But we have a few problems now. One, again, is the issue that we're not funding the global fund today as we funded it a year ago in order to do this work.
With less funding to do double the work...first of all, that's not going to happen. The only way that countries that contribute to these multilateral agreements through the global fund are going to even be able to get value for their investments--because they will be asked to invest again in the global fund, especially as we have more and more people who are clamouring to be on treatment and who are not going to be able to access treatment.... The cost to our government and other governments around the world is going to be even greater, especially if we are prepared to pay 10, 20, or 30 times more in terms of the drug costs.
The human resources costs, the procurement costs, the transportation costs, and all the rest of it, we can keep in check. The one thing we're not going to be able to keep in check if we don't come up with some sort of easy procurement solution for these drugs to be available cheaper.... At the end of the day, we either give up and say this the best the world can do, or, especially if we say we've made a commitment to 5.2 million.... We know today that with the molecule available out of India, which most of these people are on, 30% of them have to come off that molecule within two years because the toxicities are too great for them to continue. The pain they get in their legs and their hands is too great. We won't talk about them getting fat atrophy and their faces looking wasted and everything else; we're just going to talk about pain.
For that reason alone, when we move to the next level, to that second line, if we can't get that second line to them at the same price we're getting the first line to them, or at least at a comparable price, we're going to have to back away from that commitment we're already made to those 5.2 million people, and say, “You know what, you were on therapy, but we can only afford to have three million in the world on therapy because the costs are too prohibitive”.
And with the global fund--and, Pep Pharm, because the Americans have come back as well, in terms of their commitments--we just can't afford it.