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- New market incentives are being created to spur
more investment in research and development of new drugs and vaccines for malaria,
HIV/AIDS, and TB, and better diagnostic tests for these diseases.
- New resources are being raised to increase access
to existing drugs and vaccines and provide more effective treatments to combat polio,
measles, diarrhoea and respiratory diseases. International partnerships between the public
and private sector have launched campaigns, including Roll Back Malaria, the International
AIDS Vaccine Initiative, the Global Alliance for Vaccines Initiative, and Stop TB.
- Knowledge, technology and best practices for
affordable and effective prevention and treatments are being shared more widely, and new
research is under way to fill gaps in our knowledge.
New global health rules are being developed to
control cross-border or global health risks: improved global disease surveillance through
strengthened International Health Regulations; a Framework Convention on Tobacco Control
to restrain the marketing and illegal smuggling of tobacco; collaboration with the World
Trade Organization to ensure public health is protected and promoted in multilateral trade
rules. |