Malaria & Neglected Tropical Diseases
Highlighting the commitment from the Kigali declaration and looking at how we can deliver political and financial commitment to eradicate malaria and NTDs and avoid resurgence. This Mediaplanet campaign was distributed with the Guardian newspaper and launched on www.globalcause.co.uk on 16-May 2022
Highlighting the commitment from the Kigali declaration and looking at how we can deliver political and financial commitment to eradicate malaria and NTDs and avoid resurgence.
This Mediaplanet campaign was distributed with the Guardian newspaper and launched on www.globalcause.co.uk on 16-May 2022
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A PROMOTIONAL SUPPLEMENT DISTRIBUTED ON BEHALF OF MEDIAPLANET, WHICH TAKES SOLE RESPONSIBILITY FOR ITS CONTENTS
Invest in
malaria and
NTDs to fight
future disease
outbreaks
On World Malaria Day, and ahead of the malaria & NTD summit in
Kigali, Rwanda, it is important we recognise the role of strengthening
health systems to prepare for the next global disease outbreak.
©James Roh/Cotopaxi Foundation
WRITTEN BY
Andrea Lucard
Executive Vice
President of Corporate
Affairs, Medicines for
Malaria Venture
WRITTEN BY
Michelle Childs
Head of Policy
Advocacy, Drugs for
Neglected Diseases
initiative
Paid for by Medicines for
Malaria Venutre (MMV)
Before the COVID-19 pandemic, the term
“global health” was often used with
reference to low and middle-income
countries. If the past two years have taught
us anything, it is that we are all “global
health”—North or South, rich or poor, microbes and
particles connect us all.
This World Malaria Day is the perfect time to
recognise that investments in combatting diseases
that often occur amongst the poorest populations
allow countries to build more resilient health
systems. These systems can be deployed in response
to the next global health emergency.
Unlocking innovation
Outbreaks are more likely to occur where health
systems are fragile, and treatment and prevention
tools are scarce. When financial incentives for health
research are low or non-existent, such as in the
context where malaria and neglected tropical diseases
(NTDs) prosper, product development partnerships
(PDPs) are a proven path to unlocking innovation.
The PDP model leverages partners from the public
and private sectors to innovate health tools where a
single entity would be unable or unwilling to take on
the investment.
Since their establishment around 20 years ago, a
small community of 12 PDPs have delivered more
than 65 new health technologies that have protected
and saved the lives of more than 2.4 billion people.
Highlights from two of these PDPs include the
first new single-dose treatment to prevent malaria
relapse in over 60 years, developed in partnership
by Medicines for Malaria Venture (MMV) and GSK;
and the first all-oral treatment for sleeping sickness,
developed by the Drugs for Neglected Diseases
initiative (DNDi), Sanofi and the National Sleeping
Sickness Control Programme in the Democratic
Republic of Congo.
Preparing to combat future outbreaks
From the laboratory to the patient, PDPs have
engaged the populations they serve, helping to
expand local expertise and strengthen healthcare
systems. These capabilities can be called upon to fight
disease outbreaks when new health crises emerge.
In Africa, PDPs have helped strengthen local
capacity to research the world’s most neglected, often
deadly, diseases, such as visceral leishmaniasis and
sleeping sickness. DNDi has supported the training
of laboratory technicians, nurses and physicians
to conduct state-of-the-art clinical research for the
treatment of NTDs. In 2020, these trained resources
were quickly mobilised to launch the ANTICOV clinical
trial – a large trial to find treatments for mild-tomoderate
cases of COVID-19 in low-resource settings.
In addition to supporting local research
capability, PDPs are also working to build on
existing manufacturing capacity for medicines
closer to where they are most needed. With only
around 375 pharmaceutical manufacturers, Africa’s
public sector relies disproportionately on imported
medicines for malaria and NTDs – COVID-19
highlighted this vulnerability.
With funding from Unitaid, MMV is supporting
a Kenyan pharmaceutical manufacturer, Universal
Corporation Ltd, and two Nigerian manufacturers,
Emzor and Swipha, in the development of WHOprequalified
preventive medicines for malaria in
pregnancy. This increased self-sufficiency within the
continent will potentially provide not only adequate
supplies of these life-saving medicines, but also
quality-assured medicines for other diseases.
Like other tropical diseases, malaria thrives where
access to basic health services is limited. Common
symptoms, such as fever, have been shown to mask
indications of other infections, including COVID-19.
This burdens health systems and allows for disease
to spread undetected across borders. Through a
project supported by MMV, Transaid (UK) and
Zambia’s National Malaria Control Programme, local
community members — be they fisherman, farmers,
or primary school teachers — use training systems
established for malaria to inform fellow community
members about COVID-19 related policies, such as
handwashing and social distancing.
PDPs invest where others do not and this is
crucial to strengthening global health security.
The next health emergency is likely just around
the corner. In preparation for this inevitability,
sustained and flexible support to the invaluable
work of PDPs is needed.
Find out more at
mmv.org
08 MEDIAPLANET
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