WHO, Global Partners Require $31 Billion to Speed Up COVID-19 Medicines For All
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More than $31 billion is needed over the next 12 months to develop medicines that will be effective against COVID-19, and make them available to all people, the World Health Organization (WHO) and partners said on Friday.
Ahead of a major pledging summit, they updated journalists on a recently announced initiative to speed up production of these treatments, known as the Access to COVID-19 Tools (ACT) Accelerator.
“It’s clear that to bring COVID-19 under control, and to save lives, we need effective vaccines, diagnostics and therapeutics – in unprecedented quantities and at unprecedented speed”, said WHO chief Tedros Adhanom.
“It’s clear that to bring COVID-19 under control, and to save lives, we need effective vaccines, diagnostics and therapeutics – in unprecedented quantities and at unprecedented speed”, said WHO chief Tedros Adhanom.
The ACT-Accelerator was launched at the end of April, bringing together governments, health organizations, scientists, businesses, civil society and philanthropists.Members work across four pillars: diagnostics, therapeutics, vaccines, and what they call “the health system connector”. They have outlined a plan that sees low- and middle-income countries receiving 500 million diagnostic tests, 245 million courses of treatments, and two billion vaccine doses, before the end of next year.The Access to #COVID19 Tools Accelerator (ACT-Accelerator) will end the pandemic faster by ensuring that the tools developed are allocated rationally & equitably around the world, maximizing the chances of global success of finally ending the pandemic https://t.co/NWeTpT4NvP
— World Health Organization (WHO) (@WHO) June 26, 2020
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