Medicines for Malaria Venture explained

Medicines for Malaria Venture (MMV) is a not-for-profit public-private partnership that was established as a foundation in Switzerland in 1999. Its main mission is to reduce malaria in disease-endemic countries by developing and facilitating the delivery of antimalarial drugs.

History

MMV was launched in 1999, with initial seed funding of US$4 million from the Government of Switzerland, the Department for International Development (UK), the Government of the Netherlands, the World Bank, and the Rockefeller Foundation.

Governance

MMV is governed by a board of directors. The Chairman of MMV is Mr Alan Court.[1] MMV has a board of directors in North America, an Expert Scientific Advisory Committee which helps to identify projects, an Access & Product Management Advisory Committee and a Global Safety Board which reviews projects.[2]

Projects

MMV's project portfolio states that their goals are:

Open Source Malaria

MMV started the Open Source Malaria project,[3] which encourages people to share procedures and results of open source research.[4] The Open Source Malaria, with researchers at the University of Sydney, supervised high school students at Sydney Grammar School who adapted a synthesis of Daraprim (pyrimethamine) using a less hazardous method.[5] [6]

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Board of Directors Medicines for Malaria Venture . live . https://web.archive.org/web/20240501215528/https://www.mmv.org/about-us/people-governance/board-directors . 1 May 2024 . 12 December 2022 . www.mmv.org.
  2. Web site: People & governance Medicines for Malaria Venture . live . https://web.archive.org/web/20240501222218/https://www.mmv.org/about-us/people-governance . 1 May 2024 . 2022-12-12 . www.mmv.org.
  3. Web site: 14 May 2017 . OpenSourceMalaria . OpenWetWare.
  4. Web site: OpenSourceMalaria:FAQ . OpenWetWare.
  5. Web site: University of Sydney . 2016-11-30 . Breaking good: School students make costly drug cheaply using open source approach . Eurekalert.
  6. Web site: Knopf . Ehsan . 2016-12-01 . Sydney high school students spend $27 to recreate drug that has retailed for $148k . 9news.com.au.