 |

NEWS
Brazilian Model for Providing
HIV/AIDS Drugs 'Heralded,' But May Not Work 'Everywhere,'
Brazilian Model for Providing HIV/AIDS Drugs 'Heralded,' But May Not Work
'Everywhere,' NPR's 'Morning Edition' Reports
[Jun 05, 2003]
NPR's "Morning Edition
" today reports on WHO
's selection of Brazil, a country whose approach
to HIV/AIDS has "long been heralded" as a model for the developing world
for its universal provision of free antiretroviral drugs, to assist in the
development of the health agency's HIV/AIDS treatment strategy (Wilson,
"Morning Edition," NPR, 6/5). Brazil's AIDS program director Paulo
Teixeira in May announced that newly elected WHO Director-General Jong
Wook Lee at the WHO annual assembly in Geneva asked him to assist in the
development of the agency's five-year antiretroviral treatment strategy.
Brazil negotiates discounted pricing for the drugs or, if unable to
negotiate a satisfactory price, begins local production of generic copies
of the drugs (Kaiser Daily HIV/AIDS Report
http://www.kaisernetwork.org/daily_reports/rep_index.cfm?hint=1&DR_ID=17833
Lee has said that he would fulfill WHO's promise to provide three million
HIV-positive people in resource-poor countries with antiretroviral drugs
by 2005 (Kaiser Daily HIV/AIDS Report http://www.kaisernetwork.org/daily_reports/rep_index.cfm?hint=1&DR_ID=17878
NPR reports that "not everyone is convinced that Brazil's model can work
everywhere" because the country has a per capita income "considerably
more" than most developing countries, an HIV prevalence "much lower" than
sub-Saharan Africa and a functioning health care system. The NPR segment
includes comments from Dr. Anthony Fauci, head of NIH
's National Institute of Allergy and Infectious
Diseases
; Dr.William Foege, a senior fellow at the
Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation
; and Teixeira ("Morning
Edition," NPR, 6/5). The full segment is available online
in RealPlayer.
©
Speak Out Terms of use
|