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Use Biotech to Help Poor, Not Rich, Scientists Say
Fri Sep 27, 5:42 PM ET
By Rajiv Sekhri
TORONTO (Reuters) - Using
biotechnology to produce simple nutritional and hygienic improvements
and cheap vaccines would do more to improve global health than the
development of high-tech treatments, a survey of 28 leading scientists
from around the world concludes.
A report on the survey done by
two University of Toronto researchers, released on Friday, said the
scientists surveyed produced a list of top 10 biotechnologies to improve
health. They include development of cheap vaccines, ways to cleanse
drinking water and methods to genetically modify foods to enhance
nutritional value.
The list mentions no high-tech treatments such as artificial hearts
or organ transplants.
The report shows a consensus among scientists from countries as
diverse as Canada, India, the United States, South Korea (
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web sites) and Cuba on the need for improved health care for the
billions of poor people around the world.
"The key message here is that you can use very high-powered science
and cutting-edge technology to find solutions for diseases that are
killing millions around the world," said Abdallah Daar, the study's
co-author, who is director of the Joint Center for Bioethics at the
University of Toronto.
The study, published in US journal Nature Genetics on Friday, calls
for urgent attention to be paid to the inequality in health care between
the developed and developing world, where more than 5 billion people
live.
"Ninety percent of the all medical research is targeted at problems
affecting only 10 percent of the world's population," said Peter Singer,
the other author of the study, who is also a director of the Joint
Center for Bioethics.
"If you say biotech, the average person would think about Silicon
Valley, Wall Street, Harvard or Stanford, but the message of this report
is that the main benefits of biotechnology may actually be in Delhi and
Beijing and Johannesburg and Rio De Janeiro," Singer said.
First on the list is the need to develop technology to diagnose
infectious diseases. Second is technology to develop vaccines to fight
those diseases.
Some other priorities on the list include better methods of drug
delivery, technologies to clean the environment, vaccines to allow women
to protect themselves from sexually transmitted diseases, genetically
modified food such as corn and rice with enhanced nutritional value, and
computer-based tools to mine data on human and nonhuman gene sequences
for clues to preventing and treating diseases.
"The top 10 list also debunks the myth that biotechnology cannot
provide tools for disease prevention and health promotion," Daar said.
"Just as we promote the use of bed nets for malaria, we must also
develop new malaria drugs based on knowledge of the malaria parasite's
genome and genetic modification of the mosquito that carries malaria."
Singer and Daar said the technologies mentioned on the list can
realistically be put to use within a decade to help developing
countries.
"With most biotechnologies being applied to the health problems of
the industrialized nations, the World Health Organization (
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web sites) and other health bodies have voiced serious concerns,"
Singer said.
Daar added: "We hope this report will receive the serious
consideration of health and science ministers worldwide and by the
international donor community as a guide to research and funding
priorities."
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