By Anjali Sharma
UNITED NATIONS – World Health Organization said on Tuesday that a new UN-partnered project to distribute essential childhood cancer medicines has begun in Uzbekistan and Mongolia, the first rollout for a project due to be piloted in 6 nations.
The agency reported that 400,000 children are diagnosed with cancer every year and most live in low-income countries where medicines are either unaffordable or unavailable, resulted in an overwhelming 70 per cent death rate.
In high-income countries, more than 8 in 10 children who are diagnosed survive, WHO said.
Dr. Andre Ilbawi, Technical lead of the WHO cancer control programme said “The platform is now set to close this gap”.
WHO’s goal is working with leading US paediatric facility St. Jude Children’s Research Hospital to reach 50 countries where needs are greatest, providing medicines to treat 120,000 children with cancer in the next five to seven years.
Dr Ilbawi told journalists in Geneva that it is an ambitious goal, it is achievable.
“This marks the beginning of a global movement to provide children with cancer the medicines that they need, regardless of where they live, or their ability to pay”, he insisted thanks to the Global Platform for Access to Childhood Cancer Medicines.
The launch of the platform has been made possible by a $200 million investment by St. Jude’s marked the largest financial commitment ever made for childhood cancer medicines globally.
The initiative also draws on the experience of the UNICEF and the Pan American Health Organization Strategic Fund, which procure and distribute the medicines.
“This innovation has now become a needed beacon of hope for families around the world”, Dr. Ilbawi said.
The platform is not a donation programme, but rather a joint venture involving governments, the pharmaceutical industry, NGOs and local stakeholders such as hospitals.
The remaining 4 countries of the pilot phase that will soon receive cancer medication are Ecuador, Jordan, Nepal and Zambia.
El Salvador, Moldova, Senegal, Pakistan, Ghana and Sri Lanka will join the programme too, WHO said.
WHO stressed that the needs of a child suffering from cancer are complex and demanding, ranging from qualified professionals to pharmaceutical companies and communities that are ready to support a family through the traumatic process of diagnosis.
Dr. Ilbawi said with the launch of this platform come hopes of scaling it up. “The vision of giving every child a chance to fight cancer – no matter where they are born, is now becoming a reality”.
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