1 / 13

UNIVERSITIES ALLIED FOR ESSENTIAL MEDICINES

UNIVERSITIES ALLIED FOR ESSENTIAL MEDICINES. That one in every six people on this globe suffers from a disease of poverty? That ten million people die each year from diseases that have available cures? That, in the time it takes to read this slide, 5 people have died from preventable causes?.

jenas
Télécharger la présentation

UNIVERSITIES ALLIED FOR ESSENTIAL MEDICINES

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. UNIVERSITIES ALLIED FOR ESSENTIAL MEDICINES

  2. That one in every six people on this globe suffers from a disease of poverty? • That ten million people die each year from diseases that have available cures? • That, in the time it takes to read this slide, 5 people have died from preventable causes? Did you know...

  3. Universities Allied for Essential Medicines • International organization • United States • Europe • Canada • Brazil • Works to construct creative, new approaches to improving the development and delivery of public health goods • Focuses on Neglected Tropical Diseases What is UAEM

  4. to determine how universities can help ensure that biomedical end products, such as drugs, are made more accessible in poor countries and • to increase the amount of research conducted on neglected diseases, or those diseases predominantly affecting people who are too poor to constitute a market attractive to private-sector R&D investment. National Objectives

  5. Buruli Ulcer • American Trypanosomiasis- Chagas Disease • Breakbone Fever-Dengue haemorrhagic fever • Guinea Worm Disease-Dracunculiasis • Fascioliasis • African Sleeping Sickness-Human African trypanosomiasis • Black Fever-Leishmaniasis • Leprosy • Elephantiasis-Lymphatic filariasis • Neglected zoonotic diseases • River Blindness-Onchocerciasis • Snail Fever-Schistosomiasis • Soil transmitted helminthiasis • Trachoma • Yaws Neglected Tropical Diseases

  6. Called diseases of poverty • Generally in 3rd world countries • Rich countries got rid of them long ago • Pharmaceutical companies have no financial gains • No money to be made means no new medicines developed Why NTDs?

  7. When a University develops a drug, they sell rights to it via a license to a company. That company then patents the drug and has the only rights to produce it for a set number of years. This allows them to charge literally anything they want for profit. What can help? Global Access Policies with universities can allow the license to be accessible to generic companies as well as the big drug companies. Patent Laws and Universities.

  8. Scientists at Yale University discovered one of the first AIDS drugs, a molecule known as stavudine. Within a few years of its release, stavudine helped change HIV/AIDS from a rapid death sentence to a manageable condition. But stavudine was not reaching millions of desperately suffering people because they lacked the money to purchase it. Working with students on campus, Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF) urged Yale, as the patent-holder, to help increase access to the urgently needed drug. MSF’s request exploded into a student campaign that gave birth to Universities Allied for Essential Medicines. The d4t (stavudine) Story

  9. Yale and Bristol-Myers Squibb jointly announced that they would allow generic manufacturers of Stavudine to compete in certain markets, thus lowering the price of the drug from $15,000 per patient per year to just $55! The d4t (stavudine) Story Cont.

  10. 50 cents Campaign • Global Health Symposium • Health RSO Day • Global Access Week - Spring What is UAEM at CMU?

  11. For ALL majors • Anything members want to focus on can be a goal of the organization • Chance to make a difference Who can be a part of UAEM?

  12. Biweekly meetings • Learn about other parts of the world • Work to raise money and educate people in the fights against tropical diseases • Have the chance to participate in a global movement • New organization = new ideas What Can you Expect?

  13. “There is no them, there is only us.” Contact us at: Cmich.uaem@gmail.com Check out the National Website at: www.uaem.org

More Related