Archive for the ‘National Security’ category

Money Spent on Nuclear Weapons could Eliminate NTDs at a Fraction of the Cost, says Editorial

April 28th, 2010

Currently there are eight acknowledged nuclear power states (America, Russia, China, Britain, France, India, Pakistan, and North Korea) with more, (Israel, Iran, and Syria), believed to have nuclear programs. But what if those powers took some of the immense amounts of money they put into their nuclear programs and instead used it for treating NTDs? That question is the basis of a new editorial in the journal PLoS Neglected Tropical Disease by Dr. Peter Hotez.

Dr. Hotez estimates that, since the Manhattan Project, “the 11 nuclear weapons states together have invested at least 10 trillion dollars on weapons production and maintenance” while “the costs for both neglected disease control and R and D comes close to a billion dollars, or roughly less than 1/10,000th of the estimated 10 trillion dollars committed for nuclear weapons.” All of these nations, with the possible exception of Great Britain have a significant NTD burden.

Investments in nuclear weaponry are carried out under the auspice of deterring war and thus promoting peace, says Hotez, but these and additional benefits can be achieved through neglected disease funding. Increased investments in neglected disease research could control or eliminate neglected infections, support achievement of the Millennium Development Goals, stabilize and build nations, and reduce civil strife and international tensions.

To read the full text of the editorial, click here.

Big Announcement by Bill Gates and Tim Geithner

April 22nd, 2010

We’re watching this announcement live here

Bill Gates and Treasury Secretary Tim Geithner are announcing the launch of the Global Agriculture and Food Security Program– “a new fund to help the world’s poorest farmers grow more food and earn more than they do now so they can lift themselves out of hunger and poverty.”

Read their piece in the Wall Street Journal here

We will repost the recorded video when it becomes available!

Reading List 4/1/2010

April 1st, 2010

Happy April everybody! Today we’ve got a bunch of NTD related news, including some ongoing advocacy work and a possible breakthrough against African sleeping sickness (no foolin’).

Scientists open way for new sleeping sickness drug, Kate Kelland, Reuters
Members of Congress Urge Spending Boost for Neglected Diseases, Joe DeCapua, Voice of America
HEALTH: Seeking Funds to Fight Neglected Diseases, Fabiana Frayssinet, IPS
Vaccines, The Modern “Olive Branch”?, Josh Witten, Scientific Blogging
Killer diseases of Africa’s poor, Pamela Olet, Daily Nation
Blindness Prevention Initiative, AmeriCares, Reuters AlertNet

Global Pulse 2010: Day 2

March 30th, 2010

(Note: to read any of the Global Pulse discussions, you need to register here first.)

 Today marks the second day of Global Pulse, the ongoing online collaborative event focused on global issues. In the last day, we’ve seen the global health discussion include some very interesting conversations, such as if the expansion of information technology and basic health capability are competitive or cooperative goals, what the role of communities is in health systems, and about the reasons for the uneven distribution of public health education opportunities. Perhaps the two most interesting threads are the welcome thread created by Amie Batson, USAID Director of the Global Health Initiative, which has turned into a sort of open discussion on global health, and a thread with many proposed answers taken from the Human Resources and Health document recently published by USAID.

 We’re also seeing a discussion of NTDs and NTD issues begin to emerge. In global health, the importance of NTD control was brought up, while in the separate “Fostering Science, Technology, and Innovation” discussion, the topic of promoting innovation in the face of a limited market was discussed.

Here were some great NTD related questions posed on one thread that we’d like to post here as well and are open for discussion:

  1. What have been your experiences with the delivery of a package(s) of services or commodities through community-level platforms? What lessons have you learned about effective integrated programming? How much can we build onto a single platform and continue to see efficiency gains?
  2. How can we best utilize and motivate community-level health workers and volunteers as we extend the health system to reach rural populations?
  3. What changes to the targeting / approaches to water and sanitation would strengthen the impact on NTD control, in both the short and long term? What else can the NTD control community do to strengthen the sustainability of its control efforts?  

With 28 hours left in the event, we’ll see if these conversations continue to develop. Check back in tomorrow for further discussion of Global Pulse.