Clinton praises South Africa on Aids

21 July 2010

Speaking at the international Aids conference in Vienna, Austria on Monday, former US president Bill Clinton praised South Africa and President Jacob Zuma for the country's efforts to tackle HIV/Aids.

Clinton commended South Africa's community health worker programme, and was applauded when he said that Zuma "is proud that his country is no longer a pariah in the fight against Aids".

Clinton called for more action in the fight against HIV/Aids, adding that funds should go directly to Aids sufferers, rather than expensive administrations.

"In too many countries, too much money goes to pay for too many people to go to too many meetings and get on too many aeroplanes to provide too much technical assistance.

"Too much is spent on studies and reports that sit on shelves," Clinton said. "And maybe when we've got all the money in the world this is regrettable but not tragic, but keep in mind: every dollar we waste today puts a life at risk."

Clinton praised UNITAID, which funds Clinton's own Health Access Initiative, for successfully bringing down the cost of second-line therapies for low-income countries from around US$1 000 to $435 a year.

However, he said he saw little immediate chance of further reductions in the cost of first-line therapy from the current $90, except in improved pricing for tenofovir-containing fixed-dose combinations.

Any further reduction in the cost of treatment to low-income countries would therefore have to come from more efficiency and lower distribution costs.

He praised "task shifting" programmes, in which nurses were trained to do tasks formerly performed by doctors, and community health workers the tasks of nurses.

He pointed out that, in the USA, people building a nuclear power station could pay the cost by instalments over the forthcoming 30 years because it was recognised that power stations more than recouped their costs over that period.

"Healthcare is not just a right. It is an extraordinarily high-value development investment with a high rate of return."

He criticised the US pharmaceutical industry for not reducing its prices so that 1 700 people with HIV in the US could be taken off waiting lists for antiretrovirals.

"The drug manufacturers have been paid $10 000 a year per patient by the government for years for Medicaid programmes. They could take care of those 1 700 people tomorrow and never miss the money."

Source: Xinhua-BuaNews

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