This pioneering research on sleeping sickness and other neglected diseases eventually led to the creation of a new organization, the Drugs for Neglected Diseases initiative (DNDi), to focus on research and development (R&D). In 2018, DNDi celebrated the launch of fexinidazole, a new all-oral cure for sleeping sickness.
Among the Access Campaign’s earliest fights was he groundbreaking effort to get affordable treatment to people living with HIV/AIDS in South Africa. In these pages, you’ll learn the inside story of how MSF joined forces with activists to bring down the astronomical costs of antiretroviral drugs and make treatment more widely available.
We’re now challenging Johnson & Johnson to drop the price on the breakthrough drug bedaquiline, so that people living with drug-resistant tuberculosis (DR-TB) can be treated effectively. In April, MSF-USA staff protested outside Johnson & Johnson headquarters in New Brunswick, New Jersey, during the company’s annual shareholders meeting, to demand action.
In May, the Access Campaign welcomed the WHO’s strategy on the prevention and control of snakebite envenoming, which kills more people than any other neglected tropical disease. Globally, more than 100,000 people die each year following bites from venomous snakes, and some 400,000 more suffer from disabilities and disfigurement. MSF has spent years calling for snakebite to be a priority on the global health agenda, because we know that lives can be saved with concerted action.
On a personal note, I’d like to wish you farewell as my term as president of the MSF-USA board of directors comes to an end. While I will continue to serve on the board, I am delighted to introduce MSF-USA’s new president: Dr. Africa Stewart, an ob-gyn and passionate advocate for women’s health who has completed five assignments with MSF. I know you’ll enjoy hearing from her in future issues of Alert.
It has been a great honor for me to lead MSF-USA during such a critical time, and I look forward to continuing to work with our staff in the office and with colleagues around the world responding to urgent medical humanitarian needs.
Sincerely,
John P. Lawrence, MD
President, MSF-USA Board of Directors