vaccines

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Three reasons why CIA faked vaccines may cause contagion of damage

Flickr, johanoomen

New Action Thriller: From UNICEF with Love?

Now that the CIA has acknowledged running a deceptive, if not totally fake, vaccination program in Pakistan as part of the effort months ago to hunt down Osama bin Laden, here are three reasons why this episode is prompting an angry response by those who work against global poverty and disease:

  1. This isn’t just about vaccines — about fighting terrorism vs fighting polio.
  2. Health workers and aid workers overseas have to be seen as neutral and independent if they are to operate effectively and safely.
  3. National security isn’t achieved just by hunting and killing bad guys. It’s also achieved through humanitarian efforts, aid efforts and other forms of international collaboration based on mutual trust.

So let’s review where we are so far with the strange case of “The Immunizer of Abbottabad.”

After The Guardian on Monday first revealed this bizarre scheme aimed at collecting DNA from bin Laden family members, the CIA apparently has confirmed to the Washington Post that it did set up the vaccination program in northern Pakistan. Here’s what some anonymous official reportedly told the newspaper:

A senior U.S. official said the vaccine campaign was conducted by medical professionals and should not be construed as a “fake public health effort.”

“People need to put this into some perspective,” said the official, speaking on condition of anonymity because of the sensitivity of the issue. “The vaccination campaign was part of the hunt for the world’s top terrorist, and nothing else.”

“If the United States hadn’t shown this kind of creativity, people would be scratching their heads asking why it hadn’t used all tools at its disposal to find bin Laden.”

Actually, many seem to be scratching their heads asking how the Central Intelligence Agency (given its middle name) came up with such a far-fetched scheme — it doesn’t appear to have worked — and how it can argue with a straight face that this was, in addition to a covert op, a legitimate vaccination program.

To begin with, just giving kids a real Hepatitis B vaccine doesn’t mean it’s not fake public health. Continue reading

Al Jazeera: The great billion-dollar drug (and vaccine) scam?

Flickr, anolob

The pharmaceutical industry often trots out some pretty stunning numbers to explain why their drugs cost so much. A journalist and South African scholar scrutinizes the numbers for Al Jazeera.

In the first part of a two-part series called “The great billion dollar drug scam,” investigative journalist Khadija Sharife begins her analysis (interestingly, oddly, labeled by Al Jazeera as an opinion piece) with a focus on the Gates Foundation-backed global vaccination project known as GAVI, the Global Alliance for Vaccines and Immunization:

Alongside pneumococcal diseases such as meningitis and pneumonia, rotavirus-related diarrhoea is a primary childhood killer in developing countries, thought to snuff out the lives of 500,000 children each and every year. An overwhelming 85 per cent of these children are African and Asian. The need for medical miracles is as great as ever, but corporate mispricing generates huge profits, while driving up the price of life saving medicines.

British-based drug corporation GlaxoSmithKline (GSK) recently offered a five-year deal to supply poor nations with 125 million doses of the rotavirus vaccine – Rotarix – at $2.50 a dose, just five per cent of the current going price in Western markets. Through the GAVI group, the international vaccine agency financed by developed nations such as the UK, it is hoped that GSK and pharmaceutical multinational Merck – who, between them, dominate the rotavirus vaccine market – will provide a secure line of low-cost drugs for as many as forty countries in the near future.

But is it really a discount, and if so, who is paying the cost?

I think this is easy enough to answer: Yes, these are clearly discounts (about one-tenth what the vaccine costs in the U.S.) and we in the rich world are basically subsidizing cheaper vaccines for the poor world.

Is it enough of a discount? Some think not. Others think we’re getting a pretty good deal and need to be more sympathetic to the much-maligned drug industry. Continue reading

Owen Barder: Should we pay less for vaccines?

Owen Barder

Owen Barder, a development expert at the Center for Global Development, asks “Should we pay less for vaccines?

Barder’s post was prompted by the critical response some advocacy groups, like Oxfam and Médecins Sans Frontières (aka Doctors Without Borders) made after the successful fund-raising effort on June 13 by the Global Alliance for Vaccines and Immunization, a massive project getting vaccines out to poor kids.

As I noted at the time, these organizations and others were glad to see GAVI receive $4.3 billion in new funding but they felt the alliance was a bit too friendly to the drug industry and too willing to accept industry pricing.

This issue, of what constitutes fair vaccine pricing for poor countries, came up repeatedly this week at Seattle’s Pacific Health Summit. I intend to write about that in a separate post later.

For now, I urge you to read Barder’s excellent take on the critics of GAVI and the vaccine manufacturers. Continue reading

Media bashed at Pacific Health Summit; journalist told not to talk

Maybe this is part of the problem.

I just attended a session at the Pacific Health Summit that explored the difficulties, and dilemmas, of dealing with public misunderstandings around vaccine safety.

As a journalist, I wanted to join in the discussion. Oops. My bad. As I wrote earlier, there are some who think this meeting is a bit restrictive when it comes to public dialogue. I hadn’t been aware I wasn’t supposed to talk in session.

I was told by summit officials that what I did was inappropriate and a violation of their rules. Sigh …. Continue reading

Moving vaccines away from the horse-and-buggy stage

Today is the first full day of the Pacific Health Summit, which this year is focused on vaccines and “harnessing opportunity in the 21st Century.”

Harnessing seems like the right word.

Vaccines are kind of horse-and-buggy. They are perhaps the single most cost-effective and powerful health intervention that exists.

Yet we still grow the annual flu vaccine in chicken eggs. And we usually don’t exactly know why a vaccine works — because we don’t fully know how the immune system works.

That’s a problem for scientists and vaccine manufacturers. But it’s also a chronic problem of public perception, because this can make it hard for experts to convince vaccine skeptics and fearful parents that the shots are safe and low-risk.

Last night, at the opening dinner of the summit, which some have taken to calling the Davos of global health (because of its exclusivity and high-powered attendees), one of the world’s leading scientific experts in immunology said the science of vaccines today is “dreadful.”

The Pacific Health Summit, I should note, is an off-the-record meeting and I’m required to get permission before quoting anyone. I wasn’t able to catch up with Tony Fauci, the director of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, to ask him if I could report that he said that. So for now, let’s assume he didn’t.

But other scientists, who met in Seattle just before the Pacific Health Summit, said much the same thing.

Tom Paulson

Global Health Research Congress

Across the street from the summit, in the waterfront Marriott Hotel, was the second annual Global Health Research Congress. There, vaccine experts from academia and industry spent two days trying to come up with a set of basic recommendations to give to the policymakers, government representatives and others at the summit.

Today, at the summit, Ken Stuart of Seattle Biomed (and the organizer of the research congress), presented the scientists’ top three recommendations:

  • Share information
  • Work together
  • Support new technologies

Well, duh. That sounds pretty obvious and easy. It took this incredibly smart bunch two days to come up with that?

Actually, it turns out none of those three recommendations will be that easy to accomplish — just as it’s easy enough to say we should get all children around the world vaccinated but not easy at all to make it happen.

I won’t go into all the details of the debate, but the reason why none of those recommendations will be easy is that vaccines are created by at least two very different kinds of people — basic scientists working in academia and the researchers and business folks who work in the drug industry. They don’t always work well together.

For example, here’s one response to the first suggestion that scientists be more strongly encouraged (i.e., required and enforced) to share their data on the government’s web-based system known as clinicaltrials.gov.

“If you do that, you’ll just muck everything up and nobody will be happy,” said Rip Ballou, a top vaccine scientist at GlaxoSmithKline working on malaria vaccines. Part of the problem is that academicians and industry researchers, Ballou said, have very different incentives and needs.

The idea of sharing information and working together is nice, he said, but until there is greater appreciation of how to bridge that gap there won’t be much more than talk.

Stuart’s colleague at Seattle Biomed, Alan Aderem, agreed:

“Teamwork in industry is absolutely essential,” said Aderem. “But teamwork in academics is the kiss of death,” because of the need to ‘publish or perish’ as an individual.

Stuart said the point of the research congress is to find some way to resolve these differences, bridge these gaps, to support the kind of basic science that will move vaccines from the horse-and-buggy stage while also making it work for industry.

“We have two very different cultures here,” Stuart said.

Growing the ONE Campaign in Seattle

What happens when you mix a world-famous rock band, a couple of billionaire philanthropists with millions of people around the world willing to hit the streets, swarm social media sites and lobby politicians to do the right thing?

You get the ONE Campaign.

ONE Campaign Seattle

Members of ONE on the streets of Seattle, taking names and fighting poverty

Earlier this week, the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation and others celebrated a big victory in the effort to combat one of the world’s greatest inequities — millions of child deaths in poor countries every year due to vaccine-preventable diseases like pneumonia and severe diarrhea.

An initiative originally launched a decade ago out of Seattle by the Gates Foundation, the Global Alliance for Vaccines and Immunization, GAVI, received $4.3 billion from governments and donors to expand its mission of vaccinating children in poor communities.

This was more than was requested ($3.7 billion) and translates into vaccinating 250 million children over the next four years, which experts say will prevent four million child deaths. GAVI’s work so far is estimated to have already saved 5 million lives.

How was this accomplished?

How were governments, under pressure right now to cut back on foreign aid due to the economic downturn, convinced to so strongly support this initiative that has much lower “brand” recognition than, say, the Global Fund to Fight AIDS, Tuberculosis and Malaria or the latest natural disaster?

Bill Gates likely had some influence, sure. He’s long been a big proponent of vaccines. But even the Microsoft billionaire can’t always get governments to do what he wants.

That’s where his friend Bono and the ONE Campaign come in.

Gates Foundation

Bono on a recent tour of the new Gates Foundation campus, flanked by Melinda Gates and U2 lead guitarist Edge. Bill's in the back, pointing

The ONE Campaign is primarily Bono’s creation. It’s a grassroots and advocacy lobbying organization that was launched by Bono and others, with funding from the Gates Foundation, to support efforts aimed at fighting poverty — and diseases of poverty — in Africa and other poor countries. Continue reading

Gates Foundation’s global vaccinations scheme too friendly to drug industry, critics say

UN

Bill Gates at World Health Assembly

Vaccines are “miracles,” Bill Gates likes to say, because of their power to prevent death and disease so simply and at such a low cost.

Today, at a meeting in London held to increase funding for one of global health’s biggest success stories, the Global Alliance for Vaccines and Immunization, governments and international donors agreed to boost funding for the vaccine intiative by $4.3 billion — exceeding GAVI’s request of $3.7 billion

The new money — most of which came from the British government, the Norwegian government and the Gates Foundation — will allow the vaccine alliance to vaccinate 250 million more children worldwide and prevent at least 4 million child deaths over the next five years.

The funding allows expanding the initiative’s portfolio to include two new vaccines against two big killers, pneumonia and diarrhea.

“For the first time in history, children in developing countries will receive the same vaccines against diarrhea and pneumonia as children in rich countries,” said Bill Gates, co-chair of the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation. “Together we must do more to ensure that all children – no matter where they live – have equal access to life-saving vaccines.”

In this time of economic recession, when governments and donors are reluctant to even maintain, let alone increase, foreign aid, GAVI’s success at fund-raising is extraordinary.

There’s little question GAVI is making a big difference in terms of global health, having so far prevented something like 5 million deaths. I’ve written several posts recently emphasizing this point, and to some extent perhaps sounding a bit like an advocate for GAVI.

It’s hard not to be when you look at what this project has accomplished in terms of lives saved.

But there are some questioning whether GAVI is, in fact, saving the most lives possible by getting the biggest bang for the buck. This question was raised today, at the London meeting and at the press conference. Continue reading

Last big push in advance of the vaccine summit, on blogs and British media anyway

UNICEF

A shot at life

On Monday, at a big international conference in London focused on expanding global access to childhood vaccinations, one of the big questions is if the Obama Administration will step up with the U.S. share of the funding.

Nearly two million children in poor countries die annually from mundane vaccine-preventable diseases that children in wealthy nations don’t die from. Vaccines are cheap, compared to most health interventions, and can cheaply save millions of lives. As I said yesterday, this shouldn’t be a hard sell.

Oddly, the hard sell is mostly going on in the blogosphere (see ONE Campaign, for example) and being covered by overseas media.

The American media isn’t paying much attention … sigh.

The Global Alliance for Vaccines and Immunization was launched a decade ago out of Seattle, by the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation and initially operated by PATH. It remains the single-biggest project the Seattle philanthropy has ever done, and yet has been fairly low-profile.

I wrote about the launch of this project almost exactly a decade ago, when it was just getting started (and when newspapers had money for travel and foreign correspondences).

GAVI has since prevented an estimated 5 million deaths — more than the Global Fund to Fight AIDS, TB and Malaria, or any global health initiative out there right now. This is pretty much a big fat success story.

Still, hardly anybody knew (or knows) the story. The lack of public recognition didn’t matter so much before, but has turned into a funding problem. So there’s this big media blitz going on in advance of the Monday summit, where governments and donors will be asked to declare what level of support they intend to provide to GAVI.

Here are some further news reports/comments leading up to Monday:

BBC: It’s “make or break” for global vaccines initiative

The Independent: Four-hour meeting on vaccines could save 4 million lives

Orin Levine, Huffington Post: 10 years of vaccine progress in 10 days

Amanda Glassman at the Center for Global Development: Will Obama provide adequate money for vaccines?