Rapid Expansion of "Pharmerging" Markets. The pharmerging markets of China, Brazil, India, South Korea, Mexico, Turkey and Russia are forecast to grow at a combined 14 - 15 percent pace to $105 - $115 billion. Along with the pharmaceutical industry's increased focus on these high-growth markets, these countries are benefiting from greater government spending on healthcare and broader public and private healthcare funding – which is driving greater access to, and demand for, innovative medicines.Related Post: Growing market for malaria drugs
Join longtime health journalist Christine Gorman in the search for what works, what doesn't and what needs to happen next in global health.
Thursday, October 30, 2008
Pharma Boom in Emerging Markets
Wednesday, October 29, 2008
Kaiser Foundation Launches News Service
Friday, October 24, 2008
Lancet Series on China's Health
Lancet is being a good global citizen in providing this material free of charge but navigating their web site continues to be something of a challenge.
Also, reading between the lines, it seems the rivalry between Harvard's Lincoln Chen and Bill Hsiao continues apace. Chen is co-author of four articles in the series while Hsiao does not appear at all.
Both men are experts on health care systems in general and China in particular. Chen often starts the conversation by focusing on health care workers while Hsiao begins with entire systems. Seems like you might want both views.
Thursday, October 23, 2008
Logging Malawi Video
Logging video means you write down a description of the action in different sequences, what people are saying and the time code from the video so you can easily jump to it if you need it.
Today I finished a whole series on Nurse Grace Nyirongo as she gives malaria medication and checks temperatures on the pediatric ward at Embangweni Mission Hospital and talks about her life and work.
It’s all in preparation for writing scripts that will combine different video sequences with photos and audio. It’s time-consuming work and, frankly, a bit tedious. But it’s allowing me to relive the trip to Malawi and revisit my deep respect and admiration for the men and women who work in the hospitals I visited.
Wednesday, October 22, 2008
Pandemic Flu Ethics at Seton Hall
Wonder if they will take up the ethics of withholding flu vaccine from North Korea, Iran and other countries the U.S. considers rogue states?
Meanwhile in Niger
The focus in the Niger piece is on what's going right in the battle against various neglected tropical diseases. And it features local villages distributing medications in places where there aren't enough nurses and doctors to do so.
Tuesday, October 21, 2008
What's Really Going On in Niger?
Yesterday, Lamine accused MSF of exaggerating ongoing malnutrition problems in the Maradi region. Today Allié said in a press teleconference that the situation is worse than the government is willing to admit. "Despite all their efforts, the health care staff in the hospitals and health centers I visited cannot respond to the influx of malnourished children," Allié said, after returning from a visit to the Maradi region of Niger.
The government of Niger suspended MSF's operations back in July. Allié says another group, Action Contre la Faim, was given the boot in August.
The stakes are particularly high this time of year when food stocks are traditionally low before the harvest begins.
Allié took pains to say the MSF has worked with the Niger government before and she praised the government's past successes against malnutrition. But she was baffled by the latest setback and particularly worried to hear a government leader saying, "If MSF is not present, then there is no malnutrition in the area. MSF is creating malnutrition.”
Actually, Lamine's anti-aid agency stance sounds a lot like what I've gleaned from the Internet about a Norwegian documentary called "Sultbløffen" (or "The Hunger Bluff") that aired in March of 2008. The gist of the documentary is that aid agencies undermine local agricultural efforts and exaggerated the extent of the Niger famine in 2005 to justify their own existence. I hesitate to mention it since I haven't seen it, don't speak Norwegian and all the references to it I can find are suspiciously identical as well as identically vague as to who was behind the documentary.
If you've been to Niger recently, please share your thoughts on what's behind this unusual standoff.
Related post: Meanwhile in Niger
Monday, October 20, 2008
Science Looks at Plumpy'Nut Patent
As regular readers know, I've followed this controversy for almost exactly a year now. (See two key posts here and here.) I even started a separate blog devoted just to Plumpy'Nut and patents while at Harvard when the parameters of my fellowship did not allow me to write freelance pieces. (I quickly learned public health experts don't want to become journalists in their own right.) So I applaud any attention this issue gets from traditional media.
Two data points I want to remember from Enserink's excellent article:
". . . Nutriset and the French Institute of Research for Development obtained patents for Plumpy’nut that last until 2018 and are valid in Europe, North America, and about 30 African countries. Nutriset has threatened lawsuits to keep others—including Compact in Norway and MSI in Germany—from selling similar pastes. . . ."
and
". . . the patent [IS NOT] valid in many malnutrition hot spots, including India . . . "
As I learned in my own reporting, Enserink says it's unclear the Plumpy' Nut patent could withstand a challenge.
But I was most intrigued by what Michael Golden, the developer of an older non-patented nutritional supplement, had to say. Golden told Enserink that
"the pressure should not be on Nutriset but on the French government; [Golden] hopes that France’s foreign minister, Bernard Kouchner, a physician who helped found MSF in 1971, will intervene."
Back to the Usual Suspects?
But it looks like we're swinging back toward centralization of media sources. In a story that's mostly about the declining popularity of Technorati and Bloglines, Nick Carr has some very trenchant insights into the growing centripetality of the web.
Friday, October 17, 2008
Investing in Africa's Private Health-Care Biz
According to conference organizers, "Over the next decade, $25 to $30 billion in new investments will be needed in health care assets, including hospitals, clinics, and distribution warehouses, to meet the growing health care demands of sub-Saharan Africa. It is estimated that the market for health care will more than double by 2016. With a total health expenditure of $16.7 billion in 2005, roughly 60 percent—predominately out-of-pocket payments by individuals—was financed by private parties, and about 50 percent was captured by private providers."
Read more about the US-Africa Private Health Sector Forum at the Corporate Council on Africa website.
Update: CGdev.org has a good Dec. 9 post, with worthy links, on the public-private debate (via Jon at GlobeMed, in the comment feed)
Keeping Science a Secret
Thursday, October 16, 2008
Discouraging News on Infant Mortality in US
Key point: "Increases in preterm birth and preterm-related infant mortality account for much of the lack of decline in the United States′ infant mortality rate from 2000 to 2005."
Tuesday, October 14, 2008
Look East, Young Idealist
There's no doubt economic power is shifting eastwards, as Philip Stephens says. And, I would argue, along with that shift goes the power to set the agenda in global health.
Monday, October 13, 2008
US: No Vaccines for North Korea, Sudan, Other Rogue States
"could makes it harder to contain an outbreak of bird flu among chickens in, say, North Korea, which is in the region hardest hit by the virus. Sudan and Iran already have recorded cases of the virus in poultry and Syria is surrounded by affected countries. Cuba, like all nations, is vulnerable because the disease is delivered by migratory birds."
Effect Measure takes the story one step further in comments about information hoarding and siloing. As the AP points out, the Centers for Disease Control didn't even know the vaccine embargo is official policy. Given the nature of pandemics, which are no respecters of borders, CDC would have presumably opposed the policy on scientific grounds.
Making Flu Pay in China
Friday, October 10, 2008
Melamine Scandal Hits Europe
New DFID Blog
Thursday, October 9, 2008
Worst Case Scenario
Not saying it will happen. Just imagine it.
Makes you realize the need to continue funding global health and development initiatives in the midst of the inevitable downturn.
Not saying that will happen either.
Jobs: Global Health Policy Director
Blogs, Fellowships, Rights and Global Health
Jon Shaffer explores whether healthcare is a right.
I plan to study Tara Smith's paper in PLOS Biology on "Advancing Science through Conversations: Bridging the Gap between Blogs and the Academy." I have found that the same reticence that academics have about joining the global conversation permeates the global health community as well.
Wednesday, October 8, 2008
How Wars End
This 12-minute segment blew me away. It carefully covers the ground most American kids learned in grade school and then, bam, before you know we're going from Appomattox and the American Reconstruction to reconstruction in Iraq.
Most impressive of all, it leaves you thinking, "Wow, why didn't anyone make that connection before?"
You can also read the transcript but the audio had a much greater impact on me.
Here's a taste:
Sharp: Ayers thinks the messy struggle that followed the war is one reason Americans cling to the story of Appomattox. He says the gentlemanly handshake between two great generals gives us the illusion of a clean ending.
Ayers: “We just love that story, not thinking about days after that Abraham Lincoln's assassinated, two years after that military reconstruction begins, a decade after that Reconstruction finally comes to an end. Americans are most uncomfortable with the period of Reconstruction of anything else in our history, because it's not a story, it doesn't have any kind of shape to it, it just kind of explodes.”
Sharp: After the invasion of Iraq, Ayers was dismayed that in all the public debate over post-war reconstruction in 21st century Iraq, no one bothered to look at post-war reconstruction in the 19th century American South. After all, it involved many of the same elements: military occupation, democracy-building and economic development. But administration officials and pundits alike ignored it.
Conflicting News on Malawi's Maize
Tuesday, October 7, 2008
Global Health And Polymeme
Although there are other compound categories like "green and energy," there is still no category for global health. Just the tried-and-true-and ultimately not very informative "health" category.
As I've written before (here, here and here), the ways the traditional media and now the cybermedia define categories means that global health often falls between the cracks.
But maybe that just means there's an untapped opportunity for enterprising global healthalites. At any rate, Polymeme is intriguing enough that I'm going to check it out over the next few days.
Monday, October 6, 2008
Wall Street Down; Africa Up?
"For the first time, Africa's economic growth is sustaining an upward trend amid a global economic downturn induced by the financial crisis, high fuel and commodity prices and the immediate impact of measures against climate change." (The East African)