Global Fund [to 24 October 2015]
http://www.theglobalfund.org/en/news/
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News
Gavi and Global Fund Statement on Malaria Vaccine Recommendations
23 October 2015
GENEVA – Today’s recommendations by two advisory bodies to the World Health Organization, the Strategic Advisory Group of Experts on Immunization (SAGE) and the Malaria Policy Advisory Committee (MPAC), for use of the RTS,S malaria vaccine are a step toward making the vaccine available in countries with a heavy malaria burden as well as an opportunity to assess its likely real world impact.
They have called for pilot implementations of the vaccine in three to five settings in sub-Saharan Africa. This follows an earlier four-year trial of the vaccine that found it safe and effective, providing 39 percent efficacy at preventing clinical cases of malaria.
Replicating that success rate in a non-clinical setting poses challenges. The RTS,S vaccine requires four doses and the last dose is critical for sustaining the protective effect of the vaccine. The first three doses of the vaccine will be administered to children between 5 and 9 months of age and the fourth dose is given around the second birthday. This is partially outside the existing immunization schedule in which most vaccines are administered to infants 6 to 14 weeks after birth, potentially posing logistical challenges to health systems in low-income countries. Further assessing the feasibility of providing these vaccinations and the resulting impact is therefore a prudent approach…
News
Malawi and Global Fund Deepen Partnership
22 October 2015
LILONGWE, Malawi – Malawi and the Global Fund are strengthening their partnership by signing grants worth more than US$332 million, to expand treatment and prevention for HIV, TB and malaria and build resilient and sustainable systems for health. This brings the total Global Fund commitment to Malawi to US$616 million from 2014-2017.
The financial resources provided through the Global Fund come from many sources and partners, represented at the signing ceremony today by the United States, the European Union, the United Kingdom, Germany, Japan, Ireland and Norway, as well as technical partners such as UNAIDS and WHO…
News
Global Fund Statement on Cambodia’s Programs against Malaria
20 October 2015
Cambodia has made impressive progress against malaria, with a 70 percent decline in the number of cases from 2009 to 2014, and a sharp reduction in deaths in the same period.
However, the situation remains critical, and preliminary data on an increase in malaria cases in parts of Cambodia since mid-2014, as well as resistance to artemisinin-based combination therapies, carries serious implications for the broader Mekong region.
The Global Fund is working with key partners, including the Government of Cambodia and the United Nations Office of Project Services and others, to take all possible measures to reverse the recent increase.
The Global Fund implements a framework of accountability that requires transparent reporting on investments in health, so that a maximum of available resources go toward serving people affected by malaria and other diseases.
The Global Fund has a zero tolerance policy for fraud and corruption, and requires a high degree of transparency and accountability from all partners, even in challenging operating environments where governance and accountability systems do not meet international standards.
In Cambodia, the Global Fund is working with the Ministry of Health to address implementation challenges and to support efforts that maximize results and impact and that further strengthen systems for health to serve the people of Cambodia.