Historical Global Health R&D “hits”: Development, main sources of funding, and impact

By Rethink Priorities, Erin Braid, Melanie Basnak🔸, bruce @ 2023-06-12T12:46 (+56)

This is a linkpost to https://rethinkpriorities.org/publications/historical-global-health-rd-hits

Editorial note

This report was produced by Rethink Priorities during December 2022 and January 2023. The project was commissioned and supported by Open Philanthropy, which does not necessarily endorse our conclusions.

The report focuses on the development story and impact of some global health R&D ‘hits’ or ‘success stories’ of the last two decades: injectable artesunate, rectal artesunate, Coartem Dispersible, long-lasting insecticidal nets, and dolutegravir. We did not classify these developments as ‘hits’ ourselves, or compare them to any other treatments, but we were asked to look into them based on the expectation that they have saved or could save many lives, and could constitute some of the most successful treatments of the past couple of decades. We analyzed the steps that led to their development, with a particular focus on the roles different stakeholders played. Additionally, we estimated the number of deaths these products have averted to date and might avert in the future.

We have tried to flag major sources of uncertainty in the report and are open to revising our views as more information becomes available.

Executive summary

Figure 1: Cumulative number of deaths averted by each product since its introduction

Figure 2: Total number of deaths averted by each product until obsolescence

Click here for the full version of this report on the Rethink Priorities website.

Contributions and acknowledgments

Bruce Tsai and Erin Braid were the main authors of this report. Erin Braid and Melanie Basnak edited the client-facing version of the report to transform it into a public-facing report. Melanie Basnak reviewed and supervised this report. Thanks to Adam Papineau for copyediting and to Rachel Norman for assistance with publishing the report online. Further thanks to Christopher Larkin, Mathias Mondy, and Tom McLean from IVCC for taking the time to speak with us.