Dedicated To Improving Pharmaceutical Cold-Chain Distribution Practices
Login
User name:
Password:
Remember me 
View Article  Grand Challenges Projects Target Temperature-Stable Vaccine Technologies

 Each year, 27 million children in poor countries do not receive basic preventive vaccines. As a result, serious diseases that were eliminated in industrialized countries long ago remain widespread in the developing world, causing more than one million child deaths annually. Most vaccines must be given multiple times over weeks or months, and must be kept constantly refrigerated -- these are serious obstacles for families who must travel long distances to the nearest health clinic, and for communities without electricity. 

 

An estimated 151 million vaccine doses delivered to developing countries this year will spoil because they are not properly refrigerated.

 

In addition, most vaccines are delivered by injection, which increases the risk that HIV, hepatitis, and other infections could be transmitted by unsterile or reused syringes and needles. An estimated 500,000 serious infections could be avoided this year by using needle-free vaccines.

 

Recent advances in genetic engineering, chemical engineering and other scientific disciplines could lead to a new generation of childhood vaccines that are effective after a single dose, and do not require refrigeration or needles.

 

Leading this efforrt is the Grand Challenges in Global Health initiative formed in 2003; a partnership dedicated to supporting scientific and technical research to solve critical health problems in the developing world. The initiative's partners are the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation, the Canadian Institutes of Health Research, the Foundation for the National Institutes of Health, and the Wellcome Trust.

R & D Booster Shot

The Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation announced on Tuesday that it is committing an additional $100 million over five years to create a new fast-track grants initiative to support innovative global health research.  The initiative’s goal is to encourage scientists worldwide to explore creative, unorthodox ideas that could lead to major breakthroughs against some of the greatest health challenges facing poor countries.

The new initiative, called Grand Challenges Explorations, will support hundreds of early-stage research projects – many pursuing ideas that have never before been tested, and involving scientists from a wide range of disciplines.  The Explorations initiative will focus on rapidly evaluating a large number of innovative ideas that could lead to new vaccines, diagnostics, drugs, and other technologies targeting diseases that claim millions of lives every year.

View Article  IATA Announces Details of World Cargo Symposium 2008

For its second edition, The International Air Transport Association (IATA) is assembling over 20 cargo events in one single gathering, including a dedicated track on pharmaceuticals, for their World Cargo Symposium, March 03 - March 06, 2008 in Rome, Italy, at the Rome Marriott Park Hotel Centre.

 I have been invited by IATA to chair the one day Pharma Track on March 5th.

I believe this will provide a significant opportunity for members of the biopharma industry to join with colleagues and experts from around the world to discuss the challenges and propose solutions regarding global air freight logistics with key members of the airline industry in an effort to improve distribution management practices for temperature-sensitive medicinal freight. Also, it will provide an opportunity to discuss the impact of the new Perishable Cargo Regulations Chapter 17 Air Transport Logistics for Temperature-Sensitive Healthcare Products which went into effect July 1st, 2007. 

The IATA World Cargo Symposium concentrates decision makers, key stakeholders, cargo specialists and business owners, to share the latest knowledge, best practices and benchmarks around one theme: Focus on the Customer.

Over 800 cargo professionals from around the world participated in the first International Air Transport Association (IATA) World Cargo Symposium, which took place 5-9 March, 2007 in Mexico City. This one-week global mega-conference assembled 13 workgroup committees, 8 forums, 2 plenary sessions, 140 speakers, 28 exhibitors and 12 sponsors in one single gathering.

Registration and additional information is provided in the links above.