[COMMENTARY] U.S. Should Back the Kids, Not the Pharmaceutical Companies

[:en]By Josh Greenstein

Asia Catalyst’s recent report vividly depicted the barriers Chinese kids face to getting AIDS treatment that they need to survive. One key problem is that powerful U.S. based pharmaceutical companies have made some AIDS drugs extraordinarily expensive – including both second-line drugs that are essential for those who have built up resistance to the first line of AIDS medication, and pediatric medicines. The U.S. government has, until now, backed the pharmaceutical companies in their campaign to penalize countries that dare to invoke their rights to produce these medicines without patents. It is time for the U.S. government and big pharma to get out of the way and allow developing countries to give their citizens the life-saving drugs they desperately need.

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[EVENT] The Morning After at Asia Catalyst

[:en]The Morning After— Thanks to everyone who came out for Asia Catalyst’s speed-dating on Monday night. Thirty courageous men and women put on their game faces and met fellow 25 to 35-year-old progressives. Their friends joined in the after-party, and together we raised $680 for our campaign for kids with AIDS in China.

To all of you who decried the 35-year-old age limit as unfair, and those who demanded men-dating-men and women-dating-women events, we hear you, and promise we’ll have more speed-dating for progressives soon. (Just remember – if things go well, we’ll be expecting a nice big piece of wedding/commitment ceremony cake at Asia Catalyst.)

Big Pharma and AIDS in China

Speaking of speed-dating, that’s what one blogger was reminded of when listening in on U.S. Trade Representative Ron Kirk’s Senate confirmation hearing – which lasted just 48 minutes. Apparently, the Senate wants him to get right down to work. Let’s hope that his to-do list includes overhauling the administration’s past policy on compulsory licensing of AIDS drugs by developing countries.

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