U.S. Must Increase Capacity For Global Health R&D, Anticipate Global Disease Threats
Washington Post: Why aren’t we producing medications for looming global disease threats?
Mel Spigelman, physician and president and chief executive of TB Alliance
“…[A new Global Health Technologies Coalition] analysis reveals that over the past six years, [U.S.] taxpayer funding for global health research has been stagnant or declining. … Managing health threats through emergency allocations is both ineffective and inefficient — and doesn’t provide the drugs and vaccines that can stop the next unexpected disease outbreak before it starts. … Today, U.S.-led partnerships in health innovation are poised to deliver a treasure trove of new prevention, treatment, and diagnostic tools targeting a wide range of neglected diseases. But lacking sufficient and consistent support, these tools will get stuck in the pipeline and new research initiatives will not start…” (3/26).
The KFF Daily Global Health Policy Report summarized news and information on global health policy from hundreds of sources, from May 2009 through December 2020. All summaries are archived and available via search.