Senegal

Praziquantel Donation Program

Merck KGaA’s Praziquantel Donation Program, in partnership with the World Health Organization (WHO), aims to fight schistosomiasis in Africa. Schistosomiasis is a parasitic worm disease that is the second most prevalent and devastating parasitic disease in tropical countries after malaria. Infection occurs when human skin comes into contact with fresh water contaminated by snails carrying the schistosome parasites, which migrate through the body and spread the infectious disease. It represents the 2nd most severe burden for African children after malaria, and is considered as one of the most neglected tropical diseases. The consequences of an infection are particularly serious for children, as schistosomiasis stunts growth and cognitive development and also lead to anemia. WHO reports more than 200 million infected people in Americas, Africa, the Middle East, Southeast and the Western Pacific.

Takeda Initiative with Global Fund

The Takeda Initiative is an endowment made by Takeda Pharmaceutical, with an annual value of JPY 100,000,000 (approximately USD 1 million). It is designed to support the Global Fund to Fight AIDS, Tuberculosis and Malaria over the period 2010-2019, primarily for the training of health care workers and strengthening of health care systems in Africa. Controlling the spread of the three major infectious diseases is one of the eight targets set by the United Nations Millennium Development Goals (MDGs).

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.

Sanofi-aventis Children's Programs

Sanofi-aventis supports a number of projects in developing countries, the main purpose of which is to help improve children's health.

Sanofi-aventis & EPIVAC

EPIVAC (from EPIdemiology & VACcinology) is a comprehensive, one-year, on-the-job professional training program in epidemiology, applied computing, vaccinology and management of health programs for public health officers in West Africa, culminating in an inter-university diploma in 'Organization and Management of Public Immunization Programs in Developing Countries' awarded by the universities of Cocody-Abidjan (Ivory Coast) and Paris-Dauphine (France). The program is a Sanofi Pasteur, the vaccines division of sanofi-aventis, contribution to the GAVI Alliance.

Sanofi-aventis - DNDi Malaria Medicine

In April 2005, sanofi-aventis signed an agreement with Drugs for Neglected Diseases initiative (DNDi) to develop a new medicine against malaria, in response to a call from the World Health Organization (WHO) for malaria be treated by drug combinations to combat resistance. DNDi and sanofi-aventis have developed a fixed-dose combination (FDC) of two antimalarial compounds, artesunate and amodiaquine (ASAQ) that is easier to use and more affordable than any other combination currently available.

PMTCT: Abbott Rapid HIV Test Donation Program

Each year, approximately 800,000 babies around the world become infected with HIV during their mothers´ pregnancy, during birth or through breastfeeding.

Pfizer Global Health Fellows

The Pfizer Global Health Fellows program utilizes the professional expertise of Pfizer employees through specialized volunteer assignments with nonprofit organizations to improve health care services for underserved communities around the world. Since 2003, more than 230 employees with a range of technical skills have served in 39 nations for 3-6 month assignments investing nearly 200,000 hours of skills-based service to help increase the capacity of nonprofits organizations providing health care to the underserved (in the reporting period, 54 Global Health Fellows were deployed).

Pfizer Diflucan Partnership

Pfizer created the Diflucan Partnership in 2000 to provide treatment for two AIDS-related fungal infections in developing countries. Since the program's inception, Pfizer has over provided USD 1.1 billion of products and its program partners distribute millions of Diflucan (fluconazole) treatments free of charge to governments and NGOs in 63 developing countries in Africa, Asia, the Caribbean and Latin America. Pfizer has also provided training and education materials to 20,000 healthcare professionals.

Pfizer - Mobilize Against Malaria

Unveiled at the Clinton Global Initiative in 2006, Mobilize Against Malaria is Pfizer's signature social investment in malaria, supporting programs to reduce the malaria burden in three hard-hit African countries, Ghana, Kenya and Senegal, over a five year period (2007-2011). Under this USD 15 million program, Pfizer helps four leading NGOs to close critical gaps in malaria treatment, training, and public demand for quality services. In Ghana, Pfizer is helping to bring the public and private sectors together to find new solutions to the malaria challenge.

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