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.
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.
Another way to get rid of diseases that predominately affect people living in poverty is to get people out of poverty.
Despite there being no cure for Ebola, there's an 82% survival rate for cases in the United States. In Africa, the survival rate is only 50%, and the disease spreads much more rapidly.
You'd be surprised how many diseases can be prevented with basic hygiene practices, and how many diseases can be treated with basic drugs.
Plumbers save more lives than doctors. Don't take them for granted.
One of our competitors trademarked the term "hypothesis". From now on, we will call them "boneheaded ideas".