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Neglected-Disease Research Funding Hits Record High (nature.com)

Reader schwit1 shares a report: Research funding for diseases that predominantly affect people living in poverty hit a record high in 2017, according to a report released on 23 January by Policy Cures Research, a global-health think tank in Sydney, Australia. At US$3.6 billion, investments into 'neglected' diseases were higher than in any year since 2007. A surge from 2016 to 2017 included a rise in funding to fight neglected diseases generally, as opposed to targeting individual maladies.

Anna Doubell, director of research at Policy Cures Research, says that the launch of several trials testing new Ebola drugs, diagnostics and vaccines in response to the Ebola crisis in West Africa between 2014 and 2016 might be giving donors hope that investments into neglected diseases pay off. "The amount of progress made in a short period of time after the Ebola outbreak might have brought in optimism about what is possible," Doubell says.

1 of 37 comments (clear)

  1. Re:I'd guess that some challanges are easier by ShanghaiBill · · Score: 3, Informative

    An ebola outbreak can be stopped dead in its tracks with soap and hand sanitizer.

    I support medical research, but poor countries mostly need education and better public health measures.

    Clean water makes a huge difference. But electricity makes a huge difference too. Electric cooking and lighting removes soot from indoor air, relieving respiratory problems, allows students to read and study later, and saves money that people otherwise spent on fuel. Electric pumps make the clean water easier to achieve.

    Decentralized electricity based on solar panels is making a big difference in poor countries.