A “manifesto” for combatting NTDs
26 May 2010 Comments (0)Despite evidence that the global burden of neglected diseases is as great as that of any other serious disease, financial support for elimination efforts and R&D has been inadequate, say the authors of a new “Manifesto for Advancing the Control and Elimination of Neglected Tropical Diseases”, published this week.
Writing in PLoS Neglected Tropical Diseases, Peter Hotez, President of the Sabin Vaccine Institute and Distinguished Research Professor of The George Washington University Medical Center, and Bernard Pecoul, Executive Director of Drugs for Neglected Diseases initiative (DNDi), outline in eight points why the global community should increase financial support for NTD control and elimination efforts and research and development.
The manifesto states that:
· All NTDs are “tool ready” with cost-efficient and effective interventions that could be implemented now, even if for some diseases such tools are far from being perfect or complete.
· At the same time that NTDs are tool ready they are also tool deficient, signifying that the tools are incomplete, or inadequate, to sustain elimination efforts.
· NTDs have received little attention from the international community during the past ten years despite their large disease burden.
· Increasing evidence indicates an association between NTD prevalence and conflict and violation of human rights.
· NTDs can be particularly destabilizing and disrupt agricultural productivity and food security. Many poor societies with high NTD burdens have been recently engaged in a civil or international conflict or are currently at war.
· Sustained involvement by the WHO and other international health agencies is crucial for current and future NTD control and elimination efforts.
· Nothing is more important to the success of global NTD control than the involvement of communities themselves and disease-endemic countries’ health ministries.
· Achievement of Millennium Development Goal 8 (”develop a global partnership for development”) will rest with stakeholders — health ministries, affected communities, public–private partnerships, large and small non-governmental organizations, etc. — establishing a well-functioning international strategy for NTD control.
While acknowledging that policymakers are “slowly beginning to appreciate the importance of NTDs” — evidenced by the creation of a new department of Neglected Tropical Diseases at the World Health Organization; TDR’s 10-year strategic plan; and the identification, by NIH’s Francis Collins, of neglected diseases as a research priority, among other developments — Hotez and Pecoul argue that the challenge of NTDs calls for a manifesto — “a public declaration of motives by a government or by a person or group regarded as having some public importance.”
Moreover, they add, by doing more to tackle NTDs, the global health community can make progress toward Millennium Development Goals.
“[NTD control] activities have facilitated the delivery of additional interventions such as insecticide-treated bed nets, antimalarial drugs, micronutrients, and childhood immunizations,” they write.
The authors urge scientists working on NTDs to increase collaboration and identify funding opportunities and cost-efficient interventions.
“By highlighting important challenges in the fight against NTDs, this ‘manifesto’ calls on the global community for urgent, renewed, and innovative efforts.”
