GSK
Announces New Commitments to Fight HIV/AIDS in Sub-Saharan Africa with a Special
Focus on Care and Treatment of Children Andrew
Witty, Chief Executive Officer of GlaxoSmithKline, today announced a series of
new initiatives targeted at improving research, development, and access to HIV/AIDS
medicines for children in Sub-Saharan Africa and supporting healthcare for people
living with HIV and AIDS. His
announcements build on commitments unveiled in February aimed at expanding access
to medicines and encouraging new research into diseases that disproportionately
affect the world's poorest countries. The
new initiatives focus primarily on the care and treatment of children with HIV/AIDS.
More than two million children live with HIV/AIDS, almost all of them in Sub-Saharan
Africa, with the vast majority of children being infected with HIV through mother-to-child
transmission. Speaking
at the Positive Action Zingatia Maisha HIV programme in Kibera, Kenya, Mr. Witty
said: "Despite progress that has been made over the past few years, the treatment
of children with HIV/AIDS remains a significant unmet medical need. Firstly,
we must do a better job at preventing HIV in children. Today we are announcing
a new "Positive Action for Children" Fund which we will support with
up to £50 million over 10 years. This Fund will be for NGOs and others who
work to prevent mother-to-child-transmission and who work with orphans and vulnerable
children. Secondly,
GSK should use its strength and expertise as a research-based company to find
and develop new medicines. We will therefore make available £10 million
as seed money to support a new public private partnership approach for paediatric
HIV research. In
addition to fostering research, we are also setting out new commitments to increase
access to HIV medicines in collaboration with other companies. This includes developing
new fixed-dosed combination treatments for adults and children, and extending
our voluntary licensing policy to include abacavir. Our objective for Africa
is clear - to make existing medicines as widely available as possible while at
the same time ensuring sustained investment into R&D for a new generation
of medicines." The
new targeted measures GSK will pursue designed to improve the availability of
HIV medicines in Sub-Saharan Africa are: New
'Positive Action Children Fund' - GSK intends to invest up to £50
million available over 10 years to form the 'Positive Action for Children fund'.
The investment will support NGOs and others working with pregnant mothers to try
and prevent mother-to-child-transmission (MTCT) of HIV in the developing world
with a particular focus on Sub-Saharan Africa. The fund will also be used to help
vulnerable children who have been orphaned as a result of parents dying from HIV
and AIDS. £10
million seed funding to support a Public Private Partnership approach aimed at
researching and developing more ARVs for children - With more than
two million children living with HIV/AIDS in Africa, there is a clear case for
dedicated funding targeted at developing new paediatric formulations and medicines.
GSK will therefore make available an initial £10 million for a partnership
with other private and public sector bodies to address both the R&D and access
challenges associated with HIV in Sub-Saharan Africa. New
commitment to seek collaborations with other companies to research and develop
fixed-dosed combinations (FDCs) - GSK is currently undertaking a comprehensive
review of its portfolio to establish the technical feasibility and medical benefit
of developing new combination treatments with other medicines currently available
for HIV treatment. GSK
will extend its existing Voluntary Licensing Policy to include abacavir
- A new voluntary license has been agreed, on a non-exclusive basis, with South
Africa based Aspen Pharmacare Ltd for the manufacture of abacavir [Ziagen}. GSK
will not charge royalties for this voluntary license, in an effort to help reduce
prices further. GSK's
commitment to HIV - These new commitments complement existing measures
that GSK implements to improve global access to HIV treatments, including our
policy of not-for-profit pricing for HIV medicines for those countries most in
need. GSK
granted its first voluntary license (VL) for ARVs in 2001 and has now negotiated
eight licensing agreements for our ARVs in Africa. Our licensees supplied 279
million tablets of their versions of Epivir and Combivir to Africa in 2008.
This represents more than 50 per cent growth over 2007, and 130 per cent more
than in 2006. We welcome this trend as it gives customers in sub-Saharan Africa
greater choice and contributes to better security of supply. In
April 2009, GSK and Pfizer announced an innovative agreement to create a new,
world-leading specialist HIV company focused on delivering significant improvements
in treatment and access. It also brings renewed focus on HIV with an industry-leading
pipeline to deliver new HIV treatments. Today's announcement is an indication
of the commitment that the new company will bring to fighting HIV/AIDS in the
world's poorest countries. The
new company will continue GSK and Pfizer's strong record of access initiatives
and community support for HIV. GSK's long-standing Positive Action programme will
transfer to the new company, maintaining a focus on prevention, tackling stigma
and discrimination, and building capacity and treatment literacy within the global
community. Since 2002, GSK has conducted 65 partnership projects across 63 countries
and the new company will continue to invest in Positive Action. Mr.
Witty is in Kenya and has lived and worked in Africa, running GSK's business in
South Africa in the 1990s. He made these announcements at the Zingatia Maisha
HIV programme (meaning "Carefully Consider Life") in Kibera, which is
located in the outskirts of Nairobi. Kibera is the largest slum in Africa and
is similar in size to New York City's Central Park, about 1.5 square miles. With
a population of more than 1 million people, the population density is 30 times
that of New York City. Most people living in Kibera have little or no access to
basic necessities such as electricity, clean water, toilet facilities and sewage
disposal. There are approximately 50,000 AIDS orphans surviving in Kibera, often
cared for by grandparents or in overcrowded orphanages. The
Zingatia Maisha programme operates in the middle of Kibera, and provides peer-group
support for people living with HIV and AIDS, encouraging good nutrition and educating
about treatment adherence. GSK's Positive Action provides funding for the programme
in partnership with a consortium of organisations including AMREF, The Elizabeth
Glaser Paediatric AIDS Foundation and the Kenyan Ministry of Health. GlaxoSmithKline
- one of the world's leading research-based pharmaceutical and healthcare companies
- is committed to improving the quality of human life by enabling people to do
more, feel better and live longer. For further information please visit www.gsk.com |