Tag Archives: congress

Global Network Co-hosts Staff Briefings on Capitol Hill

 

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The policy team at the Global Network was busy this week taking the issue of neglected tropical diseases (NTDs) up to Capitol Hill. Together with members of the NTD Roundtable, a group of global health partners committed to fighting NTDs, we co-sponsored an NTD staff briefing in the House of Representatives on Thursday May 8, and once again in the Senate on Monday May 12. The briefings were held to discuss the impact of USAID’s NTD Program, the significance of U.S. leadership in the fight against NTDs, the potential impact of the expanded FY14 funding of $100 million for NTDs, and the need for greater NTD R&D to address treatment gaps.

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The House briefing was held the same day that USAID announced the delivery of its one billionth NTD treatment since the launch of its NTD Program in fiscal year 2006. USAID Assistant Administrator for Global Health, Dr. Ariel Pablos-Méndez, recognized the occasion by visiting a mass drug administration site in Saint-Louis-du-Sud, Haiti. During the visit, Dr. Pablos-Méndez said “the power of committed partnerships” is a key ingredient in USAID’s successful NTD Program, which brings together ministries of health, implementing NGOs, and pharmaceutical companies to form the largest public-private partnership inthe Agency’s 50-year history.

Neeraj with His Excellency Maman Sidikou, Ambassador of Niger, at the House staff briefing

Neeraj with His Excellency Maman Sidikou, Ambassador of Niger, at the House staff briefing

The Hill briefings were attended by representatives from key House and Senate committees, the NGO community, and the African diplomatic corps –including the Ambassador of Niger, His Excellency Maman Sidikou, and the Ambassador of Burkina Faso, His Excellency Seydou Bouda.  Global Network Managing Director, Neeraj Mistry, provided opening remarks and moderated the event, and presentations were given by Dr. Achille Kabore of RTI, Andrea Rudolph of Médecins Sans Frontières and Rachel Cohen of DNDi. During the briefings, participants also viewed the END7 campaign’s , “Myanmar’s Moment.” The video highlights an END7-supported mass drug administration program in Myanmar.

Following the formal presentation in the House, the speakers and participants engaged in a lively discussion surrounding the treatment of lymphatic filariasis and intestinal worms, the efficacy of certain NTD medicines, the NTD legislation that Rep. Chris Smith (R-NJ) plans to introduce soon, and how best to educate and showcase the success of NTD programs to the African diplomatic community. Ambassador Sidikou of Niger re-iterated that success stories must be highlighted to encourage program expansion; Niger was one of USAID’s first five fast-track countries that were the original focus of the NTD Program in FY2006. Since then, USAID has distributed 115 million NTD treatments and Niger is on track to eliminate blinding trachoma by 2015.

Neeraj with His Excellency Seydou Bouda, Ambassador of Burkina Faso, at the Senate staff briefing

Neeraj with His Excellency Seydou Bouda, Ambassador of Burkina Faso, at the Senate staff briefing

After the presentations in the Senate, the audience discussed advocacy for NTDs, what needs to be done to reach the WHO’s 2020 goals, and how to mix the need to use currently available tools to treat NTDs and the need to design new tools to improve or discover new treatments. Ambassador Bouda of Burkina Faso expressed gratitude for the great work that is being done in his country to fight NTDs; Burkina Faso is also a USAID fast-track country, and nearly 146 million treatments have been distributed since the NTD Program began operations.

The staff briefings were a great opportunity to demonstrate to Congress the success and effectiveness of NTD control and elimination programs. With the support of USAID, leading pharmaceutical companies, NGO partners and the commitment of NTD-endemic countries, we’re getting closer to controlling and eliminating NTDs worldwide.

Connecting the Dots: Greater Integration between WASH and NTDs

 

Photo by Esther Havens

Photo by Esther Havens

Over the past month, we’ve heard many times from the neglected tropical disease (NTD) and water, sanitation and hygiene (WASH) communities about the importance of cross-sector collaboration (see here and here). Momentum has especially been building, though, in the past two weeks.

Just last week, as the part of events recognizing the second anniversary of the London Declaration, we celebrated new commitments from WaterAid and Dubai Cares that will advance integrated deworming and WASH interventions.

This week, the Global Network and partners gathered with the former President of Ghana and Global Network’s NTD Special Envoy, H.E. John Kufuor – who also serves as Chair of the Sanitation and Water for All (SWA) Partnership – to discuss the cost-effective and sustainable strategies our sectors and private industry can take.

Another important conversation also occurred this week: “Why water and toilets matter in foreign aid,” hosted by WaterAid at the National Press Club. Barbara Frost, chief executive of WaterAid UK; Henry Northover, head of policy at WaterAid UK; and Lisa Schechtman, director of policy and advocacy at WaterAid America spoke about how WASH can advance many U.S. interests. WaterAid also invited Dr. Neeraj Mistry, Global Network’s managing director, to weigh in about the health implications of poor WASH circumstances.

Lisa observed that there’s been increasing “recognition that development component isn’t just good for moral authority but that it helps bolster defense and diplomacy components.” The 2012 National Intelligence Estimate on Global Water Security emphasizes that water can be a tool of conflict or peace and makes the connection that poverty reduction – through WASH – can increase security.

Similarly, the U.S. Center for Disease Control and other collaborators published a Global Health Security Agenda in February to thwart risk of infectious diseases.

Barbara then stressed the impact that WASH has on “women’s health, girls’ lives, empowerment and what it means for their healthy development.” For instance, in many vulnerable communities, “girls drop out of school because they are carrying water or because there aren’t adequate toilets when they go through puberty.”

In the same way, NTDs disproportionately impact females. When END7 campaign ambassador Abhishek Bachchan visited a lymphatic filariasis clinic in Orissa State, India, he heard from women about how the stigma and misinformation associated with the disease prevented their daughters from getting married and participating equally in society. Women and girls with a certain form of schistosomiasis, one of the most common NTDs, are also three times more likely to contact HIV.

Henry, who noted that “dirty water is the vector for so many of the diseases that you see under the microscope,” also reflected on global challenges in the WASH community. Most importantly was that some serious challenges on how aid is targeted.

Global health is a fraction of one percent of the federal $1.012 trillion budget – and the budget for NTDs is even smaller. But this tiny amount has a huge impact, which is why the Global Network is urging the public to encourage key members of Congress to protect funding for this critical program.

Then Neeraj emphasized, “this is not an either or measure – we have to do both [WASH and NTDs] to have a significant and sustainable impact on many of these diseases.” While WASH and NTDs “may seem like disparate thematic issues in the development agenda, we are looking at similar thematic platforms” to make positive changes, in schools or during child health weeks.

Ultimately, we will not stop the transmission of NTDs without clean water, improved sanitation, and better hygiene practices, and even with good water, we need to distribute treatments to protect against disease. The Global Network looks forward to continuing its support as collaboration and dialogue between both sectors grows.

Help Us Protect U.S. Funding for NTDs – a Cause Worth the Investment

 

In January, we celebrated the largest increase in U.S. funding for neglected tropical diseases (NTDs) since 2010.  Yet the party was cut short by the that President Obama’s FY15 budget request recommended cutting NTD funding by more than 13%, down to just $86.5 million. Considering the great strides the United States Agency for International Development’s (USAID) NTD Program has made in improving health around the world, cutting funding now would be a huge mistake.

Will you help protect U.S. funding for NTD programs? Send a letter now.

Investing in NTDs is a smart, cost-effective way to boost the health and economic prosperity of millions of people worldwide. Global health is a fraction of one percent of the federal $1.012 trillion budget – and the budget for NTDs is even smaller. But this tiny amount has a huge impact.

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InterAction, an alliance of nonprofits, emphasized this point in their annual Choose to Invest report – a publication which provides members of Congress with funding recommendations for U.S. foreign assistance programs based on experience from the field. Under the leadership of the Global Network and others in the NTD community, InterAction recommended that the U.S. program for NTDs be funded at $125 million in FY15.

Sahr Gando, a miner from Sierra Leone

Sahr Gando, a miner from Sierra Leone

An increase in funding for NTDs means effective programs, like this one in Sierra Leone, will continue to run. Last year, the USAID NTD Program, together with partners, assisted Sierra Leone’s Ministry of Health in providing almost half a million people in the country, including Sahr Gando, with life-saving medicines. After receiving treatment, Sahr Gando was able to go back to work and support his family – a task which may have been impossible if treatment never arrived.

Together, we can ensure NTD programs like the one in Sierra Leone are protected – or even improved.

END7 recently launched a campaign to protect NTD funding. Click here to send a letter to Congresswomen Granger and Lowey—longtime advocates of NTDs and leaders of the House appropriations subcommittee that focuses on global health and foreign assistance funding―to thank them for their continued support for NTD programs and urge them to maintain or even increase funding for NTDs in FY15.

Thanks for taking a stand with us.

Global Network Ambassador Continues to Make the Case for Global Health

Tommy G. Thompson, former Secretary of the Department of Health and Human Services and former Governor of Wisconsin (1987-2001) spoke out about global health as a key lever in foreign policy on Wednesday in an editorial published by the Huffington Post. Secretary Thompson acknowledges the difficult foreign policy issues facing the 112th Congress and offers up a solution: use health diplomacy to improve international health conditions in order to bolster the U.S. economy and strengthen foreign policy.

He states that health diplomacy involves “winning the hearts and minds of those abroad by strategically exporting medical care and humanitarian aid, building in-country capacity, and providing health education, training and personnel.” By using this deliberately the U.S. can engage in measures to reduce terrorism, increase the number of productive workers, and ultimately “secure our nation’s future and build a strong, stable global community.”

Drawing on his experience, he says: “Health diplomacy must be institutionalized as a critical component of U.S. diplomatic, defense and foreign policy. Global health is not a Republican issue or a Democrat issue. It’s not even exclusively an American issue. It is the moral responsibility and strategic concern of every freedom-loving citizen of the world.”

Governor Thompson has been a Global Network Ambassador since 2008 and a vital voice for NTDs. In August 2008 he traveled throughout Rwanda and joined the Rwandan Ministry of Health in launching their first-ever national deworming campaign. Yesterday’s post follows a 2009 editorial co-authored with Dr. Peter Hotez, president of the Sabin Vaccine Institute in which they examine NTD control as a means of U.S. foreign policy.