Researchers
who evaluated a global subsidy for malaria treatment say it had a substantial
impact in a short space of time. Publishing their results in The Lancet, the
global health experts acknowledged that the scheme had been "highly
controversial". The Affordable Medicines Facility for malaria (AMFm) was called into question by Oxfam last week. The research says it reduced the price of drugs and led to more
treatment.
AMFm
was launched in seven African countries by the Global Fund with the aim of
bringing down the price of the most effective form of malaria treatment, to
discourage problems with resistance. The researchers, led by a team from London
School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine, found the subsidy led to large falls
in the price of drugs in most of the pilot schemes. They said: "There had been concern that
the poorest would not benefit from the programme, because the drugs were not
free.”The effect of AMFm in Niger and Madagascar was limited, with low orders. "In
all other pilots, it's likely AMFm had a dramatic effect on drugs sold through
the private for-profit market.”These changes were substantial and achieved in
only a few months, which showed the power of tapping into the distributional
capacity of the private sector."
Oxfam
has criticised the scheme for focusing on "untrained shopkeepers" to
help deliver treatment in rural communities - but supporters of AMFm claim
these objections are purely ideological.
US
opposition
The
evaluation did not measure health outcomes, and the researchers said data on
the use of treatment was not yet available.
In
an accompanying comment article, 10 eminent scientists noted "unremitting opposition"
to AMFm from the United States, and appealed for the scheme to be preserved in
its current form when the Global Fund's board decides its future next month.
The
scientists said: "This programme, when fully implemented, rapidly met its
benchmarks despite the many constraints, expectations and unrealistic timelines
imposed on it. "We must acknowledge that an efficient approach to
subsidising anti-malarial drugs has worked, making them available in the
private sector where people go to buy them."
BBC News
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