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"The goal is to make sure that the drug is produced and made available to as many people as possible," said Seeberger, a former Massachusetts Institute of Technology professor who now teaches at Berlin's Free University. Sabine Haubenreisser, a spokeswoman at the European Medicines Agency, said that if the new drug is close enough to the original, its producers could apply for it to be considered as a generic product or use older data proving artemesinin's effectiveness
-- which could speed the approval process. Malaria cases and deaths have been dropping since 2004, due largely to campaigns to distribute bednets, spray homes with insecticide and make better drugs available. The World Health Organization estimates that at least 655,000 people die of malaria every year, mostly children under 5 in Africa. At the moment, artemisinin-based therapies are considered the best treatment, but cost about $10 per dose
-- far too much for impoverished communities. Former U.S. President Bill Clinton's Clinton Foundation currently has a program to purchase the treatments, then sell them at a deeply discounted 50 cents to communities where they're most needed. Cutting the price further while increasing production could "make a big difference," said Sutherland. "Many times more children will have access to the right drug early in their disease, and that's likely to have an impact on mortality."
[Associated
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