8A - The Michigan Daily - Thursday, September 26, 1996 NATION/WORLD U.N. finds new vaccines too costly for poor nations I Los Angeles Times WASHINGTON - Medical science is on the brink of developing newer and more effective vaccines to prevent the scourges of some childhood diseases, but their cost may be too great for poor nations to bear, a U.N. report warned yesterday. The study, released by the World Health Organization and UNICEF, pre- dicted that vaccines would be devel- oped within 15 years for currently unpreventable childhood killers, such as diarrheal diseases, acute respiratory infections and malaria. Also, it said there would be vast improvements in existing vaccines. "But there is a catch, the report said. "The new generation vaccines are expected to be many times more expen- sive than those in use today. Vaccines are likely to cost not cents, but dollars a dose from now on." Moreover, the growing reluctance of wealthier countries to donate money to support vaccine programs in the Third World threatens the lives of millions of children, the report said. It urged governments and others to donate more money to fund the pro- grams to support vaccines for those neediest countries that cannot afford them. Treatment for children who develop preventable illnesses "will cost a lot more, both in money and needless suffering," than paying for immuniza- tions, the report said. The report asked manufacturers to consider "tiered pricing," for poorer nations, so they would be charged less. "The 21st century is the century of the vaccine," said Dr. Ciro de Quadros, a top adviser on immunization at the World Health Organization. But he added, "The vaccine of the future will be more expensive than the vaccine of today." More than 12 million children die every year around the world, 3 million of them before they are a week old, the report said. The report hailed the successes in the global immunization program, noting that the percentage of children immu- nized against the most common child- hood ailments has grown from 5 per- cent in 1974 to 80 percent today. Nevertheless, it said that lapses in the current system cause the unnecessary deaths of an estimated 2 million chil- dren annually from diseases that could be prevented by immunization. These occur because current vac- cines are not 100 percent effective, and because about 20 percent of the world's children each year are not fully immu- nized during their first year against diphtheria, tetanus, whooping cough, polio, tuberculosis and measles. Many children fail to receive all the required doses of a vaccine, sometimes because of delivery problems, or failure to com- ply with schedules for reasons that are beyond their control, the report said. In 1994, for example, more than I million children died from measles, nearly 500,000 from neonatal tetanus, and almost 400,000 from whooping cough. "These were the children who slipped through the ... net - among them some of the poorest and most dis- advantaged children in the world," the report said. l .r AP PHOTO Border problems A Palestinian woman tries to stop an Israeli border police officer from arresting a Palestinian youth outside the Old City's Damascus Gate In Jerusalem, yesterday. New test detects mad cow disease in cattle, humans I" The Washington Post Scientists have devised a relatively simple and accurate way to test for the presence of brain-destroying maladies such as Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease (CJD) in humans and "mad cow dis- ease" in cattle. If the test eventually becomes com- mercially available, it could cut the transmission rate of these invariably fatal conditions by identifying conta- gious hosts and, in people, by providing a way to screen potential donors of tis- sue, blood and organs. The method was invented by researchers at the National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke and California Institute of Technology. They found that the presence of a distinctive protein in a subject's spinal fluid is a reliable sign of one of a family of dis- eases known collectively as transmissi- ble spongiform encephalopathies (TSE). So far, the test has proven accu- rate about 96 percent of the time in humans and 87 percent in animals. Prior to that discovery, reported in today's issue of The New England Journal of Medicine, the only way to test for CJD was to take biopsy samples from the brains of patients - a risky and frequently inconclusive procedure. As recently as a year ago, few peo- ple had heard of TSEs. Spongiform encephalopathies (so called because of the sponge-like, hole-pocked texture of gray matter destroyed by the dis- ease) are ordinarily quite rare in peo- ple, striking one or two persons per million worldwide every year. Animal. forms, however, are fairly common, particularly as a disease called scrapie in sheep. But human health concerns began to rise this spring with the revelation that between 1994 and 1995, 10 Britons developed a peculiar variant of CJD, presumably from eating dis- eased beef. Ten may not seem like a large number, but it astonished researchers for two- reasons. First, nine of the patients were less than 35 years old, whereas the normal inci- dence rate in all persons less than 45 years old is only five per billion per year. Second, all the patients suffered from a peculiar form of CJD ostensibly unique .to the British Isles - where, over the last 15 years, hundreds of thou- sands of cattle have been infected with a bovine TSE popularly termed "mad cow disease." In addition, researchers knew that TSEs could be transmitted by eating flesh, thanks to studies of a cannibal group in Papua New Guinea that experienced an epidemic of a TSE called kuru until the practice of eating deceased elders was curtailed. Further, laboratory experiments have shown that, in some cases, the dis- eases can be transmitted between species; in fact, the use of sheep offal as a supplement in cattle feed appar- ently caused the British outbreak. Health officials began to worry that somehow the bovine form might be spreading to humans - a connection for which there is still no conclusive evidence. 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