World Bank and Merck & Co., Inc., Announce US$50 Million Funding Initiative to Eliminate River Blindness in Africa

Saturday, March 29, 2008

The World Bank and Merck & Co., Inc., announced an initiative to raise US$50 million to help eliminate river blindness, a leading cause of preventable blindness, in 28 African countries.
 
Merck has pledged up to $25 million—about half of the funding needed over the next eight years—to help eliminate this public health problem which puts the health and livelihood of 100 million people at risk worldwide, mostly in sub-Saharan Africa. The disease causes intense itching, disfiguring skin disease, and eye lesions that often result in permanent blindness.
 
The World Bank will work with Merck and other partners to raise the remaining $25 million. This $50 million in new funding will supplement the $20 million already raised by the Bank from international partners, for a total of $70 million to support the program through 2015.
 
World Bank President Robert B. Zoellick said: "With this public-private partnership, we can eliminate river blindness in Africa, and free dangerous lands for productive agriculture to overcome poverty.  On behalf of the 40,000 people who will be protected from going blind each year, I want to thank Merck, the WHO, the governments involved, and our other partners."
 
Merck Chairman, President and CEO Richard T. Clark said: "In addition to this pledge, Merck affirms our commitment to donate MectizanTM (Ivermectin) to all who need it for the treatment of river blindness until the disease is eliminated as a public health problem.  No one group can tackle this disease alone. Only by harnessing the complementary skills and resources of the public and private sectors can we ensure that more than 100 million people will receive Mectizan annually. And only by harnessing our collective will can we effectively address the most pressing public health challenges of our day."
 
A devastating disease spread by black flies found near river banks, river blindness (onchocerciasis) has been largely eliminated in 10 of the 11 targeted West African countries under the first large-scale aerial spraying program started by the World Bank and the World Health Organization (WHO) in 1974. This has enabled resettlement and cultivation on over 25 million hectares of fertile land, boosted farm productivity and rural incomes, and prevented 600,000 people from going blind.
 
Merck joined the fight to eliminate the disease in 1987 by announcing it would donate its medicine MECTIZAN, the only well-tolerated drug known to halt the development of river blindness, for as long as necessary. In 1995, the World Bank together with the WHO, non-governmental organizations (NGOs), foundations and other donors established the African Program for Onchocerciasis Control (APOC) to oversee successful delivery of MECTIZAN through community-directed treatment programs in the 19 non West African countries affected by river blindness.  WHO is the executing agent of APOC, while the World Bank manages the APOC multidonor trust fund.
 
“The river blindness program in partnership with African Countries is helping to roll back a serious threat to health and development, as well as strengthen health delivery systems through increased community participation and ownership,” noted Obiageli Ezekwesili, the World Bank’s Vice President for Africa.
 
 
Further Project Information
 
• Today's announcement coincides with the 20th anniversary of the MECTIZAN Donation Program. To date, the program has donated more than 530 million doses of MECTIZAN, valued at some US $2.7 billion. Recognized for its unparalleled success, the program – the longest-running medicine donation commitment in history - currently reaches approximately 70 million people each year for the treatment of river blindness.
 
• APOC and its partners have pioneered an innovative community-based delivery strategy through which 350,000 trained community volunteers distribute MECTIZAN and other health services such as insecticide-treated bed nets for malaria control to 120,000 remote communities. 
 
• This new funding pledge will enable APOC to continue to expand community-directed treatment (CDTI) programs thereby strengthening overall health care infrastructures in the 28 African countries where CDTI programs currently exist.
 
• By 2015, this funding will also enable CDTI projects to co-implement at least one other health intervention in addition to MECTIZAN delivery and help countries and their partners to improve health care by expanding other health programs to hard-to-reach communities using CDTI.


For more information about the World Bank's Riverblindness Programs:
www.worldbank.org/gper
The World Bank and Africa: www.worldbank.org/afr
For more information about Merck and the MECTIZAN Donation Program visit: www.merck.com


Source: World Bank