Brazil and 17 Countries Unite to Get Better Prices for AIDS Drugs

After three days of debates last week in BrasÀ­lia, the capital  of Brazil, governmental and civil society representatives from 18 Latin American and Caribbean countries decided to unite to negotiate prices for AIDS treatment medications and to purchase the medications together.

The idea of the meeting was for the countries to reach a common position that will enable treatment, prevention, and care to be extended to the entire population, not just the groups most vulnerable to the disease, by 2010.

According to the director of the Ministry of Health’s National STD (sexually transmitted diseases)/AIDS Program, Pedro Chequer, higher drug prices have raised the average annual treatment cost per patient from US$ 1.35 thousand, in 2003, to US$ 2.5 thousand, in 2005.

He pointed out, however, that for countries to continue to be able to deal with the disease, it is not enough just to reduce prices.

"It is essential for countries to unite, with the backing of international agencies, to establish effective mechanisms for the national production of medicines. The reduction and negotiation of prices are short-lived and do not guarantee us sustainability in the medium and long run," he emphasized.

Chequer affirmed that the world faces problems not only with medications but with the supply of contraceptives as well.

"If the whole world decided today to use condoms, as dictated by the scientific norm for sexual prevention, the supply would be insufficient.

"We have urged the World Bank, the United Nations, and bilateral agencies from First World countries to join with us in setting an effective timetable for expanding the installed capacity of condom factories," he said.

The results of the encounter will be presented at a meeting of the UN General Assembly in May. Among other things, the final document recommends the creation of indicators to evaluate access to prevention, care, and treatment in different countries and the need to seek international allies to correct clauses that impede better prices in economic and political accords.

Agência Brasil

Tags:

You May Also Like

Brazil Revamps Family Farming Program

The Incentive Program for Cooperativism in Family Farming and Solidary Economy (Coopersol) was launched ...

Brazil: A Family for Each Street Kid

British Mick Pease is pushing the boundaries of childcare in Brazil. Says he, "The ...

Rio Police Kill One for Every 23 Arrested, in US There is One Death for 37,000

A report by Human Rights Watch a non-governmental organization (NGO)  reveals that many killings ...

Lula as Pontius Pilate

Colombia wants Brazil to classify the FARC as a terrorist group, freeze its bank ...

ILO Wants World to Learn from Brazil’s Labor Court Decisions

Sentences imposed by Brazilian labor courts in cases of exploitation of slave-like labor, child ...

For Brazilians

The Brazilian Consulate in Los Angeles  answers the most common questions from Brazilians living ...

Revenue Down in Brazil by 2%

Brazilian government revenue was US$ 9.581 billion (25.745 billion reais) in November which, although ...

Expozebu Can Generate US$ 3.5 Million in Deals for Brazil

The business roundtables between Brazilian and foreign businessmen during the 71st ExpoZebu, which took ...

Law Students Interested in Human Rights Wanted for Volunteer Work in Brazil

The Robert F. Kennedy Memorial Center for Human Rights and Terra de Direitos are ...

Computers are reading the future

h2>In Brazil these days, fortune tellers, palm readers, astrologers and all types of future ...