Tag Archives: GlaxoSmithKline

GlaxoSmithKline creates a new unit for NTDs

We have great news to share in the world of NTDs! GlaxoSmithKline (GSK), a UK-based pharmaceutical and healthcare company, has created a Neglected Tropical Diseases Unit in efforts to control and eliminate NTDs once and for all. The purpose of the unit includes developing the capacity worldwide to implement NTD intervention programs and also acting as a “not-for-profit” entity leveraging GSK’s operating capabilities and infrastructure.

GSK has played an active role in helping to eliminate these diseases of poverty. In 2009, the company created a patent pool that allows wider access to intellectual property for NTD work and research. Also, just last year, GSK expanded its albendazole donation program which was recently updated last month.

The unit came about after a team within GSK, the Future Strategy Group, reviewed high risk areas such as urban slums, rural areas, and conflict zones that are commonly affected by NTDs. The unit will bring together GSK’s existing programmes and create new partnerships with NGOs, commercial companies, Governments and other groups. In the beginning, focus will be placed on ensuring global access to medicines for five disease areas where treatments already exist: onchocerciasis, schistosomiasis, lymphatic filariasis, trachoma, and soil-transmitted helminths. The unit will also scale-up already existing GSK NTD activities such as drug and vaccine research and development. Furthermore, a pilot program will be integrated using community partnerships that will serve children and tackle the root cause of NTDs. Finally, the group will campaign to increase awareness of the burden of NTDs.

This is an amazing advancement for the fight against NTDs. Here at End the Neglect, we are encouraged by such progress and hope to see more in the future. To do your part in combating these diseases of poverty, please visit our Get Involved page.

GSK gives update on agreement with WHO to support de-worming of school age children in endemic countries

Today GlaxoSmithKline (GSK) announced its progress on expanding its drug donation commitment to the World Health Organization (WHO). Last October 2010, GSK pledged to provide an additional 400 million tablets of albendazole per year to WHO to enable de-worming of school age children in Africa; today that pledge was formalized. In addition to this, GSK albendazole donations will be expanded to countries outside of Africa who have a high prevalence of soil-transmitted helminths, which affects 800 million children worldwide, causing low school attendance and delayed development.

Togo and Rwanda were the first African countries to have received the initial shipments of albendazole treatments from GSK under this commitment. Other African countries scheduled to receive donations in order to begin NTD programs over the next year include Mozambique, Namibia, Uganda and Burkina Faso.

Click here to read the full press release for this announcement. Generous donations from pharmaceutical companies is just one way of ending the neglect for NTDs. Visit our “Get Involved” page to learn more about what can be done to fight against these debilitating diseases.

GSK Announces Expansion of Albendazole Donation

GlaxoSmithKline (GSK) announced today at the World Health Organization’s (WHO) launch of the first report on neglected tropical diseases (NTDs) that they will partake in a five-year commitment to expand the donation of its medicine albendazole to treat children at risk of intestinal worms, known as soil-transmitted helminths (STH).

The new WHO report states that STH infections are more detrimental than any other infection among school-aged children, causing cognitive and developmental issues, physical stunting, and missed school days. These infections are transmitted by use of unsanitary water.

To treat and control STH infections, the WHO recommends annual school-wide deworming, where children between 1-15 years of age receive a single dose of albendazole (or mebendazole), in regions where such infections are high.

Under the new commitment announced today, 400 million treatments of albendazole per year will be provided in addition to the previously committed supply to the WHO with 600 million tablets of albendazole per year for use in the Global Programme to Eliminate Lymphatic Filiariasis (GAELF). This donation will support the UN’s strategy to improve women’s and children’s health and, when combined with existing de-worming programmes, will enable the countries to scale-up their efforts to achieve universal coverage of school age children in Africa. Shipments of the new donations are expected to start in late 2011.

Medicines for Malaria Venture Contributes to Pool for Open Innovation Against NTDs

The Pool for Open Innovation against Neglected Tropical Diseases (the Pool) is a consortium whose members make information and knowledge available to the public for the sole purpose of developing patents, tools, and other intellectual property to combat neglected tropical diseases. The Pool was established in February 2009 by GlaxoSmithKline and Alnylam Pharmaceuticals, and has since been joined by the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT). The Pool is administered by BIO Ventures for Global Health (BVGH).

Today, Medicines for Malaria Venture (MMV) has become a contributor to the Pool, acting as the first product development partnership (PDP) in the Pool’s history. Read more about the partnership and what it means in the fight against neglected tropical diseases.