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Come la schiavitù e la discriminazione razziale, la povertà non è naturale. Essa è  prodotta dall’uomo e può essere vinta ed eradicata dalle azioni degli esseri umani
Nelson Mandela (2005)

MINOLTA DIGITAL CAMERA

by Daniele Dionisio*

Member, European Parliament Working Group on Innovation, Access to Medicines and Poverty-Related Diseases

UNCTAD 2016: Mappa della Povertà

 

Quante povertà?

Il rapporto UNCTAD 2016 suddivide la povertà in ‘relative’, ‘consistent’, ed ‘extreme-absolute’, dove l’ultima definizione chiaramente attiene alla condizione di quanti impossibilitati al godimento di sufficienti livelli di nutrizione e di buona salute. Per queste fasce di popolazione la Banca Mondiale ha introdotto nel 1991 la soglia di 1.25 dollari di introito giornaliero (poi elevata a 1,90 dollari nel 2015, ma tuttora presente nel target 1.1 dei recenti Sustainable Development Goals-SDGs delle Nazioni Unite) quale standard di povertà assoluta nei Paesi più poveri.

Nel 1990 circa 1.9 miliardi di persone (più di un terzo della popolazione mondiale) sopravvivevano con meno della soglia giornaliera predetta. Entro il 2015 la percentuale era però scemata al 12% significando che più di un miliardo di persone erano state sottratte alla più pesante miseria. Indiscutibilmente un grande successo, anche se circa 836 milioni di persone versano tuttora in povertà assoluta.

Progresso disomogeneo                           

I successi più eclatanti sono documentati in Asia orientale e Pacifico dove la proporzione di quanti in povertà estrema (soprattutto in Cina e India) è crollata da più dell’80% negli anni ottanta del secolo scorso a meno dell’8% oggi. Meno drammatico, ma significativo, in Asia meridionale nello stesso periodo la percentuale si è ridotta dal 59% al 19%, mentre in Africa sub-sahariana il dato ha visto una flessione dal 57% degli anni novanta  al 43% odierno.

Al di là dei progressi, povertà estrema sfortunatamente permane in aree asiatiche, caraibiche e, soprattutto, sub-sahariane. In Madagascar versa in povertà assoluta l’82% della popolazione, il 78% in Burundi, il 77% nella Repubblica Democratica del Congo (RDC), il 71% in Malawi.

Almeno in 15 Paesi sub-sahariani il 50% delle rispettive popolazioni è in povertà estrema. E il problema non interessa solo l’Africa se è vero che Haiti e molta parte dell’arcipelago della Micronesia mostrano livelli di povertà estrema coinvolgenti più del 50% degli abitanti.

Questi dati indicano che, nonostante il declino globale, la riduzione della povertà è tuttora disomogenea nelle diverse aree geografiche.

Al riguardo, povertà estrema permane concentrata in Africa sub-sahariana e Asia meridionale, con l’80% della popolazione legata ad un introito giornaliero inferiore a 1.25 dollari. Nel 2011 le Nazioni Unite riferivano che, mentre il 60% delle fasce più povere era confinato in 5 precisi Paesi (Bangladesh, Cina, RDC, India e Nigeria), i progressi delle regioni caraibiche nella riduzione della povertà tra gli anni novanta e il 2011 avevano sofferto di eccessiva lentezza.

In questo contesto, la povertà delle fasce giovani di popolazione è destinata a configurarsi nei prossimi decenni quale sfida maggiore per i Paesi a crescita demografica rapida.

Un approccio allargato

Con l’obiettivo primario di eradicare la povertà estrema, il Goal 1 dei Sustainable Development Goals-SDGs è imperniato su una visione ampia della povertà quale fenomeno poliedrico e multidimensionale in un mix complesso di cause economiche, sociali e ambientali. Coerentemente, i targets del Goal 1 chiamano alla eradicazione della povertà estrema in generale, ma pure alla riduzione di quella propria delle fasce più giovani o di quella correlata alla discriminazione sessuale; esortano alla introduzione di ridistribuzione sociale per proteggere poveri e vulnerabili; alla adozione di uguali diritti e uguale accesso alle risorse economiche e ai servizi; al contenimento dell’impatto di shock climatici, economici e sociali; all’implementazione da parte dei  Paesi di politiche e dinamiche atte a ridurre ed eliminare la povertà.

La mina delle disuguaglianze

L’impegno internazionale ad eradicare la povertà dovunque e in ogni suo aspetto è racchiuso dunque nel Goal 1 degli SDGs quale naturale prosecuzione del Goal 1 dei precedenti Millennium Development Goals. 

Purtroppo, la mina vagante delle disuguaglianze rende arduo scommettere sul conseguimento di povertà zero entro il 2030. Quale fondato ottimismo, infatti, se ad oggi circa 830 milioni di persone ancora sopravvivono con meno di 1,90 dollari di introito giornaliero, se 1.8 miliardi di persone guadagnano meno di 2,50 dollari al dì, se, infine, un guadagno medio giornaliero di 250 dollari finisce nelle tasche di solo l’1% della popolazione mondiale mentre il 50% non supera i 7 dollari?

PER APPROFONDIRE

Mandela calls for action on ‘unnatural’ poverty https://www.theguardian.com/world/2005/feb/03/hearafrica05.development

UNCTAD: Goal 1 No Poverty http://stats.unctad.org/Dgff2016/people/goal1/index.html

UN: Sustainable Development Goals – SDGs https://sustainabledevelopment.un.org/?menu=1300

UN: The Millennium Development Goals Report 2015 http://www.un.org/millenniumgoals/2015_MDG_Report/pdf/MDG%202015%20rev%20(July%201).pdf.

UN: World population prospects, the 2015 revision https://esa.un.org/unpd/wpp/Download/Standard/Population/

UN: Transforming Our World: The 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development https://sustainabledevelopment.un.org/content/documents/21252030%20Agenda%20for%20Sustainable%20Development%20web.pdf

World Bank (2005). Poverty lines. In: Introduction to Poverty Analysis. Chapter 3. Washington, D.C. http://siteresources.worldbank.org/PGLP/Resources/PovertyManual.pdf

Ferreira F, Jolliffe D M and Prydz E B (2015). The international poverty line has just been raised to $1.90 a day, but global poverty is basically unchanged. How is that even possible? Let’s Talk Development – A blog hosted by the World Bank’s Chief Economist  http://blogs.worldbank.org/developmenttalk/international-poverty-line-has-just-been-raised-190-day-global-poverty-basically-unchanged-how-even

United Nations Economic Commission for Africa (2015). Economic Report on Africa: Industrializing through trade. UNECA. Addis Ababa http://www.uneca.org/publications/economic-report-africa-2015

Woodward D and Abdallah S (2010). Redefining Poverty: A Rights-based Approach. New Economics Foundation London http://dnwssx4l7gl7s.cloudfront.net/nefoundation/default/page/-/publications/RBPLTechPub.pdf.

 

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*Daniele Dionisio is a member of the European Parliament Working Group on Innovation, Access to Medicines and Poverty-Related Diseases. Dionisio is former director of the Infectious Disease Division at the Pistoia City Hospital (Italy), and Head of the research project PEAH – Policies for Equitable Access to Health.

d.dionisio@tiscali.it  http://www.peah.it/  https://twitter.com/DanieleDionisio

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

International Pressure on India’s Drug Industry: The Hide-and-Seek Game of Modi’s Administration

India’s pharmaceutical industry is among the biggest ones in the world and plays a major role in the market especially for less developed countries. Regulatory warnings and bans on Indian drug factories for failing manufacturing standards are hitting the sector since several years. The government is making a political move to accomplish with international blames but how much concrete the change will be still remains unclear

Pietro_picture-150x150

by Pietro Dionisio

Degree in Political Science, International Relations

Cesare Alfieri School, University of Florence, Italy

 International Pressure on India’s Drug Industry

The Hide-and-Seek Game of Modi’s Administration

 

The Indian pharmaceutical sector accounts for about 2.4 per cent and 10 per cent of the global pharmaceutical industry in value and volume terms respectively, and is expected to expand at a 15.92 per cent Compound Annual Growth Rate (CAGR) from US$ 20 billion in 2015 to US$ 55 billion by 2020.

Additionally, the government plans to set up a US$ 640 million venture capital fund to boost drug discovery and strengthen pharmaceutical infrastructure at a time when the market is dominated by generic drug industries accounting nearly 80 per cent of the whole Indian pharma production. The Pharma Vision 2020 by the government’s Department of Pharmaceuticals aims to make India a major hub for drug discovery.

What’s more, over the last 10 years, the export of India’s generic pharmaceuticals has reshaped the global drug business. Once known as exporters of bulk active pharmaceutical ingredients (APIs), Indian generic drug makers have moved upwards on the global value chain and managed to gain a foothold in regulated markets such as the US and Europe. Nowadays, India is the largest provider of generic drugs globally accounting for 20 per cent of global generic drugs exports. This makes India a lifeline for millions of people in developing countries, especially in Africa.

But things could unfortunately change since India faces pressure from the United States (US) and Big Pharma lobbies to roll-back its in force health patent rules that still put people first against corporate profits.

In May, a first alert was played by the Narendra Modi central administration by issuing a new policy document about intellectual property rights (IPRs) at large (not only health-related). The new direction is likely to be an effect of the India-US working group created a couple of years ago to review IPRs and loosen pressure on the Country. In the document, seemingly compliant with the WTO’s agreement on TRIPS (Trade Related Intellectual Property Rights), IPRs are meant to be an economic tool allowing India to provide economic growth while safeguarding the public interest. However, just at a careful reading, the words leave room for more than one interpretation making the legislation ambiguous.

And there is more.

In an effort to improve the economy, the government is trying to reform its drugs law to make it easier for companies to do business while ensuring the safety and efficacy of medicines. As such, the government is willing to open the country to foreign investors as regards all economic, including pharmaceutical, sectors. Relevantly, the administration will allow foreign investors to buy up to 74 per cent of Indian drug companies without prior government approval.

So conceived, the move is raising concerns about its effects on domestic pharmaceutical industry. Admittedly, due to  high sector fragmentation, a gradual takeover by foreign investors is likely to impair India’s role as a supplier of low-cost generic medicines to much of the world and create upheaval in the global generics market.

Not to mention that the new direction would also aim to improve regulatory standards and bring drug industry into line with global norms and enforcement of rules, including a fresh look at penalties and punishment for companies violating manufacturing and clinical trial guidelines.The move follows regulatory warnings and bans in recent years on Indian drug factories for failing manufacturing standards.

All things taken together, it is bad news for poor people that the Indian Ministry of Health and Family Welfare has been in touch with the US and EU regulators to get advices and suggestions and make the new law (likely to be ready soon) aligned with international standards. Perhaps, will there be some additional pressures on India? All people in need touch wood.

Otherwise, there is no doubt that the new bill could have the potential to solve significant issues affecting the pharma sector including relevant to the weak Indian drug control system.

Inherently, at a time when Indian drugmakers are defending themselves from poor manufacturing quality accusations from US and European regulators, or have been hauled up before the court for alleged data integrity and sanitary violations, the new bill, once enforced, could hopefully help solve the problem.

Like a coin, the political move embarked on by India shows two faces. It is not clear, indeed, if the government is really changing its position about pharmaceuticals. The words used in the official documents are ambiguous, though it is clear that the Indian administration is trying to slacken the international pressure on its drug sector. However, a real change shouldn’t preferably be made happen considering the role that Indian generic drug makers cover internationally for the sake of poor people living in less developed countries. On the flip-side, since more control on drugs quality is vital, the new law could serve as a much-needed tool.

UNDP-led ADP: Working Paper

undpAccess and delivery partnership

A Pipeline Analysis of New Products for Malaria, Tuberculosis and Neglected Tropical Diseases, August 2016

http://adphealth.org/upload/resource/ADP_Pipeline_Analysis_Report.pdf 

Presentation

This report, published by the UNDP-led Access and Delivery Partnership, is a comprehensive survey of the product pipeline for products that show promise in improving current approaches towards the prevention, diagnosis and treatment of malaria, tuberculosis (TB) and neglected tropical diseases (NTDs).

The aim is to identify potential challenges in the introduction of new health products in developing countries. New products may come with requirements for greater safety monitoring, or changes to the procurement and supply systems, as well as affordability considerations. Where relevant information is available, it can contribute to the planning and design of interventions to enable access to such new products for the patients who need them.

This report compiles information on potential new vaccines, diagnostics and medicines for TB, malaria and three NTDs – human African trypanosomiasis (HAT), leishmaniasis and Chagas disease. It is hoped that such analysis of the product pipeline across the product categories of vaccines, diagnostics and medicines can help to highlight common issues or problems, as well as promote better synergies for implementation research. The report is intended as an on-going initiative, to regularly update the information so that policy-makers and other actors have access to key information on new health products.

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The international Good Clinical Practices Code: Time for a Global Approach

The WHO and ICH (International Conference for Harmonization) GCP codes have not been updated since 1995 and 1996 respectively. Currently, a partial revision of the ICH GCP code is ongoing, but the update process does not seem sufficiently inclusive. If GCP codes are meant to set standards pertinent and applicable at global level, then a more comprehensive revision is needed, characterized by more transparency and more inclusiveness together with adequate representation of researchers, sponsors, regulators and ethical reviewers from LMICs

raffaella ravinetto

by Raffaella Ravinetto*

Head of Clinical Trials Unit, Antwerp Institute of Tropical Medicine

The international Good Clinical Practices Code: Time for a Global Approach

 

The Good Clinical Practices (GCP) codes are meant to set globally applicable standards for the conduct of clinical trials on pharmaceutical products on human subjects (1). They are “an international ethical and scientific quality standard for designing, conducting, recording and reporting trials that involve the participation of human subjects”. Compliance with GCP “provides public assurance that the rights, safety and well-being of trial subjects are protected, consistent with the principles that have their origin in the Declaration of Helsinki, and that the clinical trial data are credible” (2).

There are two international GCP codes: the one of the World Health Organization (WHO) (1) and the one of the International Conference of Harmonization of Technical Requirements for Registration of Pharmaceuticals for Human Use (ICH) (2). Despite their similarities, they originate from quite different frameworks. The WHO is an international organization that brings together 194 Member States, and it is mandated to direct and coordinate international health within the United Nations system (http://www.who.int/about/en/). The ICH brings together the regulatory authorities and pharmaceutical industry from the European Union, the United States, Japan, Canada and Switzerland, and it is mandated “to improve, through harmonisation, the efficiency of the process for developing and registering new medicinal products in the form of the International Conference on Harmonisation of technical requirements for registration of pharmaceuticals for human use” (http://www.ich.org/home.html). Despite its limited mandate, the ICH has the ambition to become a global standard, and today most clinical research actors in Low- and Middle-Income Countries (LMICs) refer to the ICH rather than WHO GCP code. Non-ICH countries are involved in ICH through the Global Cooperation Group, but in practice their contribution seems to be quite limited (3),

Early critics of the ICH GCP code contended that it derived from informal consensus (considered as the weakest approach to guidelines development) and that it was written in absence of a systematic up-to-date search for the relevant literature (4). Others argued that the international GCP codes were “created by a small number of regulatory agencies and drug companies from industrialized nations, with little input from developing countries” (5).  Leading academic researchers also contended that the international GCP codes lack consideration for the challenges met by clinical researchers in LMICs (6, 7). The latter is not surprising. While other guidelines and regulations are subject to periodical revisions, the WHO and ICH GCP codes have not been updated since 1995 and 1996 respectively. Thus, they reflect the situation of more than twenty years ago, when multi-centre clinical trials were mainly conducted in Western contexts, and they do not take into account the challenges met today, in the context of “globalization of clinical trials”, with more and more trials carried out in LMICs (8). Since the international GCP codes guide and orient most national legislators and most funding agencies, their failure to address the challenges of researchers in LMICs may result in insufficient protection of research subjects and communities in these contexts.

We are not aware of any update of WHO GCP. Conversely, a partial revision of the ICH GCP code is ongoing, to modernize it “by supplementing with additional recommendations which will facilitate broad and consistent international implementation of new methodologies” (http://www.ich.org/fileadmin/Public_Web_Site/ICH_Products/Guidelines/Efficacy/E6/E6_R2__Addendum_Step2.pdf). The fact that the revision was accompanied by an open consultation (till 31st January 2016) surely provided a positive opportunity to try to have an impact. But the update process was poorly known and it does not seem sufficiently inclusive. In practice, it is not clear whether significant inputs came from the non-ICH region, and to what extent they will be taken into account.

If GCP codes are meant to set standards pertinent and applicable at global level, then a more comprehensive revision is needed, characterized by more transparency and more inclusiveness. In particular, adequate representation of researchers, sponsors, regulators and ethical reviewers from LMICs should be ensured. The revised guidelines should be strongly rooted in ethics, be sensitive to the different cultural and social perspectives, and take into account trials- and context-related challenges, for being at the same time “global”, “context centered” and “patient centered”.

This paper derives from a doctoral thesis, “Methodological and ethical challenges in non-commercial North-South collaborative clinical trials”, carried out at KU Leuven (Belgium). The manuscript is available at https://lirias.kuleuven.be/handle/123456789/517274.

References 

1) World Health Organization (WHO). Guidelines for Good Clinical Practices for trials on pharmaceutical products. 1995. WHO Technical Report Series No. 850, Annex 3. Geneva, Switzerland. Last accessed on 14/09/2015 at http://apps.who.int/medicinedocs/pdf/whozip13e/whozip13e.pdf

2) International Conference of Harmonization (ICH). ICH Tripartite Guideline for Good Clinical Practices E6 (R1), 10th June 1996. Last accessed on 14/09/2015 at http://www.ich.org/fileadmin/Public_Web_Site/ICH_Products/Guidelines/Efficacy/E6/E6_R1_Guideline.pdf

3) Specht S and Klingmann I. ICH: strenghts, weaknesses, and future tasks. Ther Inn & Reg Science 2014; 48(3):357-61

4) Grimes DA, Hubacher D, Nanda K, Schulz KF, Moher D and Altman DG. The Good Clinical Practice guideline: a bronze standard for clinical research. Lancet 2005; 366(9480):172-4

5) Rennie S. The FDA and Helsinki. Hastings Cent Rep 2009: 39(3):49

6) White NJ. Editorial: Clinical trials in tropical diseases: a politically incorrect view. Trop Med Int Health 2006; 11(10):1483-4

7) Lang T, Cheah P Y and White N J. Clinical research: time for sensible global guidelines. Lancet 2011; 377(9777):1553–5

8) Lang T and Siribaddana S. Clinical trials have gone global: is this a good thing? PLoS Med 2012;  9(6):e1001228

 

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*Raffaella Ravinetto holds a Pharmacy Degree from the University of Torino and a Postgraduate Diploma in Tropical Medicine from the Antwerp Institute of Tropical Medicine.   

After a seven-year experience as a Clinical Research Scientist in the private pharmaceutical sector, she worked in emergency and development programs in the Balkans and in Africa. In 2002, she joined Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF), where she followed various dossiers on access to essential medicines and quality of medicines, while performing regular field assessments. She currently works at the Antwerp Institute of Tropical Medicine, as head of the Clinical Trials Unit, coordinator of the Switching the Poles Clinical Research Network and promoter of Quamed (a Network promoting evidence-based strategies for universal access to quality medicines). She was president of the Italian branch of MSF (2007-2011).   

Her main areas of interest include North-South collaborative clinical research, research ethics (particularly in relation to resource-constrained settings) and access to health. 

 

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Zika vaccines show early promise 

MEDIA AND PUBLIC HEALTH: HOW PRINT MEDIA CAN ALLEVIATE PRESSURE ON THE PUBLIC HEALTH SECTOR 

Kevin Rudd: My 10 principles to reform the United Nations, before it’s too late 

PHM activities at the World Social Forum, Montreal 9-14 August 2016 

Be careful what you wish for: will local NGOs fall into the same traps as their northern cousins? 

ANDI Newsletter, August 09, 2016 

Health Affairs Disparities, Hospital Financing & More, August 2016; Volume 35, Issue 8 

Against North Carolina’s HB2 Law: Mental Health And Discrimination Cannot Co-Exist 

UN chief urges large nations to ratify Paris climate accord 

Funding Conservation Through the Lens of Climate Change 

IMPEL Water conference 2016, Firenze, Italy, 5-6 October 2016 

Communication, environment and behaviour:  EEA Report No 13/2016 

Indigenous land rights: How far have we come and how far do we have to go? 

Sexual Violence Against Women Draws New Funder Attention 

UNCTAD: Goal 1 No Poverty 

Global food prices down slightly in July — UN agency 

Development of an open-source web-based intervention for Brazilian smokers 

Health Affairs Today: request for abstracts 

Breaking News: Link 201

Breaking News Links, as part of the research project PEAH (Policies for Equitable Access to Health), aim to focus on the latest challenges by trade and governments rules to equitable access to health in resource-limited settings

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Breaking News: Link 201

 

Comprehensive evaluation of the implementation of the Global Strategy and Plan of Action on Public Health, Innovation and Intellectual Property- web-based public survey 

‘These Agreements Depend on Secrecy in Order to Pass’ 

One year on, the SDGs provide reason for hope 

Civil Society and Global Goals – lessons for engagement in the era of the SDGs  

Streamlining R&D Core Areas for Global Health Reporting 

Why Health Care Innovation Lags (And What To Do About It) 

From communities to global policy: Innovations to access medicines underway 

Pay ’em or Don’t Charge ’em? The Case of Conditional Cash Transfers and User-Fee Exemptions in Nepal for Pregnant Mothers 

WHO: Public health round-up 

Think the Aids epidemic is over? Far from it – it could be getting worse 

One Zika Vaccine Should Protect Against Any Virus 

Zika information campaign: Improving media coverage on the virus, epidemics and crisis 

Principles of Tobacco Control: Extinguishing The Habit 

Textual analysis of sugar industry influence on the World Health Organization’s 2015 sugars intake guideline 

The Clinical and Public Health Challenges of Diabetes Prevention: A Search for Sustainable Solutions  

A time for action: antimicrobial resistance needs global response 

WHO marks World Breastfeeding Week, calls for the right of all women to breastfeed anytime, anywhere  

Food fortification for impact: a data-driven approach 

First-Year Evaluation of Mexico’s Tax on Nonessential Energy-Dense Foods: An Observational Study 

The Other Clinton Foundation: A Look at Bill and Hillary’s Personal Philanthropy 

Tata Trusts, Global Fund join hands to fight diseases 

The Power Of Four: Accelerating Interprofessional Collaboration In Nursing 

Human Rights Reader 392 

On debt and taxation, rich and poor countries are worlds apart 

Why drug trials need to respect vulnerability 

Setting Universal Health Coverage Priorities: India and Dialysis  

The BRIC nations’ response to climate change is critical to the fate of the planet 

Climate change threatens the basis of food security in Latin America and the Caribbean 

How Funders Are Using the Power of Their Investments to Impact Climate Change 

Commission announces platform on better management of food waste