Category Archives: News

Advocacy day trip to an AIDS vaccine lab, as described one who was there

Today’s blog comes from Mark Pointer of our Norwich group, who joined us on out advocacy day trip to a working AIDS vaccine lab.

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Dr Bergin speaks to the group

On the last day of our National Conference, we spent a very enjoyable and informative morning at the Chelsea & Westminster Hospital, as we visited the prestigious Human Immunology Laboratory (HIL).

The HIL is the International AIDS Vaccine Initiative`s flagship laboratory where it performs its own AIDS vaccine research as well as coordinating research for other IAVI labs around the world. IAVI is a global, not-for-profit, public-private product-development partnership working with organizations in countries worldwide to help to develop an affordable AIDS vaccine through research and development, effective clinical trials, education initiatives, policy analysis and advocacy.

We were greeted by Dr Philip Bergin and Dr Emmanuel Cormier, who explained

Dr Bergin shows us the £250,000 multi-laser flow cytometer

Dr Bergin shows us the £250,000 multi-laser flow cytometer

their AIDS research work to date and how HIL serves as a hub for IAVI’s vaccine development partnerships. The HIL team, consisting of 18 research scientists and technicians play a pivotal role in AIDS vaccine development in low and middle income countries. Partners include the Kenya AIDS Vaccine Initiative, Rwanda’s Project San Francisco, the Uganda Virus Research Institute, the Indian Council of Medical Research and the Zambia–Emory HIV Research Project. In some countries where IAVI is not sponsoring clinical studies, the organization works with partners to support AIDS vaccine research and advocacy efforts

The HIL team also oversees the training in IAVI’s extended network of collaborating clinical research centres  With their support nearly all of the labs in this network have received international accreditation in Good Clinical Laboratory Practices (GCLP), ensuring the standardization of laboratory procedures applied in IAVI-sponsored vaccine trials.

Blood samples!

Blood samples!

Dr Bergin took us on a guided tour of the laboratory, explaining the research which was being carried out in different areas. He told us that one of the main problems of the development an AIDS vaccine is the ability of the HIV virus to mutate before immune system antibodies can neutralize the virus. Also, the cost of developing a vaccine became clear when we were told that just one of the pieces of equipment (multi-laser flow cytometer) cost £250,000!

The laboratory is the central Repository where all the specimens from HIV vaccine trials and epidemiology studies are stored and we were very impressed with the liquid nitrogen pods, in which tens of thousands of 1ml specimen tubes are stored either in -180 C in liquid nitrogen pods (Blood) or in– 80 C freezers (Serum).

During a Q & A session with Dr Bergin and Dr Cormier they explained that DFID is a major funder but IAVI has brought in other UK partners including Oxford University, St.George’s Hospital and Imperial College.

Vaccine research is a long-term and costly investment, but the potential rewards

Our handsome Mr Poitner inspects the samples

Our handsome Mr Poitner inspects the samplesare very much more cost effective compared to the price of continual antiretroviral treatment. Currently investment in AIDS vaccine research stands at £800 million compared to the cost of antiretroviral drugs being £22 billion. However, for every two people put on antiretroviral therapy five become newly infected with HIV.

IAVI’s current donors include the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation, the Starr Foundation, the governments of Denmark, Ireland, Japan, the Netherlands, New York City, Norway, Spain, Sweden, the United Kingdom and the United States.

Dr Cormier explained that IAVI helps to address the critical gaps in vaccine development by bringing together experience and expertise with ground breaking new early research from academia. In IAVI projected models, if a vaccine can be produced giving 70 % effectiveness against the AIDS virus, it would save 8.9 million lives.

Both doctors have been encouraged by results of a clinical trial in Thailand in 2009 and are hoping that the new development goals feature R & D. They are also hoping that the UK government will understand the value and benefits of a long-term investment into vaccine development.

The HIL is tucked away inside the Chelsea and Westminister Hospital. I work in an NHS laboratory and was not even aware of its existence. Yet, as we walked around the HIL and talked to Drs. Bergin and Cormier it was clear to us that it is carrying out ground breaking work. What a shame its work is not better known and made more visible to potential donors, policy decision makers and the general public. The UK should be very proud of the work these researchers are doing. Just listening to Dr Bergin and Dr Cormier, you can see how passionate and determined they are to maintain the important progress made in IAVI`s research in finding an AIDS vaccine. A vaccine would dramatically transform the lives of millions of people world-wide. It would also reduce the growing need for antiretroviral drugs by stopping AIDS infections taking hold. We sincerely hope that IAVI’s present donors continue to support them are that more donors will come on board to support this vital research.

Live Below the Line: the challenge so far

We are now half way through the Live Below the Line challenge. In this guest blog post from Frances Hague,  group leader of the  Newcastle RESULTS group, Frances reflects on the challenge so far and what meals she has been making. Have a read and share with your friends.

Day 1

I’m nervous and excited for the start of LBTL today – and so pleased with how many lovely people have sponsored me!

Hot water and porridge with banana

Hot water and porridge with banana

Went shopping with my £5 in hand yesterday and came home with a bag full of bargains and smart price food for £4.62. I’m going to try to be as creative as possible but no doubt the same meals will crop up a few times!

The spare 38p is in case of the need for emergency tea bags, since going without a cup of tea is definitely going to be difficult…

Currently preparing for tomorrow by eating as much as possible!

Day 2

The first day of Live Below the Line was a little bit different to what I expected.

Vegtable fried rice

Vegtable fried rice

I wasn’t really hungry at any point during the day – no more so than usual anyway! I think I’ve definitely made good food choices that will keep me full, and now understand why so many people who live below the poverty line rely heavily on staple foods such as rice or potatoes.

I have noticed how bland my meals have been, particularly when making porridge and omelettes with water rather than milk, or not having spices and herbs to season rice dishes.

I usually really look forward to planning, cooking and eating my meals, but I’ve already found that rather than enjoying it, I’m eating just to fuel myself – a constant reality for those who live below the poverty line.

Day 3

So I’m at the half-way point of my LBTL challenge, and not feeling too bad. My energy levels are a bit lower than usual, and I found it a harder to get up this morning, but I suppose lethargy is something that comes with having stodgy food as part of your staple diet every day.

Vegetable and lentil dahl

Vegetable and lentil dahl

The lack of variety is getting to me; I miss having spices and different fruits (although buying a pack of frozen veg was definitely a good idea). When I’m busy complaining about having so few ingredients to work with, I’m constantly reminding myself that this situation is only temporary for me but a reality for so many millions of people.

I also now realise that buying cheap tea bags was a great idea, as a lack of caffeine is not pretty! LBTL puts into perspective how spending £2 on a cup of tea in a cafe is such a frivolous waste of money, and definitely makes me think twice about doing so in future.

Fancy trying the challange yourself? Sign up to Live Below the Line with RESULTS here.

May Action Announced

Despite the focus on hunger and poverty in the MDGs, under nutrition remains a problem of almost unimaginable proportions. In 2010 it was estimated that 925 million people in developing countries were suffering from some form of under nutrition- that’s up from 824 million in 1990.

Banner ImageThere are many causes of this problem: an unfair global food system that favours large scale industrial food production over small scale farming; significant gaps in international financing for agricultural production; large numbers of people eating not enough or not nutritionally rich enough food; fluctuating food prices that force millions of people into food poverty…..the list goes on.

However, the winds of change are starting to blow.

This June, the leaders of the G8 are meeting in the UK to discuss, among other things, the crisis at the heart of our food system. What’s more, on June 8th ahead of the G8 meeting, David Cameron is hosting a ‘Hunger Summit’ in London, to make a resounding international call for financial resources and political will to tackle under-nutrition.

Over the past few months, hundreds of UK charities have been working together as part of the ‘IF Campaign’ to make sure world leaders clearly hear the call to end world hunger.

This month we will be joining the global movement to end the crisis in our food system. We are calling on the UK Government and David Cameron to stand up and make a strong pledge at the Summit and to implement changes that will create a fair and sustainable food system for all.

Materials included this month:

GROUP MEETINGS FOR TELEPHONE CONFERENCE: 7th May 2013, 8pm

This month there are groups meeting to join the conference call in: Central London, South London, Poole, the Stort Valley, Birmingham, Oxford, Macclesfield, Central Sheffield, South Sheffield, Leicester, Newcastle, Edinburgh, Glasgow, Norwich, Bath, Bristol, Leamington Spa, Reading and Linlithgow.  If you would like information on the location of your local group, please get in touch with us in the office at: felix.jakens@results.org.uk

If yo would like to join the conference call there are 3 numbers you can call –  0844 762 0762, 0203 398 1398 or 0800 22 90 900. You must then enter the participant code, which is 18723. If you would like advice about which number to call please contact us in the office.

We look forward to you joining us

Joint APPG meeting with high level speakers from the Global Fund

NxrlnnWFmRqla6TQ2LG_ecr7B2g79Rbh28j1S6V47mEOn Monday 29th April the All-Party Parliamentary Groups on HIV/AIDS, Tuberculosis (TB) and Malaria and Neglected Tropical Diseases held a meeting, in the UK Parliament, to discuss the importance of the Global Fund to Fight AIDS, TB and Malaria in the fight against the three diseases. Despite prorogation (marks the end of a parliamentary session and Parliament goes into recess until the state opening on the 8th May) the session was chaired by Rt Hon Nick Herbert MP and he was joined by over ten parliamentarians , and a packed audience, that heard from high level speakers, including:

Simon Bland, outgoing Chair of the Board (June 2013) of the Global Fund, reflected on his chairmanship of the Global Fund highlighting the remarkable change the Fund has went through in the last year in response to the challenges faced in 2011, results achieved in the Fund’s 10 year history and the implementation of a new strategy.

 Dr Mark Dybul, Executive Director of the Global Fund, spoke about the potential that the Fund has to transform the trajectory of the three diseases over the next decade – completely controlling them as public threats if it has enough resources as its disposal – and the importance of UK and other country’s support during this replenishment year to continue the Fund’s vital work. Further information on the replenishment, needs assessment, results and impact of the Fund can be found here.

Maureen Murenga, Here I am Ambassador for the Global Fund, gave a very personal account of her life experience, living with HIV, having lost friends and loved ones to TB and HIV/AIDs. She spoke about how there was little hope for people living with HIV in Kenya, because of the treatment costs, but then the Global Fund helped people to access lifesaving treatment.

Lynne Featherstone MP, Parliamentary-Under Secretary of State for International Development, talked about the strong support that DFID has given to the Global Fund, bringing forward payments to meet its funding pledge a year early, and its importance in the fight against the diseases.

The Minister highlighted how the Fund has gone through a period of rapid and extensive change in the last year under the guidance of Simon Bland, and colleagues, and that any future funding pledge to the Global Fund for this upcoming replenishment would be based on the Multilateral Aid Review (MAR) update due in the summer, as well as when a UK announcement could best leverage additional funds from other donors.

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Milly Hooke from the central London RESULTS group reflects on her experience Living Below the Line

Today is the official launch of Live Below the Line 2013. As many of you begin to undertake the challange, here are some recent personal blog posts from Milly Hooke, a grassroot volunteer in London who took the challange last week.  Hopefully some of her posts and recipe ideas will encourage you as you embark on this difficult but thought-provoking challange.

Can I really Live Below the Line?

Having attended many grassroots campaigning meetings with Results UK, a charity working to eradicate poverty and suffering, it is now time to embark on their biggest activist challenge of the year. I will be ‘Living Below the Line’, spending just £1 a day for 5 days on my entire food and drink consumption! As a self-confessed ‘foodie’ this will be no easy task.

After discussing how to achieve a nutritious ‘shopping basket’, for under a fiver, with my friends I managed to compile a sufficient shopping list; rice, oats, jam, tea bags, beans, pasta, biscuits, some type of veg (hopefully at a discounted price) and possibly some form of reduced meat!… Bit of an ambitious list but with my list in mind I set off to Sainsburys to raid their ‘Basics’ range. In addition to my shopping list I managed to get some discounted breaded chicken bites and pork pies, definitely not my average choice but with a little bit of luck this meat will provide some source of protein and saving me from totally bloating up on a purely carb diet!

The reason behind my (slightly) crazy decision to embark on this challenge is to raise awareness of the millions of people that face this challenge every day.. But they don’t have to make the choice of how to last a just a week this way this is life for them. And they don’t just have decisions on whether its better to get ginger biscuits or custard creams, they have to choose between food or sending their children to school to gain an education. This is an inequality that should not exist, across the globe enough food is made to feed everyone, yet each night 1 in 8 people go to bed hungry. This is unjust and must be ended, together we can work towards a fairer world where everyone has enough to eat.

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New report shows aid funding for nutrition is at a very low level

Official Development Assistance (ODA) that is dedicated to basic nutrition programmes represents only 0.4% of total aid, according to a new report that analysed figures from 2011.  Although some countries are showing leadership in this field, resources and political will remain insufficient to eradicate world hunger. In 2010 the World Bank estimated that an increase of US$10.3 billion in annual financial resources would end under-nutrition. But since then, basic nutrition ODA has increased by only US$139 million, about 1.4% of the identified need.

Credit: GAINAlliance

According to the Development Initiatives report, Canada is currently the largest donor of basic nutrition , disbursing an annual average of US$108 million between 2009 and 2011  The Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation disbursed US$64 million.  The UK and Japan follow, with US$47 million and US$46 million respectively, including contributions made through bilateral aid and through multilateral agencies. EU institutions were also important donors, with contributions of over $34million.

The figures are complicated by differing definitions used in different agencies. The figures above show nutrition-specific programmes. But a larger amount is given to programmes that have are nutrition sensitive, for example programmes in sectors, such as health, agriculture or education. The nutrition-specific components of such interventions are hard to identify and measure. ODA to projects that have a direct impact on nutrition will therefore  be higher than that recorded by the ODA data. Assessing how much of this funding supports nutrition outcomes directly remains problematic.

It is important to publicise the low levels of Aid going to nutrition programming. Under-nutrition is the underlying cause of a third  of all deaths of children under five. Under-nourished children are also more likely to be vulnerable to illnesses and earn about 10% less as adults if they survive. In 2006 the World Bank found that under-nutrition could result in a loss of about 2–3% of national GDP, hence reducing the domestic revenue available for investing in infrastructure and public services.  Investments in nutrition are essential to achieving the Millennium Development Goals (MDGs) and ultimately the eradication of poverty.

The figures provided in the new report come at an important time, just weeks before the Prime Ministers Summit on June 8th. The UK government and the Children’s Investment Fund Foundation (CIFF) will be co-hosting a high-level international meeting, Nutrition for Growth: Beating Hunger through Business and Science in London. The event will bring together business leaders, scientists, governments and civil society to make the ambitious commitments needed to tackle under-nutrition in some of the world’s poorest countries.

Steve Lewis, head of Global Health Advocacy at RESULTS UK, said “These figures draw attention to the very low levels of Aid going to nutrition specific programmes in the poorest countries. Yet interventions to address under-nutrition are among the most effective in reducing poverty. The 2012 Copenhagen Consensus, a panel of international development experts, showed that such interventions can provide a return of US$30 per child for each dollar spent”.

RESULTS supporters can support the success of the June 8th Summit by writing to MP’s and ask them to make the following points to the Prime Minister:

  • The success of the June 8th summit depends on the high-level world leaders who attend – we request that David Cameron himself is present at the summit.
  • Funding for nutrition programmes is highly effective.  A package of interventions to reduce under-nutrition proposed by The Lancet in 2008 was deemed the most effective among 30 measures to tackle poverty.
  • Therefore  the UK government should make a substantial, multi-year, pledge at the conference which will inspire other donors to follow suit.

For Vaccines, What’s Coming Down the Pipe Next?

Imagine a world without AIDS, TB and malaria. It seems impossible, given that these are the world’s top three infectious disease killers. Yet right now we have a historic opportunity to eliminate these diseases as public health threats.

Defeating these diseases has been at the forefront of global health efforts since the new century began, backed with the political will of Millennium Development Goal 6 and the resources that followed.

Progress has been made across the board, but if we stop now, we risk losing gains we have made. However, if we want to finish the job and eradicate these diseases, we need new vaccines. From smallpox to polio to whooping cough, vaccines have traditionally offered a high impact and cost-effective means of preventing disease and death. No disease in history has ever been eradicated without a vaccine, and this time will be no exception. Continue reading

Laura from the Glasgow RESULTS group reflects on her weekend at the RESULTS National Conference 2013

In this guest blog post, Laura Kerr, leader of the Glasgow RESULTS group, reflects on her weekend at the RESULTS National Conference 2013.

I wrote this blog post as I made the 5 and a half hour journey back to Glasgow after the Results National Conference 2013; and I’m very happy to say that no matter how many hours I would have to spend on a train to get to the conference I would.

I heard from so many interesting, engaging and inspiring people throughout the weekend that I feel I could write a book on how much I learned so excuse me if I try to fit to fit too much into this blog.

The main theme of the conference was the Millennium Development Goals and what comes next after 2015. I thought I knew quite a bit about the MDG’s before this weekend but the expert speakers taught me so much more about the positive and negative impacts of the goals.

On a positive note the goals have help to facilitate the significant reduction in extreme poverty, ensured that that we have almost reached our goal in terms of boys and girls being enrolled in primary education and  helped change the development sector for the better (just to name a few). They have encouraged everyone to work towards similar outcomes and as Pushpanath Krishnamurthy highlighted, they have created a much wider impact than just facts and figures; they have changed the development discourse and allowed civil society, activists and NGO’s to all be seen and heard much more widely and in a way almost facilitated a platform for the grassroots individual to be heard.

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World leaders gather on global education crisis

Girls in Nigeria

Image courtesy of GCE UK / Martin Godwin

This week, an unprecedented gathering of world leaders in Washington DC is seeking to urgently accelerate progress on achieving education for all. 61 million children of primary school age are still out of school around the world, and with less than 1,000 days remaining to the deadline for the Millennium Development Goals (MDGs), urgent action is needed right now to ensure every child goes to school by 2015.

Heads of global development agencies and ministers from eight developing countries that account for a large proportion of the world’s out-of-school children are meeting to discuss urgent action to remove the barriers to achieving the Millennium Development Goal (MDG2) of universal primary education by 2015 and to close the gap between rich and poor in learning access and outcomes.

Education summit key players

Key Players: (from left to right) Ban Ki-Moon (UN Secretary-General), Jim Kim (President of World Bank), Gordon Brown (UN Special Envoy on Education), Alice Albright (CEO of Global Partnership for Education)

The “Learning for All Ministerial” meetings are taking place ahead of the World Bank Spring Meetings and are co-hosted by Jim Kim, the Bank’s President, Ban Ki-Moon, the UN Secretary-General, and former UK Prime Minister Gordon Brown, now the UN’s Special Envoy on Global Education. The countries under discussion are: Bangladesh, Democratic Republic of Congo, Ethiopia, Haiti, India, Nigeria, Yemen, and South Sudan.

Just a few weeks ago, UNESCO released a new estimate of the annual financing gap for achieving education for all, putting it at an astonishing $26billion a year – that’s the gap after existing national government and donor commitments. Without urgent action to close this gap, I’m afraid many children will still be out of school in 2015, and many more will also be in school but receiving such a poor quality education that they are learning very little. The UN estimates that 250million children are still unable to read or write by the time they should be reaching grade 4 of school. At least 1.7million additional teachers need to be recruited if universal primary education is to be achieved by 2015 (1million in Africa alone).

RESULTS are determined to see world leaders taking the bold action required. Today (Friday), we, along with the Global Campaign for Education, Global Partnership for Education (GPE), Oxfam and Plan, have arranged a major discussion on “Financing Education as a Global Public Good: 1000 Days to 2015 and Beyond” (see the invite below for all the details). Our hope is that this session will identify a range of ambitious actions that bilateral donors, national governments, the GPE, the World Bank, the private sector and others can take to get us back on track with education for all.

Financing Education as a Global Public Good

Watch this space for updates from this major global gathering, coming soon!

RESULTS welcomes Matt Oliver to the TB team

Hi everyone, my name’s Matt Oliver and I’m coming to the end of Week One at RESULTS UK! I’ve taken on the role of Health Advocacy Officer working on Tuberculosis. I’ll be working on UK-based advocacy, supporting the team’s work on parliamentary engagement and am looking forward to getting started.

I’ve joined RESULTS from Malaria No More UK, where I was an intern supporting their work on parliamentary engagement and getting to grips with the world of MDG6 and the Global Fund. Before that I spent some time volunteering on the Obama Campaign in Denver, Colorado which was a fantastic (and exhausting!) experience.

In the last few years I’ve worked in Mexico leading on the development of a small, charitable project in Chiapas, working to support local CSOs and experiencing some of the challenges that organisations face delivering health care in the developing world. I also spent a long period in France near Annecy helping a local cycling company prepare to launch in the UK.

I’m really looking forward to getting started at RESULTS, and looking forward to meeting and working with all our campaigners and partners across the UK and the wider TB community.