Press Releases |
Tuesday, 18 May 2004 |
Jamaica signs first Global Fund grant accessing Clinton Foundation low-price drugs
Geneva,
Switzerland - Jamaica will be the first country to sign
a grant agreement with the Global Fund to Fight AIDS, Tuberculosis
and Malaria that accesses prices for drugs and diagnostic tests
negotiated by the Clinton Foundation.
The Grant Agreement is worth US$ 7.5 million over its first two-year
phase for the prevention and treatment of HIV/AIDS and was signed
in Geneva late Monday by the Minister of Health, the Honourable
John Junor, along with Ambassador Ransford Smith, from the Jamaican
Mission.
“In the last 15 years our program has been driven by education
and prevention, and in the last two years by treatment,” said
Dr Yitades Gebre, Executive Director of the National AIDS Programme,
speaking from Kingston, Jamaica. “But we were unable to scale
up necessary life-saving interventions due to resource constraints.
With this grant we can take our response to a much higher level
of saving lives.”
As provided for under the Clinton Foundation agreements with its suppliers, beneficiaries of Global Fund and World Bank grants can access prices that have been negotiated by the Clinton Foundation with five manufacturers of antiretroviral treatments (ARVs) and five manufacturers of HIV/AIDS diagnostic tests. These prices were announced originally in October 2003 and January 2004, and to date they have been available to the 16 countries in the Caribbean and Africa where the Clinton Foundation’s HIV/AIDS Initiative is active.
The drugs in these agreements include individual formulations and two- and three-drug fixed dose combinations which have been pre-qualified by the World Health Organization to assure quality and efficacy.
There were an estimated 22,000 people living with HIV/AIDS in Jamaica at the end of 2002, of whom approximately 6,000 require ARV treatment. An estimated 500 people living with the virus are currently receiving ARV therapy, primarily in the private sector, and to a very limited extent in the public sector. The program aims to supply ARV treatment to 2,000 people during the first two years, and universal coverage by the end of the second three-year phase of the grant.
Jamaica is home to the third largest population of people in the Caribbean living with the virus, after Haiti and the Dominican Republic, who have also been awarded Global Fund grants for HIV/AIDS treatment and prevention.
Other activities funded by Jamaica’s program, which was engineered in collaboration with the World Bank, will target specific communities such as youth, commercial sex workers and men who have sex with men, underpinned by a drive to establish a national HIV/AIDS policy that reduces stigma and discrimination throughout society.
The Global Fund is a unique global public-private partnership dedicated to attracting and disbursing additional resources to prevent and treat AIDS, tuberculosis and malaria. This partnership between governments, civil society, the private sector and affected communities represents a new approach to international health financing. The Fund works in close collaboration with other bilateral and multilateral organizations to supplement existing efforts dealing with the three diseases.
The Global Fund has been established as an independent private
foundation under Swiss law and is governed by an international Board.
Apart from a high standard of technical quality, the Global Fund
attaches no conditions to any of its grants. It is not an implementing
agency. It relies on local ownership and planning to ensure that
new resources are directed to programs on the frontline of this
global effort, reaching those most in need. Its performance-based
approach to grant-making - where grants are only disbursed if progress
has been measured and verified - is designed to ensure that funds
are used efficiently and create real change for people and communities.
Information on the work of the Global Fund is available on this website or contact Robert Bourgoing, Communications Officer, at +41 22 791 1714, , or Tim Clark, +41 22 791 17 68, .
Download a high
resolution picture of the signing of the grant agreement.







