Bangladesh

Sanofi-aventis: My Child Matters

In 2004, sanofi-aventis and the International Union Against Cancer (UICC) launched a mobilization and awareness program called 'My Child Matters', to fight against childhood cancers in emerging countries. The objective is to encourage institutions (hospitals, NGOs, etc.) to develop pragmatic approaches to improve awareness, early diagnosis, access to care and treatment, pain control and better management of the social and cultural aspects of the disease for both children and families.

Novo Nordisk: World Partner Project

The diabetes pandemic will undoubtedly affect developing countries' ability to grow and develop. The World Partner Project (WPP) was launched in 2001 to establish a foundation on which developing countries can build their own diabetes healthcare strategies and ultimately improve access to proper care. The WPP works with local partners, usually health ministries and/or patient organizations, and is funded by a grant from Novo Nordisk.

Novo Nordisk: Differential Pricing on Insulin

Among the targets for UN Millennium Development Goal 8 is a call for partnerships with pharmaceutical companies to provide access to affordable essential drugs in developing countries. Since 2001, Novo Nordisk has offered human insulin to the public health systems in Least Developed Countries (LDCs) at prices which do not to exceed 20% of the average price in Europe, Japan and North America. In 2009, Novo Nordisk offered this pricing scheme to all 49 LDCs, of which 36 used it to buy insulin at or below this price, compared to 32 in 2008.

Novartis Coartem

Coartem is the first World Health Organization-prequalified fixed-dose, artemisinin-based combination therapy (ACT) antimalarial, approved by stringent regulatory authorities and on the WHO Model List of Essential Medicines. Coartem is fast-acting and cures over 97% of patients after a 3-day treatment course. Coartem combines artemether, a derivative of artemisinin (from the Chinese medicinal plant Artemisia annua), with a synthetic substance, lumefantrine, which has not been used as a monotherapy.

Leprosy Elimination

Novartis is providing free treatment for leprosy patients worldwide through its multi-drug therapy.

Global Pharma Health Fund

The Global Pharma Health Fund e.V. (GPHF) is a charitable organization initiated and funded exclusively by donations from Merck KGaA, Darmstadt Germany. In 2007, it took over the work of the former German Pharma Health Fund, which was set up in 1985. The organization aims to improve health care in the context of development assistance, in particular the use of the GPHF-Minilab in the fight against counterfeit drugs.

Global Alliance to Eliminate Lymphatic Filariasis (GAELF)

The Global Alliance to Eliminate Lymphatic Filariasis (GAELF) was created to eliminate one of the world's leading causes of disability and disfigurement as a public health problem by the year 2020. An estimated 120 million people in at least 80 countries of the world suffer from the disease, and one billion (20% of the world's population) are at risk of infection.

GlaxoSmithKline's PHASE Program

GlaxoSmithKline's Personal Hygiene & Sanitation Education (PHASE) project is helping to reduce diarrhea-related disease by encouraging school children to wash their hands. GSK established PHASE in 1998 and has so far invested over USD 7 million in the program. PHASE is run in partnership with AMREF, Save the Children and Earth Institute at Columbia University, as well as national Ministries of Health and Education in countries where the program is active. The program has had impressive results so far.

Children Without Worms

Children Without Worms (CWW) is a partnership between Johnson & Johnson and the Task Force for Child Survival and Development that supports global efforts to reduce soil-transmitted helminth (STH) infections (intestinal worms) in children. Operating through partnerships with governments, communities, and NGOs, CWW seeks to treat 25 million children twice a year, as part of a larger campaign to increase awareness of STH, hygiene education, and the need for improved sanitation infrastructure and access to clean water.

Changing Diabetes in Children

The Changing Diabetes in Children program is part of Novo Nordisk's Access to Diabetes Care strategy and aims at improving availability, accessibility, affordability and quality of diabetes care for children with type 1 diabetes in least developed countries, via partnerships. It also contributes to the achievement of the UN Millennium Development Goals, especially Goal 4: Reduce child mortality and Goal 8: Develop a global partnership for development.

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