Monday, July 21, 2008

Deal Seeks to Offer Drug for Malaria at Low Price - NYTimes.com



 
 

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via www.nytimes.com on 7/18/08

Deal Seeks to Offer Drug for Malaria at Low Price

Published: July 18, 2008

The Clinton Foundation announced Thursday that it had brokered an agreement among several drug makers that it hoped would ensure a steady supply of a crucial malaria medicine at reasonable prices for the world's poor.

The charity, created by former President Bill Clinton, is trying to control spikes in the price of artemisinin, a derivative of the sweet wormwood plant that Chinese scientists turned into the latest miracle drug against malaria.

In 2004, when international donors agreed to pay for artemisinin-based drug cocktails, the price of the raw material soared. In a year, it more than quadrupled, to about $500 per pound from about $115 per pound. (At the time, pharmaceutical executives in China blamed farmers for hoarding the supply.)

The Swiss pharmaceutical maker Novartis, then the only company with an artemisinin-based drug approved by the World Health Organization, absorbed the losses, and makers of generic drugs were scared away from the field.

But by 2006, after farmers rushed to plant more sweet wormwood and pickers gathered it in the wild, the price had plummeted to about $70 a pound. It has remained in that range since.

The complex deal announced Thursday involves two Chinese suppliers of artemisinin, two Indian companies that turn it into active ingredients and two more Indian companies, Cipla and Ipca Laboratories, that produce finished pills.

The Chinese companies have agreed to supply artemisinin at a price of no more than $136 a pound, said Dai Ellis, the foundation's executive vice president for access programs. The drug makers have agreed to buy at that price, but are free to buy elsewhere if they can find it for less than about $125 a pound. In return, they will sell their products at agreed-upon low wholesale prices.

At the moment, with global artemisinin prices well below those levels, the ceiling is "irrelevant," Mr. Ellis said. "Capitalism takes over."

However, he said, donors may soon start subsidizing private-market purchases of such drugs. (In most poor countries, people buy malaria drugs at private pharmacies and shops, while AIDS and tuberculosis drugs are distributed by public hospitals.) Lower prices could create new demand, sending prices of the raw material up again.

It is unclear how much control over the market the arrangement will create. Wormwood is also farmed in Vietnam and Tanzania and grows wild around the world. When prices soared, plans were announced to grow it in South Africa and elsewhere, and to make synthetic versions.

Mr. Ellis said the Clinton Foundation hoped to sign up more suppliers.

It also announced that Cipla and Ipca would produce a new artemisinin-based combination, artesunate plus amodiaquine, for about 30 percent less than its prevailing market price.

Sanofi Aventis, the first company to market a version of this combination approved by the W.H.O., deliberately did not patent it. Novartis's earlier product combines artemisinin with a different drug, lumefantrine.

Daniel Vasella, chairman of Novartis, said he was glad to have more competitors because, even at current artemisinin prices, his company lost 80 cents on each pill it made for public health agencies. With research and distribution expenses, he said, "It has cost us over $100 million."


 
 

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Tuesday, July 15, 2008

Op-Ed Columnist - Nicholas D. Kristof - The Luckiest Girl in the World - Op-Ed - NYTimes.com - Sent Using Google Toolbar

Op-Ed Columnist - Nicholas D. Kristof - The Luckiest Girl in the World - Op-Ed - NYTimes.com

Op-Ed Columnist

The Luckiest Girl

Published: July 3, 2008

This year's college graduates owe their success to many factors, from hectoring parents to cherished remedies for hangovers. But one of the most remarkable of the new graduates, Beatrice Biira, credits something utterly improbable: a goat.

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Fred R. Conrad/The New York Times

Nicholas D. Kristof

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"I am one of the luckiest girls in the world," Beatrice declared at her graduation party after earning her bachelor's degree from Connecticut College. Indeed, and it's appropriate that the goat that changed her life was named Luck.

Beatrice's story helps address two of the most commonly asked questions about foreign assistance: "Does aid work?" and "What can I do?"

The tale begins in the rolling hills of western Uganda, where Beatrice was born and raised. As a girl, she desperately yearned for an education, but it seemed hopeless: Her parents were peasants who couldn't afford to send her to school.

The years passed and Beatrice stayed home to help with the chores. She was on track to become one more illiterate African woman, another of the continent's squandered human resources.

In the meantime, in Niantic, Conn., the children of the Niantic Community Church wanted to donate money for a good cause. They decided to buy goats for African villagers through Heifer International, a venerable aid group based in Arkansas that helps impoverished farming families.

A dairy goat in Heifer's online gift catalog costs $120; a flock of chicks or ducklings costs just $20.

One of the goats bought by the Niantic church went to Beatrice's parents and soon produced twins. When the kid goats were weaned, the children drank the goat's milk for a nutritional boost and sold the surplus milk for extra money.

The cash from the milk accumulated, and Beatrice's parents decided that they could now afford to send their daughter to school. She was much older than the other first graders, but she was so overjoyed that she studied diligently and rose to be the best student in the school.

An American visiting the school was impressed and wrote a children's book, "Beatrice's Goat," about how the gift of a goat had enabled a bright girl to go to school. The book was published in 2000 and became a children's best seller — but there is now room for a more remarkable sequel.

Beatrice was such an outstanding student that she won a scholarship, not only to Uganda's best girls' high school, but also to a prep school in Massachusetts and then to Connecticut College. A group of 20 donors to Heifer International — coordinated by a retired staff member named Rosalee Sinn, who fell in love with Beatrice when she saw her at age 10 — financed the girl's living expenses.

A few years ago, Beatrice spoke at a Heifer event attended by Jeffrey Sachs, the economist. Mr. Sachs was impressed and devised what he jokingly called the "Beatrice Theorem" of development economics: small inputs can lead to large outcomes.

Granted, foreign assistance doesn't always work and is much harder than it looks. "I won't lie to you. Corruption is high in Uganda," Beatrice acknowledges.

A crooked local official might have distributed the goats by demanding that girls sleep with him in exchange. Or Beatrice's goat might have died or been stolen. Or unpasteurized milk might have sickened or killed Beatrice.

In short, millions of things could go wrong. But when there's a good model in place, they often go right. That's why villagers in western Uganda recently held a special Mass and a feast to celebrate the first local person to earn a college degree in America.

Moreover, Africa will soon have a new asset: a well-trained professional to improve governance. Beatrice plans to earn a master's degree at the Clinton School of Public Service in Arkansas and then return to Africa to work for an aid group.

Beatrice dreams of working on projects to help women earn and manage money more effectively, partly because she has seen in her own village how cash is always controlled by men. Sometimes they spent it partying with buddies at a bar, rather than educating their children. Changing that culture won't be easy, Beatrice says, but it can be done.

When people ask how they can help in the fight against poverty, there are a thousand good answers, from sponsoring a child to supporting a grass-roots organization through globalgiving.com. (I've listed specific suggestions on my blog, nytimes.com/ontheground, and on facebook.com/kristof).

The challenges of global poverty are vast and complex, far beyond anyone's power to resolve, and buying a farm animal for a poor family won't solve them. But Beatrice's giddy happiness these days is still a reminder that each of us does have the power to make a difference — to transform a girl's life with something as simple and cheap as a little goat.

I invite you to comment on this column on my blog, www.nytimes.com/ontheground, and join me on Facebook at www.facebook.com/kristof.