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There is a lack of incentives driving agencies to actively address the problem of counterfeit medicine--some individuals may care enough to risk their jobs by speaking out, but most keep their mouths shut.
President Bush has promised significant amounts of money for HIV/AIDS, some of which will to go to the GFATM. Yet one wonders if they can sustain decent AIDS treatment.
Drugs donated to developing countries are being stolen by criminal groups, which harms patients, encourages criminal networks, and probably leads to dangerous counterfeiting.
As more and more of our tax dollars fund drugs for poor nations, criminals are making fortunes off our good will. Out of the 100 million high-quality antimalarial dosages donated to Africa, approximately 30 million are diverted.
Malaria is far too serious a disease to be left to the unaccountable and ineffectual UN agencies and Roll Back Malaria partners.
What can the World Health Organization and the World Bank to do avoid mission creep?
How has mission creep affected the World Health Organization's and World Bank's efforts to combat malaria?
Problems with procurement, corruption, and intellectual property threaten new and innovative malaria treatments.



