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DATE: EMBARGOED until 12h Central European Time 14 May 2008
Lilly commits $1mm to World Medical Association to support
Innovative Tuberculosis Training Course
Geneva, 14 May 2008 - Eli Lilly and Company announced today the
scaling-up of an existing partnership with the World Medical Association
(WMA) by providing a grant of $998,773 to expand training courses
for physicians on multi-drug resistant tuberculosis (MDR-TB).
Tuberculosis (TB) is a preventable disease that kills close to
two million people every year and infects an estimated nine million
more. Of these, nearly 500,000 have multidrug-resistant TB.
The purpose of this online training is to help physicians, both
in the public and private sector, to use the latest international
guidelines and treatment protocols for MDR-TB care in their daily
work. This will allow more physicians around the world to acquire
the basic knowledge on standard TB management at a time when there
is a resurgence of the epidemic. A new toolkit will also be developed
for physicians on how to manage TB in the workplace. This will
be produced with the World Economic Forum for use in China and
South Africa.
The announcement of the new four-year joint partnership agreement
was marked in Geneva today by a signing ceremony between Jacques
Tapiero, president of Lilly's intercontinental operations and
WMA president Dr. Jon Snaedal. Lilly's key partners including
the World Health Organization (WHO), the Stop TB Partnership,
the International Council of Nurses, the World Economic Forum
and alongside Geneva-based diplomats and foreign dignitaries,
were invited to the ceremony.
Dr. Snaedal said: 'We shall now be making the course more interactive
with more case studies and a progressive learning pattern. A TB
refresher course is important to get physicians back on track
regarding the basic knowledge of standard TB.'
Jacques Tapiero added: 'We applaud WMA's commitment to developing
innovative approaches to stemming the MDR-TB global burden. Given
adequate healthcare infrastructure and adherence to proper medication
regimens, MDR-TB is not only treatable, but indeed curable. This
online training course is an important addition to the already
existing tools and activities of a larger partnership of 16 public
and private organizations worldwide dedicated to fighting MDR-TB.'
With underwriting from Lilly, the WMA over the past year has
already developed an online training course for physicians to
more effectively diagnose, prevent and treat multi-drug resistant
tuberculosis. Clinical guidelines were developed and harmonized
with evidence-based material sourced from the WHO, the International
Council of Nurses and the International Hospital Federation. The
course was tested among physicians in South Africa. The Norwegian
Medical Association has adapted the material to a web-based format
and will be providing CME credits to those following the course.
The German Medical Association assisted on providing managerial
support in the conception of the project.
The online course will be expanded to develop a TB refresher course
and a training course on MDR-TB training. Training champions in
MDR-TB treatment will be created in South Africa, India and China.
The course, already available in English, is being translated
into Spanish, French, Chinese and Russian and will be published
in handbook and CD form in addition to the online format. MDR-TB
is a serious public health threat in many parts of the world,
notably in Sub-Saharan Africa, Central and Eastern Europe, mainland
China, Southeast Asia and in Central and South America.
The recent identification of extremely virulent TB and the increasing
number of MDR-TB cases show that the knowledge and handling of
TB treatment is still insufficient. With concrete evidence that
incomplete TB treatment is responsible for the occurrence of extremely
drug resistant TB, an ethics policy is being planned to look at
whether and how patients can be encouraged to complete their treatment
regimen and where the autonomy of a patient ends in order to safeguard
public health.
Access to the course is free of charge via the WMA
website or directly on the education server of the Norwegian
Medical Association.
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