HC Deb 08 May 2001 vol 368 cc47-9W
Mr. Tom Clarke

To ask the Prime Minister when the Performance and Innovation Unit's report on global health will be published. [160722]

The Prime Minister

The PIU report "Tackling the Diseases of Poverty: A package to meet the Okinawa/ Millennium Targets for HIV/AIDS, Tuberculosis and Malaria" is published today. The report sets out a range received by the office of the Police Ombudsman for Northern Ireland in each month from his appointment up to the latest available date; how many in each month were (a) rejected, (b) withdrawn, (c) under investigation, (d) had investigations completed, (e) resulted in disciplinary proceedings being taken, and by whom and (f) resulted in files being sent to the Director of Public Prosecutions. [159156]

Mr. Ingram

The make up and disposition of the complaints received by the Police Ombudsman from 6 November 2000 to 21 April 2001 are not available in the exact form requested. However, the figures that are available are listed in tabular form in the two charts.

Table 1: Cases and complaints received by the Police Ombudsman
Number
Month received Cases1 Complaints
November 2000 400 518
December 2000 265 362
January 2001 332 449
February 2001 283 360
March 2001 243 294
April 2001 220 252
1Cases may involve more than one complaint

of options for tackling these three devastating diseases in developing countries as a contribution, both to the UK Government's thinking and to the international debate.

The report calls for a comprehensive global strategy to: improve and expand coverage of health systems and health promotion; make affordable for those that need them vaccines, drugs, and other products to prevent and treat the diseases; and provide incentives for research into new, more effective health products.

The PIU report proposes a series of measures including: a new Global Fund for Health to finance the purchase of existing health products to tackle the three diseases, substantially scaling up the provision of these products to those most in need but least able to afford them; binding advance purchase commitment to purchase new, more effective products as they become available, strengthening incentives to step up investment in R&D; a framework for tiered pricing and greater local production of patented products under voluntary licences to improve affordability; and clarification of the flexibilities in intellectual property protection under the WTO TRIPS agreement; targeted support including tax credits and public-private partnerships for R&D, and a new platform for clinical trials of new drugs and vaccines; and a scaled-up and better co-ordinated global partnership to halt and reverse the spread of disease.

The report estimates that 50 million lives could be saved over the next 20 years if the global effort to tackle these diseases was better resourced and co-ordinated.

The UK is already fully committed to playing its part in a greater and better co-ordinated international effort to tackle communicable diseases in the developing world. The ideas in the PIU report will help the UK pursue this agenda internationally at the highest level.

Copies have been placed in the House Library.