Canada gives 10% of its H1N1 vaccines to WHO
This article was originally published in Scrip
Executive Summary
The Canadian government is donating five million doses of H1N1 vaccine (10% of its total vaccine order), as well as Can$6 million, to support the World Health Organization's (WHO) pandemic relief efforts in developing countries. To date, 16 countries and four vaccine manufacturers have pledged a total of 200 million vaccine doses to the WHO.
You may also be interested in...
US FDA head Hamburg declares no one can inspect world on its own
The US Food and Drug Administration recently signalled its desire to work more closely with other drug regulators in assessing the quality of pharmaceutical manufacturing facilities around the world.
FDA's Hamburg declares no one can "inspect world on its own" for poor quality medicines
It seems as if the US FDA is softening its stance on assessing the quality of pharmaceutical manufacturing facilities around the world in future, with an apparent desire to work more closely with other drug regulators. However, incorporating the regulators from countries such as India, China and Japan into a global inspectorate still looks problematical.
Pharma and MSF agree on competition for cheap vaccines, but differ on pricing
Large pharmaceutical companies and Médecins sans Frontières may not often see eye-to-eye over access to medicines in poor countries. But it seems as if industry and the humanitarian body, a prominent critic, do agree that competition works in improving access to vaccines, even though they don't agree about the mechanisms of price setting.