Bill Gates: Vaccine funds must be targeted at the poorest
Guardian
13.06.2011
By Liz Ford
Microsoft founder and philanthropist Bill Gates dismissed suggestions that money pledged to the Global Alliance for Vaccines and Immunisation (Gavi) should be directed to middle-income countries, saying funds would continue to go to the world’s poorest, wherever they lived.
Research published last year found that around three-quarters of the world’s poor now live in middle-income countries, and so do the majority of the world’s unvaccinated children.
In an interview with the Guardian on Monday, Gates said: “Most poor people live in the poorest countries. Gavi is very careful. We cover the places where people are in need of vaccines.”
He added that if a country was perceived not to have the money to pay for vaccines, “we need to go into the country to get them to prioritise that spending. We need to do that”.
He added: “Our goal is very simple, if any child doesn’t get the rotavirus or pneumoccocal vaccines [for diarrhoea and pneumonia respectively], we have not done our job.”
Gates, whose foundation, the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation, is a founding partner of Gavi, addressed criticism that the cost of vaccinations continued to be too high and was dominated by large pharmaceutical companies, such as GlaxoSmithKline. Last week, the GSK, along with Merck, Crucell and Sanofi-Aventis, announced they were reducing the cost of their vaccines.
Gates said: “I’m very business-minded about these things and have development experts to understand the true marginal costs of producing vaccines. So what GSK did… was get to the marginal cost to make those vaccines.”
He defended the inclusion of GSK on the Gavi board, saying the company didn’t vote on issues to do with vaccine prices.
At present around 80% of Gavi money goes directly to pay for vaccines, the remainder is used to support country health systems, and delivery and overheads.
Vaccine delivery and health worker shortages are major obstacles for some developing countries, although Gates said he didn’t believe more money should be diverted from the cost of vaccines to meet costs for infrastructure. He acknowledged that sometimes delivery “was tricky” but immunisation, he said, “doesn’t require a doctor”, so the costs are relatively low.
However, Dr Sophie Harman, senior lecturer in International Politics specialising in Global Health at City University London, said donors need to be mindful that investment in vaccines “is not the magic answer to global health issues such as pneumonia and diarrhoea”.
The Gates foundation announced it was giving $1bn to Gavi at the alliance’s pledging conference, hosted by prime minister David Cameron in London on Monday. The amount is part of the $10bn the foundation previously pledged to give over the next decade.
The conference aimed to raise $3.7bn (£2.3bn) to meet a funding shortfall at Gavi over the next five years, which it estimates will save 4 million children’s lives. However, pledging exceeded this amount, hitting $4.3bn. The UK pledged £814m of new funding up to 2015, while the US is believed to have pledged $450m. Brazil and Japan pledged money for the first time, and Australia increased its commitment tenfold.
Full article
Related:
Fox News: Government Paid Millions to Vaccine-Injured Kids
Scientists fear MMR link to autism
Bill Gates wants to register all new babies on the planet for vaccines
Guardian article on overpopulation *
How charities are customarily run: Bono’s Foundation - 99% of the loot not given to the poor
40 billionaires hide behind charity foundations to fund The Cause
The Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation working on Sweat-Triggered Vaccines
Bill Gates and Hillary Clinton backs population control
Children without MMR jabs should be banned from school
Vaccines and the chances of catching Polio?
Experts admit swine flu jab ‘may cause’ deadly nerve disease
Govt Admits Flu Vaccine Causes Seizures In Children
Family to Receive $1.5M+ in First-Ever Vaccine-Autism Court Award *





