2019 David Branigan For children under five years, increasing active play and reducing sedentary screen-time, while getting sufficient sleep, is critical for healthy physical and cognitive development, which impacts life-long health, according to new World Health Organization guidelines.Continue reading -> Image Credits: WHO. Ghana launches the world’s largest vaccine drone delivery network 24/04/2019 Editorial team [Gavi, The Vaccine Alliance, Press Release] With support from Gavi, The UPS Foundation and other partners, Zipline drones will serve up to 2,000 health facilities and 12 million people in Ghana. Omenako, Ghana, 24 April 2019 – Gavi, the Vaccine Alliance today announced support for the expansion of a medical drone network into Ghana. Zipline, a California-based automated logistics company, will use drones to make on-demand, emergency deliveries of high priority products including emergency and routine vaccines and other health products.Continue reading -> Image Credits: Gavi/2019/Tony Noel. Posts navigation Older postsNewer posts This site uses cookies to help give you the best experience on our website. Cookies enable us to collect information that helps us personalise your experience and improve the functionality and performance of our site. By continuing to read our website, we assume you agree to this, otherwise you can adjust your browser settings. Please read our cookie and Privacy Policy. Our Cookies and Privacy Policy Loading Comments... You must be logged in to post a comment.
New Study Maps Vaccine Coverage Disparities, Helps Explain Why Targets Are Being Missed 26/04/2019 Maina Waruru Child vaccination targets of at least 80 percent coverage in low- and middle-income countries, are regularly being missed. To better understand why this is happening, a new study created high resolution maps of vaccine coverage to identify disparities within countries and to inform effective strategies to increase coverage and access.Continue reading -> Image Credits: WHO. Stepping Up The Fight Against Severe Malaria In Zambia: An Innovative Approach Scales Up 25/04/2019 David Branigan As leaders from across the globe met in Paris today to renew commitments against malaria on World Malaria Day, a Geneva-based group announced the scale-up of a project in rural Zambia that reduced severe malaria fatality by 96 percent. The innovative project administers life-saving drugs to children with malaria in rural communities, and provides immediate rapid transport via bicycle ambulance to health centres. On World Malaria Day today, Medicines for Malaria Venture (MMV) announced that they will expand their innovative project in collaboration with Transaid to further reduce fatality due to severe malaria through rapid community-based treatment in rural Zambia, according to a press release. Rabbecca Chisenga, an emergency transport system (ETS) rider and community health volunteer (CHV) in the village of Mupola, Serenje, Zambia. Also for World Malaria Day, leaders from across the globe met in Paris today for a high-level conference organised by Roll Back Malaria (RBM) Partnership “to renew commitments and announce new initiatives to accelerate the global movement to end malaria in our lifetime,” according to an RBM Partnership news release. Among the speakers at the conference were Dr Abdourahmane Diallo, CEO of RBM Partnership; Peter Sands, executive director of The Global Fund to Fight AIDS, Tuberculosis and Malaria; and Anne Hidalgo, mayor of the city of Paris. This year’s World Malaria Day is particularly significant because it “comes ahead of the Sixth Replenishment Conference of the Global Fund to Fight AIDS, Tuberculosis and Malaria which takes place in Lyon on 10th October,” at which the Global Fund “seeks to raise at least US$14 billion to step up the fight against AIDS, Tuberculosis and Malaria,” the RBM Partnership release said. “2019 presents a crucial opportunity for celebrating and continuing to commit to ending malaria,” David Reddy, CEO of MMV, said at a World Malaria Day event yesterday in Geneva organised by the Swiss Malaria Group. “We are working closely with the Global Fund to support its funding efforts in countries by developing innovative tools to broaden impact and helping make these tools available to the people in need.” “Most importantly,” he said, “access and uptake of innovative medicines has still to be considerably scaled up, including in remote communities: innovative partnerships for access is now part of our vision and an important component of our business model.” Scaling Up Community-Based Malaria Treatment in Zambia The MMV project, MAMaZ against Malaria, effectively reduced severe malaria fatality by 96 percent, from 8 percent to only .25 percent of cases resulting in death, according to the MMV release. “This was achieved through effective community engagement, a functioning drug supply chain, implementing an innovative emergency transport system for patients using bicycle ambulances and increased access to key medicines for severe malaria,” it said. The project administers rectal artesunate suppositories (RAS) to children at the community-level as soon as severe malaria is suspected, and transports these children to health centres using bicycle ambulances to receive the remaining doses of artesunate. See also: (HPW, MMV: Zambia Pilot Project, 3 September 2018). The pilot project reached a population of 54,000, and the expanded project will now reach around 200,000 people. “Children under 5 years of age are one of most vulnerable groups affected by malaria. In Africa, about 285,000 children died before their fifth birthdays in 2016,” the World Health Organization website states. “Because the clinical condition of children with malaria can deteriorate rapidly,” it says, there should be a “low threshold” for treating children as soon as possible with non-oral artesunate. “Malaria can become deadly all too quickly, especially for children under 5 living far from health facilities,” George Jagoe, head of Access & Product Management at MMV, said in the release. “The dramatic 96% reduction in case fatality achieved by the pilot project,” he said, “demonstrates not only the undeniable benefit of using RAS and emergency transport in tandem but also the incredible life-saving impact this project could have at full scale in Zambia as well as other high-burden malaria countries.” The new project, MAMaZ against Malaria at Scale, will be implemented by a consortium of partners including Development Data, DAI Global Health, Disacare, Transaid and MMV, and will work closely with the National Malaria Elimination Centre (NMEC) in Zambia. MMV, “a leading product development partnership (PDP) in the field of antimalarial drug research and development,” has secured the funds for this expansion and will provide the technical malaria expertise for the new project, the release said. Image Credits: MMV. Revise Biosimilar Guidelines, Scientists Demand; WHO Says Not Now 25/04/2019 William New Scientists from a range of countries are calling for an update to World Health Organization guidelines on biosimilar products in order to help national authorities better implement policies to make biosimilars less costly. Current guidelines are outdated and are being misused, they say. But a WHO official told Health Policy Watch the guidelines document should not be made “over-prescriptive”, and that a thorough assessment by an expert group last year found a revision unnecessary but will keep considering it. Continue reading -> Image Credits: Louis Reed/Unsplash. WHO Recommends Young Children Play More, Watch Screens Less, Get Plenty Of Sleep 24/04/2019 David Branigan For children under five years, increasing active play and reducing sedentary screen-time, while getting sufficient sleep, is critical for healthy physical and cognitive development, which impacts life-long health, according to new World Health Organization guidelines.Continue reading -> Image Credits: WHO. Ghana launches the world’s largest vaccine drone delivery network 24/04/2019 Editorial team [Gavi, The Vaccine Alliance, Press Release] With support from Gavi, The UPS Foundation and other partners, Zipline drones will serve up to 2,000 health facilities and 12 million people in Ghana. Omenako, Ghana, 24 April 2019 – Gavi, the Vaccine Alliance today announced support for the expansion of a medical drone network into Ghana. Zipline, a California-based automated logistics company, will use drones to make on-demand, emergency deliveries of high priority products including emergency and routine vaccines and other health products.Continue reading -> Image Credits: Gavi/2019/Tony Noel. Posts navigation Older postsNewer posts This site uses cookies to help give you the best experience on our website. Cookies enable us to collect information that helps us personalise your experience and improve the functionality and performance of our site. By continuing to read our website, we assume you agree to this, otherwise you can adjust your browser settings. Please read our cookie and Privacy Policy. Our Cookies and Privacy Policy Loading Comments... You must be logged in to post a comment.
Stepping Up The Fight Against Severe Malaria In Zambia: An Innovative Approach Scales Up 25/04/2019 David Branigan As leaders from across the globe met in Paris today to renew commitments against malaria on World Malaria Day, a Geneva-based group announced the scale-up of a project in rural Zambia that reduced severe malaria fatality by 96 percent. The innovative project administers life-saving drugs to children with malaria in rural communities, and provides immediate rapid transport via bicycle ambulance to health centres. On World Malaria Day today, Medicines for Malaria Venture (MMV) announced that they will expand their innovative project in collaboration with Transaid to further reduce fatality due to severe malaria through rapid community-based treatment in rural Zambia, according to a press release. Rabbecca Chisenga, an emergency transport system (ETS) rider and community health volunteer (CHV) in the village of Mupola, Serenje, Zambia. Also for World Malaria Day, leaders from across the globe met in Paris today for a high-level conference organised by Roll Back Malaria (RBM) Partnership “to renew commitments and announce new initiatives to accelerate the global movement to end malaria in our lifetime,” according to an RBM Partnership news release. Among the speakers at the conference were Dr Abdourahmane Diallo, CEO of RBM Partnership; Peter Sands, executive director of The Global Fund to Fight AIDS, Tuberculosis and Malaria; and Anne Hidalgo, mayor of the city of Paris. This year’s World Malaria Day is particularly significant because it “comes ahead of the Sixth Replenishment Conference of the Global Fund to Fight AIDS, Tuberculosis and Malaria which takes place in Lyon on 10th October,” at which the Global Fund “seeks to raise at least US$14 billion to step up the fight against AIDS, Tuberculosis and Malaria,” the RBM Partnership release said. “2019 presents a crucial opportunity for celebrating and continuing to commit to ending malaria,” David Reddy, CEO of MMV, said at a World Malaria Day event yesterday in Geneva organised by the Swiss Malaria Group. “We are working closely with the Global Fund to support its funding efforts in countries by developing innovative tools to broaden impact and helping make these tools available to the people in need.” “Most importantly,” he said, “access and uptake of innovative medicines has still to be considerably scaled up, including in remote communities: innovative partnerships for access is now part of our vision and an important component of our business model.” Scaling Up Community-Based Malaria Treatment in Zambia The MMV project, MAMaZ against Malaria, effectively reduced severe malaria fatality by 96 percent, from 8 percent to only .25 percent of cases resulting in death, according to the MMV release. “This was achieved through effective community engagement, a functioning drug supply chain, implementing an innovative emergency transport system for patients using bicycle ambulances and increased access to key medicines for severe malaria,” it said. The project administers rectal artesunate suppositories (RAS) to children at the community-level as soon as severe malaria is suspected, and transports these children to health centres using bicycle ambulances to receive the remaining doses of artesunate. See also: (HPW, MMV: Zambia Pilot Project, 3 September 2018). The pilot project reached a population of 54,000, and the expanded project will now reach around 200,000 people. “Children under 5 years of age are one of most vulnerable groups affected by malaria. In Africa, about 285,000 children died before their fifth birthdays in 2016,” the World Health Organization website states. “Because the clinical condition of children with malaria can deteriorate rapidly,” it says, there should be a “low threshold” for treating children as soon as possible with non-oral artesunate. “Malaria can become deadly all too quickly, especially for children under 5 living far from health facilities,” George Jagoe, head of Access & Product Management at MMV, said in the release. “The dramatic 96% reduction in case fatality achieved by the pilot project,” he said, “demonstrates not only the undeniable benefit of using RAS and emergency transport in tandem but also the incredible life-saving impact this project could have at full scale in Zambia as well as other high-burden malaria countries.” The new project, MAMaZ against Malaria at Scale, will be implemented by a consortium of partners including Development Data, DAI Global Health, Disacare, Transaid and MMV, and will work closely with the National Malaria Elimination Centre (NMEC) in Zambia. MMV, “a leading product development partnership (PDP) in the field of antimalarial drug research and development,” has secured the funds for this expansion and will provide the technical malaria expertise for the new project, the release said. Image Credits: MMV. Revise Biosimilar Guidelines, Scientists Demand; WHO Says Not Now 25/04/2019 William New Scientists from a range of countries are calling for an update to World Health Organization guidelines on biosimilar products in order to help national authorities better implement policies to make biosimilars less costly. Current guidelines are outdated and are being misused, they say. But a WHO official told Health Policy Watch the guidelines document should not be made “over-prescriptive”, and that a thorough assessment by an expert group last year found a revision unnecessary but will keep considering it. Continue reading -> Image Credits: Louis Reed/Unsplash. WHO Recommends Young Children Play More, Watch Screens Less, Get Plenty Of Sleep 24/04/2019 David Branigan For children under five years, increasing active play and reducing sedentary screen-time, while getting sufficient sleep, is critical for healthy physical and cognitive development, which impacts life-long health, according to new World Health Organization guidelines.Continue reading -> Image Credits: WHO. Ghana launches the world’s largest vaccine drone delivery network 24/04/2019 Editorial team [Gavi, The Vaccine Alliance, Press Release] With support from Gavi, The UPS Foundation and other partners, Zipline drones will serve up to 2,000 health facilities and 12 million people in Ghana. Omenako, Ghana, 24 April 2019 – Gavi, the Vaccine Alliance today announced support for the expansion of a medical drone network into Ghana. Zipline, a California-based automated logistics company, will use drones to make on-demand, emergency deliveries of high priority products including emergency and routine vaccines and other health products.Continue reading -> Image Credits: Gavi/2019/Tony Noel. Posts navigation Older postsNewer posts This site uses cookies to help give you the best experience on our website. Cookies enable us to collect information that helps us personalise your experience and improve the functionality and performance of our site. By continuing to read our website, we assume you agree to this, otherwise you can adjust your browser settings. Please read our cookie and Privacy Policy. Our Cookies and Privacy Policy Loading Comments... You must be logged in to post a comment.
Revise Biosimilar Guidelines, Scientists Demand; WHO Says Not Now 25/04/2019 William New Scientists from a range of countries are calling for an update to World Health Organization guidelines on biosimilar products in order to help national authorities better implement policies to make biosimilars less costly. Current guidelines are outdated and are being misused, they say. But a WHO official told Health Policy Watch the guidelines document should not be made “over-prescriptive”, and that a thorough assessment by an expert group last year found a revision unnecessary but will keep considering it. Continue reading -> Image Credits: Louis Reed/Unsplash. WHO Recommends Young Children Play More, Watch Screens Less, Get Plenty Of Sleep 24/04/2019 David Branigan For children under five years, increasing active play and reducing sedentary screen-time, while getting sufficient sleep, is critical for healthy physical and cognitive development, which impacts life-long health, according to new World Health Organization guidelines.Continue reading -> Image Credits: WHO. Ghana launches the world’s largest vaccine drone delivery network 24/04/2019 Editorial team [Gavi, The Vaccine Alliance, Press Release] With support from Gavi, The UPS Foundation and other partners, Zipline drones will serve up to 2,000 health facilities and 12 million people in Ghana. Omenako, Ghana, 24 April 2019 – Gavi, the Vaccine Alliance today announced support for the expansion of a medical drone network into Ghana. Zipline, a California-based automated logistics company, will use drones to make on-demand, emergency deliveries of high priority products including emergency and routine vaccines and other health products.Continue reading -> Image Credits: Gavi/2019/Tony Noel. Posts navigation Older postsNewer posts This site uses cookies to help give you the best experience on our website. Cookies enable us to collect information that helps us personalise your experience and improve the functionality and performance of our site. By continuing to read our website, we assume you agree to this, otherwise you can adjust your browser settings. Please read our cookie and Privacy Policy. Our Cookies and Privacy Policy Loading Comments... You must be logged in to post a comment.
WHO Recommends Young Children Play More, Watch Screens Less, Get Plenty Of Sleep 24/04/2019 David Branigan For children under five years, increasing active play and reducing sedentary screen-time, while getting sufficient sleep, is critical for healthy physical and cognitive development, which impacts life-long health, according to new World Health Organization guidelines.Continue reading -> Image Credits: WHO. Ghana launches the world’s largest vaccine drone delivery network 24/04/2019 Editorial team [Gavi, The Vaccine Alliance, Press Release] With support from Gavi, The UPS Foundation and other partners, Zipline drones will serve up to 2,000 health facilities and 12 million people in Ghana. Omenako, Ghana, 24 April 2019 – Gavi, the Vaccine Alliance today announced support for the expansion of a medical drone network into Ghana. Zipline, a California-based automated logistics company, will use drones to make on-demand, emergency deliveries of high priority products including emergency and routine vaccines and other health products.Continue reading -> Image Credits: Gavi/2019/Tony Noel. Posts navigation Older postsNewer posts This site uses cookies to help give you the best experience on our website. Cookies enable us to collect information that helps us personalise your experience and improve the functionality and performance of our site. By continuing to read our website, we assume you agree to this, otherwise you can adjust your browser settings. Please read our cookie and Privacy Policy. Our Cookies and Privacy Policy
Ghana launches the world’s largest vaccine drone delivery network 24/04/2019 Editorial team [Gavi, The Vaccine Alliance, Press Release] With support from Gavi, The UPS Foundation and other partners, Zipline drones will serve up to 2,000 health facilities and 12 million people in Ghana. Omenako, Ghana, 24 April 2019 – Gavi, the Vaccine Alliance today announced support for the expansion of a medical drone network into Ghana. Zipline, a California-based automated logistics company, will use drones to make on-demand, emergency deliveries of high priority products including emergency and routine vaccines and other health products.Continue reading -> Image Credits: Gavi/2019/Tony Noel. Posts navigation Older postsNewer posts