Literature DB >> 11545327

Public-private partnerships for health: their main targets, their diversity, and their future directions.

R Widdus1.   

Abstract

The global burden of disease, especially the part attributable to infectious diseases, disproportionately affects populations in developing countries. Inadequate access to pharmaceuticals plays a role in perpetuating this disparity. Drugs and vaccines may not be accessible because of weak distribution infrastructures or because development of the desired products has been neglected. This situation can be tackled with push interventions to lower the costs and risks of product development for industry, with pull interventions providing economic and market incentives, and with the creation of infrastructures allowing products to be put into use. If appropriately motivated, pharmaceutical companies can bring to partnerships expertise in product development, production process development, manufacturing, marketing, and distribution--all of which are lacking in the public sector. A large variety of public-private partnerships, combining the skills and resources of a wide range of collaborators, have arisen for product development, disease control through product donation and distribution, or the general strengthening or coordination of health services. Administratively, such partnerships may either involve affiliation with international organizations, i.e. they are essentially public-sector programmes with private-sector participation, or they may be legally independent not-for-profit bodies. These partnerships should be regarded as social experiments; they show promise but are not a panacea. New ventures should be built on need, appropriateness, and lessons on good practice learnt from experience. Suggestions are made for public, private, and joint activities that could help to improve the access of poor populations to the pharmaceuticals and health services they need.

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Year:  2001        PMID: 11545327      PMCID: PMC2566486     

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Bull World Health Organ        ISSN: 0042-9686            Impact factor:   9.408


  32 in total

1.  Working with the private sector: the need for institutional guidelines.

Authors:  Gill Walt; Ruairi Brugha; Andy Haines
Journal:  BMJ       Date:  2002-08-24

2.  Development of a candidate polyvalent live vaccine against human immunodeficiency, hepatitis B, and orthopox viruses.

Authors:  S N Shchelkunov; A E Nesterov; I A Ryazankin; G M Ignat'ev; L S Sandakhchiev
Journal:  Dokl Biochem Biophys       Date:  2003 May-Jun       Impact factor: 0.788

3.  Prioritizing public- private partnership models for public hospitals of iran based on performance indicators.

Authors:  Raana Gholamzadeh Nikjoo; Hossein Jabbari Beyrami; Ali Jannati; Mohammad Asghari Jaafarabadi
Journal:  Health Promot Perspect       Date:  2012-12-28

Review 4.  Research and development of new vaccines against infectious diseases.

Authors:  Marie Paule Kieny; Jean-Louis Excler; Marc Girard
Journal:  Am J Public Health       Date:  2004-11       Impact factor: 9.308

5.  Ethics in public health research: a research protocol to evaluate the effectiveness of public-private partnerships as a means to improve health and welfare systems worldwide.

Authors:  Donald A Barr
Journal:  Am J Public Health       Date:  2006-11-30       Impact factor: 9.308

6.  Ethics in public health research: masters of marketing: bringing private sector skills to public health partnerships.

Authors:  Valerie A Curtis; Nana Garbrah-Aidoo; Beth Scott
Journal:  Am J Public Health       Date:  2007-02-28       Impact factor: 9.308

7.  Preparedness for infectious threats: public-private partnership to develop an affordable vaccine for an emergent threat: the trivalent Neisseria meningitidis ACW135 polysaccharide vaccine.

Authors:  Christopher B Nelson; Maureen Birmingham; Alejandro Costa; Joelle Daviaud; William Perea; Marie-Paule Kieny; Daniel Tarantola
Journal:  Am J Public Health       Date:  2007-04-05       Impact factor: 9.308

8.  More medicines for neglected and emerging infectious diseases.

Authors:  Jack Radisch
Journal:  Bull World Health Organ       Date:  2007-08       Impact factor: 9.408

9.  Public-private partnership as a solution for integrating genetic services into health care of countries with low and middle incomes.

Authors:  Florian Meier; Oliver Schöffski; Jörg Schmidtke
Journal:  J Community Genet       Date:  2012-05-22

10.  An analysis of ophthalmology services in Finland - has the time come for a Public-Private Partnership?

Authors:  Liina-Kaisa Tynkkynen; Juhani Lehto
Journal:  Health Res Policy Syst       Date:  2009-11-10
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