• Beyond making medicines – the role of Pharma | Lutz Hegemann, President Novartis Global Health
    Feb 1 2024

    With more than half of the people on the African continent not having access to basic essential medicines according to the World Health Organization resulting in an estimated one million deaths, the challenge of poor access to medicines will not be solved by one government or a single organization alone. There is only so much that any single organization can do and that is why partnership is so important. Pharma cannot simply reduce its contribution to the provision of medicines but need to care about the benefits to society at large. Pharmaceutical companies are a key partner in solving the challenge of access to reach more people so that innovations are not just sitting on the shelf. Beyond making medicines, society expects pharma companies to have a clear access agenda so that it is innovating for the many not only the few. The private sector need to make sure that innovation reaches patients. It need to go beyond the transactional approach and take a keen interest in how medicines are being used in order to deliver the greatest value to society. We need medicines that are fit-for-purpose in resource contrained settings to allow us to better utilize those solutions when resources are limited. There are challenges with deploying innovation in the best interest of patients which leads patients be diagnosed in the community way too late when they may no longer quality for disease modifying therapy thereby worsening health outcomes. So we need to find areas in the health systems where we can work together in order to reduce those barriers. It the past it has taken 10 years for innovation to reach African patients after it was available in Europe on the US. It is possible to eliminate this gap to a zero time gap as was recently done with a product that was approved by the Food and Drugs Authority,Ghana and the Swiss regulator Swissmedic within the same time frame. We need an ecosystem that makes it possible for African innovation to be more visible and to thrive. There are some exceptionally bright people who can drive innovation in Africa for Africa and for the world. The sickle cell gene therapy that Novartis is working on in collaboration with the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation is one example of that. I am optimistic that over the next decade we will see things like this happening.

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    24 min
  • Lenias Hwenda | The African Medicines Agency - what comes next with Chimwemwe Chamdimba
    Oct 30 2023

    #africa #health #clinicaltrials #decentralisedclinicaltrials #healthcare #globalhealth #medicines #vaccines #ama #africanmedicinesagency #ema #europeanmedicinesagency 30 October 2023 | Lenias Hwenda | The African Medicines Agency - what comes next | Let's Talk about Health in Africa | Chimwemwe Chamdimba


    The coming year in 2024 is going to be an exciting one according to Chimwemwe Chamdimba, the head of the Africa Regulatory Harmonization Initiative at AUDA NEPAD. Listen to find out why this is an exciting year for the African Medicines Agency. In this podcast, Chimwemwe explains what to expect in the coming months and key initiative that are on the horizon for the African Medicines agency. She explains where development are with the board of directors, and terms of reference for recruiting the Director General of the African Medicines Agency. Listen for more.

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    49 min
  • Lenias Hwenda | Can decentralised clinical trials work in Africa, expand diversity & global reach?
    Apr 28 2023

    #africa #health #clinicaltrials #decentralisedclinicaltrials #healthcare #globalhealth #medicines #vaccines 27 April 2023 | Lenias Hwenda | Let's Talk about Health in Africa | Craig Lipset. In this conversation, Craig Lipset discusses with Lenias Hwenda how decentralised clinical trials are being increasingly used in clinical research in Europe and the US and how they can help to expand diversity and reach during clinical trials if clinical investigators are intentional about design. A clinical trial is a series of research studies that test new treatments before they are approved for people to use. Before national medicines regulators can approve a new treatment for use in people, clinical trial results must show that the treatment works and does not cause harm to people. One of the challenges with clinical trials is that racial and ethnic minorities are generally significantly under-represented. Too few clinical trials are done in African countries, and the decentralised approach offers an opportunity to overcome some of the challenges that limits reach and diversity. Craig explains why the increasingly important decentralised clinical trial approach complements the traditional approach over the next decade and what sponsors, investigators and clinical sites should think about to increase diversity in clinical research including in the African context. Subscribe: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCegcj4FoxgVoogCiXGySvpg Follow Let's Talk about Health in Africa on social LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/showcase/utanopodcast/ Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/groups/275438384523782 Twitter: https://twitter.com/Meds4Africa Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/meds4africa/ Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/medicinesforafrica/ Website: www.medicines4africa.com

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    40 min
  • Lenias Hwenda | Let's talk about rare diseases in Africa
    Mar 13 2023

    14 March 2023 | Lenias Hwenda talks about rare diseases in Africa with Kelly du Plessis, the CEO of Rare Diseases South Africa. Rare diseases remain poorly understood by health authorities and yet they are increasingly affecting African populations. Kelly du Plessis explains some of the challenges with rare diseases in Africa and how her organisation, Rare Diseases South Africa has been solving these challenges in South Africa.

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    37 min
  • Lenias Hwenda | Why foreign aid for routine health care in Africa should end by 2030
    Nov 15 2022

    Have you ever wondered why foreign aid has persisted for so long? Dr Olusoji Adeyi, the President of Reilient Health Systems and a former Director at The World Bank explains the nuances of foreign aid and why it is counter-productive. Foreign aid has persisted in order to support a foreign aid industrial complex that has been built around aid. This complex is sustained for the benefit of those around it - the external contractors who's business is to but products for distribution in African countries. In fact most of the time bilateral aid is not fundamentally aimed at Africans. According to Dr Adeyi, African countries would be best served by creating a plan to transition out of receiving aid for routine healthcare needs by 2030.

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    44 min
  • Lenias Hwenda | How big is the cancer burden in Africa and what governments should be doing about it.
    Aug 31 2022

    31 Aug 2021 | Lenias Hwenda | Utano Podcast | Let's Talk about Health in Africa | The size of Africa´s cancer burden and what governments should do about it

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    3 min
  • Lenias Hwenda What's Wrong with Global Health - Perspectives of African Women
    Mar 13 2022

    To celebrate International Women’s Month, we are hosting a Live Podcast to explore explores the personal and professional experiences of high level professional African women working in global health. Recently, there have been growing calls amongst global health academics to decolonize global health in the leading medical journals like The Lancet and the British Medical Journal. The decolonization campaign seeks to fight against systems of dominance and power in the global health community of those working to improve the health of populations worldwide. Global health has its origins in the colonial era when it was a means to control colonized populations and make exploitation by colonial powers easier. However, today, the same power imbalances persist amongst many organizations and individuals working in global health, most of whom preserve and perpetuate the same power imbalances that they profess their work seeks to correct. This is reflected in the extractive nature of relationships between nations and individuals in global health and the perpetual failure of most recipient countries to improve their development capacity after decades of receiving capacity develop support by donor partners. It is against the very purpose of global health organisations to develop the kind of capacity development that would make countries less dependent on donor support. This is clear in the fact that they typically concentrate resources, expertise and data amongst other things in institutions of high-income countries. These power imbalances in global health are not necessarily confined to the wealthier nations. They can also be found in institutions of poorer nations where there is a small cadre of professionals who benefit from the status quo.

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    1 ora e 5 min
  • Lenias Hwenda | How Egypt, Togo and Malawi achieved lymphatic filariasis elimination
    Feb 24 2022

    22 Feb 2022 | Lenias Hwenda | Let's Talk about Health in Africa | NTD Series This is how Egypt, Togo and Malawi achieved lymphatic filariasis elimination | Dr Didier Bakajika | WHO Technical Officer for Neglected Tropical Diseases (Lymphatic Filariasis and Onchocerciasis) Dr Didier Bakajika talks to us about the challenge of lymphatic filariasis prevention and control and how countries like Egypt, Malawi and Togo that managed to achieve eliminated reached this milestone. He also explains the importance of data and how the WHO ESPEN programme is supporting countries to enable systematic data collection in order to enhance the effectiveness of prevention and control programs. Overall, there is progress but there are a number of things that Dr Bakajika says that countries need to do to accelerate our progress towards elimination.

    #Africa #health #ntds #beatntds #endtheneglect #Togo #malawi #egypt #WHO #infectiousdiseases

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    48 min