Thank you very much, honourable chairman, and all members of Parliament and of this committee.
It's always a special pleasure for me to be here with you. I've been able to talk to you several times and to update you on what's happening, not just in the Global Fund but also on global health in general. So I'm particularly pleased to be here with you this morning.
My first message is, indeed, one of great thanks to Canada, to its government, and also to you as parliamentarians for what you've been supporting over so many years now on global health.
Canada has shown extraordinary leadership in global health, both in maternal and child health. Canada has been well recognized for that over many years, through the G-7 summits and their commitment to mother and child health, and to the Global Fund and therefore to the fight against the major infectious diseases: AIDS, tuberculosis, and malaria.
Let me also point out again how closely these topics are related. Still today HIV, TB, and malaria are directly responsible for the deaths of 1.1 million women per year and 1.2 million children per year. There's a very close link between the international efforts to improve the health of women and children and the efforts we make in addressing the major infectious diseases.
In fact, you mentioned, Chair Allison, that we had this replenishment meeting in Washington, D.C., that delivered a little bit more than $12 billion for the three-year period of 2014 to 2016. That allows us to disperse about $4 billion per year. Roughly half of that goes directly into the health of women and children. This is just to emphasize this very close link.
I also want to thank you for the consistent support across all parties here in Canada for global health. I've always perceived this was very much a bipartisan issue supported by all of you, and I really want to thank you for that.
Therefore, let's look a little bit at what has been achieved with this extraordinary support from Canada over the last couple of years. This is the year the international community, represented by the United Nations, is reviewing the progress on the millennium development goals. We will have the big summit in September in New York. Therefore, it's important to take stock.
Child mortality has now gone down by 50% in just over the last decade. That is an extraordinary achievement that few of us working in the field would ever have thought possible. Similarly, maternal mortality has gone down also by about 50%. If we look at the three diseases—AIDS, tuberculosis, and malaria—we see decreases in infection rates and mortality also in the order of 40% to 50% across all these three diseases.
When the millennium development goals were established in 2000, it was perceived as a global emergency crisis. The numbers were going up and up. Six million people were dying from these diseases every year.
Now we're able to say that not only have we halted and reversed these trends, as was mandated by the MDG summit, but also we can really see that we have decreases of 50% and more. That means that we can also approach the phase where we can credibly talk about defeating these three diseases over the next 15 years or so once and for all as public health problems. This is an extraordinary achievement. I really hope that all of you who played an important role in this feel justifiably proud of what has been achieved with your support.
We should now build on that as we are already into a year that will be quite critical for international development. It's an extraordinary year, if we are looking at the big events coming up.
There is the financing for development conference in Addis Ababa in July that will set the scene for how the world will finance development over the next 15 years. Then there is the big summit with many heads of state, some say the biggest assembly of heads of state ever, in New York in September on sustainable development goals and how to chart out the course forward to defeat poverty over the next 15 years. Also, let's not forget that all of this is linked to climate change. We have the big conference in Paris in December on climate.
There is a very critical year ahead of us.
When I look at global health, I see particularly extraordinary opportunities beyond what I just said.
There has been a famous report in The Lancet that some of you might have seen. The big medical journal, The Lancet, commissioned a study that included really all the best brains in the world on public health and finance. They issued their Lancet report on global health by the year 2035, so they took a little longer-term perspective.
They called this report the “great convergence” because that's what it is about. We see now, after many decades when health indicators between the poorest countries and the richest countries were growing bigger and bigger...the gaps were getting bigger. Mortality was rising in the poorest countries where we had, in the wealthy countries, quite sophisticated health systems and life expectancy was going up. Now we see for the first time almost ever that this is approaching again, and that is fantastic news.
Last year the World Health Organization issued a report saying that life expectancy in the poorest countries, the low-income countries, has increased by nine years over the last 15 years. That's extraordinary, and there are many African countries where life expectancy was going down, particularly because of AIDS, and we were worried about the stability of these countries. Now the World Health Organization can report that in the poorest countries life expectancy has gone up by nine years. By the year 2030 we can credibly talk about approaching mortality rates for children and for adults where there will not be this big gap that we've seen so far.
That's not to say that the health systems will be at the same level. That's not possible, but you don't need these extraordinarily expensive and sophisticated health systems. What you need is very simple but affordable and highly effective interventions, which we now have, that will enable us to achieve this great convergence in health.
From the Global Fund's perspective, we are a financing institution and we make these resources available for countries in need so they can implement their programs on care, prevention, and treatment. But apart from the financial resources, we also look very much at efforts to make those programs more effective and to provide the kind of technical assistance and innovation that will drive these improvements.
Therefore, we've made innovation and the engagement of the private sector a key topic for the Global Fund for the next few years. That also matches quite well with the agenda of the Honourable Minister Paradis, who is also talking a lot about innovation and private sector engagement. In fact, I was with him on a panel at the World Economic Forum in Davos where we discussed that. There was a special edition of Global Health and Diplomacy that was issued, together with Canada, and we participated in that and published an article on how the Global Fund is including the private sector and innovation in that.
To that effect we've created what we call an innovation hub where we bring together many private sector companies from around the world, again, not to ask for their money but to ask for the particular innovation that they can provide, which if linked with the resources that we provide, will allow us so much more impact in the countries. We are looking at issues like improving the procurement and the supply chain management, the financial management, risk management, and the overall program quality. We already have a number of very good examples where leading international companies are working with the Global Fund to make these programs more effective and more accountable, by the way, so that we can really follow the investments and measure the results and the impact.
In that context we are also proposing what we call an e-marketplace. We want to, in a sense, innovate the whole way that countries procure essential drugs and health commodities to make it simpler, to make it more transparent, and to make it cheaper.
We have already, over the last two years, through innovations in procurement, saved about $300 million by purchasing bed nets, by purchasing AIDS drugs and malaria drugs, because we have a new way of procuring. In the future we are proposing an e-marketplace where those countries and their ministries or their NGOs can directly access online what kinds of commodities they need, what kinds of drugs they need, and access them at the best possible price and at guaranteed quality.
That cuts out a lot of middle agencies that increase the price and the complexity. This is not proposed just for the Global Fund. This is for all kinds of agencies that want to participate in that, including bilateral agencies, multilateral agencies, and other partners of the Global Fund.
That's one of the innovations that we are proposing and that we have been discussing with the Canadian ministry because we feel there might be a particular affinity. We would be very proud if Canada would pioneer some of that with us and communicate that with us in this very important development year.
You mentioned that the Global Fund is a key partnership where governments, private sector, and civil society come together at all levels—the global level and the country level. We strongly believe only that would be able to achieve these extraordinary results that we've seen and to achieve even more in the future.
Thank you very much for inviting us. We definitely are very happy to engage in any questions you might have.