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Brazil Could Turn a Trade Victory Into Defeat  - MARY ANASTASIA O'GRADY
Mary Anastasia O'Grady writes of Brazil's tactics at the WTO and its history on TRIPS and AIDS drug prices, quoting the AFM and AEI paper on Brazil's AIDS treatment program.

ASTMH Presentations on DDT  -
Download the presentations made by Richard Tren & Katy French at the recent ASTMH session on DDT and IRS

AFM Media Release on USAID policy changes  -
USAID has announced signficant changes to its malaria control program. See AFM's media release and commentary here.

New Drug Mix Against Malaria Is Announced  - Don McNeil
Sanofi Aventis have now developed a single dose artemesinin-based combination therapy which spells good news for malaria patients.

Malaria initiative develops cheap pill treatments  - Maggie Fox
Couple the use of artemisinin-based drugs with an effective malaria control program using DDT and we could substantially reduce the number of people infected with malaria each year.

Carson's bridge to malaria  - Dimitri Vassilaros
Allegheny bridge has been renamed to honour Rachel Carson - author of "Silent Spring". This move is both unfortunate and inappropriate. Millions of people, mainly women and children, die each year beacuse of the junk science surrounding DDT.

Zimbabwe to commemorate Malaria Week  -
Zimbabwe will commemorate SADC Malaria week this week, more than two weeks after the start of the traditional malaria season...

Bukenya pleads for DDT use  - Vision Reporter
Vice-President Prof. Gilbert Bukenya has appealed to the international community to support Uganda’s fight to eradicate malaria, including the use of DDT against mosquitoes.

Stop the Rachel Carson Bridge  - Junk Science Action Alert!
The Allegheny County Council (Pennsylvania) will meet today (Dec. 6) to rename its Ninth Street Bridge in honor of Silent Spring author Rachel Carson whose junk science-fueled crusade against DDT has helped condemn tens of millions of the world's poor to death and sickness from malaria. Given the fact that millions of people in developing countries have died from malaria as a result of Carson's junk science on DDT, we think this move would be outrageous and unacceptable.

Tackling Malaria the DDT Way  - Dr. Matthias Offoboche
Dr. Matthias Offoboche, a former Deputy Governor of the old Cross Rivers State calls for Nigeria to start IRS with DDT in order to tackle malaria.

Doctors warn of misusing malaria drug  - Jessica Berman
Scientists are concerned that a new and effective anti-malaria drug has started to show signs of resistance in Africa. They are concerned about the misuse of the drug, artemisinin and what that could mean for the treatment of malaria.

Africa must engage directly in fight against malaria  - Wen Kilama
Until an effective vaccine is developed to prevent malaria, countries should adopt a well-managed IRS program using DDT. It has proven to be the most effective and least costly intervention available – it has the potential to save countless lives and prevent millions of unnecessary bouts of illness.

A Vital Weapon Against HIV/Aids  - C. Payne Lucas
The worldwide destruction brought on by HIV/Aids cannot be overcome by an after-the-fact crisis management approach. We need a war mindset. The pandemic calls for a multi-pronged attack, especially in Africa, where the havoc has been most disastrous and threatens to undo 50 years of hard-won progress in public health, education, and development ....

Disease with a cure
>Published: October 3 2005 03:00 | Last updated: October 3 2005 03:00

Malaria is one of the world's most devastating diseases, accounting for up to 500m infections each year, 1m deaths and billions of pounds of economic damage to the countries most affected, notably in Africa. But unlike Aids and other illnesses still vexing scientists, drugs exist that not only alleviate but cure malaria. More needs to be done to bring these artemisinin-based combination therapies (ACTs) to patients.

For the governments of the developed world, that should begin with fresh financial support. Meeting in London last month, donor nations pledged less than half the target set by the United Nations-backed Global Fund to Fight Aids, Tuberculosis and Malaria to support programmes planned up till 2007. Without greater subsidies, most people in need will not be able to afford the ACTs that have proved so effective.

In the longer term, more research is needed to keep ahead of the evolution of the highly complex malaria parasite. An effective model exists: public-private partnerships that combine non-profit, corporate and academic research to develop drugs for which commercial incentives are limited.

Yet the Medicines for Malaria Venture and the Malaria Vaccine Initiative are struggling to raise funding. The former claims it will be broke by next spring without additional support for existing programmes. Governments are put to shame by the generous support of a handful of philanthropists, led by the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation.

More money to fight malaria needs to be backed by political support from the international community. The World Health Organisation's system of "pre-qualification" to approve drugs, and the Roll Back Malaria partnership operating alongside it to fight the disease, are woefully under-staffed. The latter has just three staff to co-ordinate procurement, projections of demand and technical assistance to countries seeking to acquire malaria drugs.

The pharmaceutical sector, led by Novartis, GlaxoSmithKline and Sanofi-Aventis, is already helping in the work to find new drugs and experimental vaccines. But it would be in the industry's own interests to second experienced staff to the WHO to create a better co-ordinated and staffed system that would provide the greater support and predictability the companies need to produce malaria treatments speedily and at cost. A new centralised mechanism for planning, purchasing and distribution may be necessary.

That leaves a final challenge for the developing world. Much money already ear-marked for ACTs by the Global Fund has not been used. That partly reflects suspicion about long-term international support and funding for ACTs. But it is also the result of bureaucracy, corruption and misplaced priorities. Recipient nations need to invest more in building up their own healthcare systems and improving distribution to ensure the best drugs are brought to their own people.

Financial Times