Search
 
 
Friday, November 20, 2009
 
 
RESEARCH   AREAS
 
Global Health
 

AEI's research on global health addresses diseases like AIDS and malaria, pandemics, mortality and morbidity rates, drug patenting, counterfeit products, health in the developing world, and the successes and failures of governments and international organizations in these areas. This section of the website gathers together AEI research, books, and events focused on global health.

 
Feature: A Second Wave of Swine Flu?

President Obama recently declared swine flu a national health emergency, and the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention reported that less than half of the vaccine expected this month had been shipped. The process of producing a vaccine, as AEI's Scott Gottlieb, M.D., has written, is an extremely tricky one. Vaccines are still made by the same process that has been used for fifty years, and that process is risky, expensive, and slow. In an AEI Health Policy Outlook, Gottlieb outlines the steps the FDA could take to improve capacity, including developing guidelines for a new regulatory review pathway for emerging technologies as well as working to speed approval for vaccines in the pipeline. In another AEI Health Policy Outlook, resident scholar John E. Calfee discusses the development of the antivirals Tamiflu and Relenza, which have the potential to save thousands of lives. In May, the AEI Press published U.S. Markets for Vaccines: Characteristics, Case Studies, and Controversies, a look at vaccine markets and the political, economic, and regulatory factors that influence their development.

 

Scholars on Global Health


 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
  
 
 
 
Counterfeit Medicines
 
Myriad responses are required for all parts of the substandard drug problem.
 
The Case for Paying Organ Donors
 
We must enable more patients in wealthy countries to obtain transplants at home by empowering their governments, under strict regulation, to offer incentives to prospective donors.
 
Green Revolution in the Balance
 
A battle is developing over food security and research into bio-engineered crops is in the crosshairs.
 
India's Counterfeit Claims on Counterfeit Drugs
 
The Indian government is touting a new survey showing a low percentage of drugs within the country are counterfeit. But the reality is that India still has a major problem will poor-quality drugs.
 
 
Making a Killing The Deadly Implications of the Counterfeit Drug Trade
 
In this groundbreaking study, Roger Bate traces the burgeoning international trade in counterfeit pharmaceuticals.  
 
Europe's Coming Demographic Challenge Unlocking the Value of Health
 
Nicholas Eberstadt and Hans Groth outline a plan for Western Europe to capitalize upon its healthy older workforce.  
 
Malaria and the DDT Story
 
Malaria kills millions of people each year and hundreds of millions more suffer chronic illness. Economic development is inhibited and poverty is perpetuated.  
 
 
PAST EVENTS
 
 
This event will discuss the European Union's recent consensus to institute new criteria that could ultimately blacklist about fifteen percent of the EU pesticides market used by the agricultural and pest control industries.
 
 
What are the best ways for identifying counterfeit and substandard drugs in the field? How can consumers, regulatory bodies, and others work together to combat their deadly impact?