For more than half a
century, the Population Council has pursued the objective of giving people
the means to choose whether and when to have children by meeting their needs
for contraception. One of the ways of achieving this goal in which the
Council has been uniquely successful is developing long-lasting but
reversible contraceptives and making them available to women throughout the
world who want and need them.
In fact, three of the
four long-acting, reversible contraceptives for women available today were
developed by the Council at its Center for Biomedical Research: the Copper T
intrauterine device; the Norplant® subdermal implant system and its
successor, Jadelle®; and Mirena®, the levonorgestrel hormone-releasing
intrauterine system (IUS). More than
75 million women worldwide have relied on these products for family
planning.
The Council aims to provide access to these contraceptives to all—rich
and poor, in developed and developing countries. In licensing these products
to pharmaceutical companies for manufacturing and marketing, the Council
always includes provisions for access to the products at reduced prices by
public-sector organizations that make them available to the poor. A special
public-sector price may be established, below the market price but above
cost, or a charitable foundation may be created to donate the product. Among
the foundations that have been established to satisfy this requirement are:
The International Contraceptive Access Foundation
The International Contraceptive Access (ICA) Foundation was established in
December 2003 as a collaboration between Bayer Schering Pharma AG, a
research-centered pharmaceutical company, and the Population Council. The
objective of this collaboration is to provide contraceptive products to
developing countries and to serve the reproductive needs of women and
families in resource-poor settings. The ICA Foundation donates specially
packaged levonorgestrel-releasing intrauterine systems (LNG-IUS) to
international development agencies and public health organizations (both
government and nongovernmental affiliates) who then offer the LNG-IUS at
reduced or no cost to poor women and families. The foundation is governed by
an international board of trustees representing public-sector agencies and
the international donor community as well as the Population Council and
Bayer Schering Pharma. As of late 2008, donations have been made to eight
countries, including Brazil, Ecuador, Indonesia, and Kenya, and the
foundation continues to create new programs and partnerships.
The ARCH Foundation
Under its Mirena contract, Bayer HealthCare Pharmaceuticals (which is responsible for sales of Mirena within the United States), established the not-for-profit ARCH
Foundation to assist low-income women in the United States who do not have
insurance coverage for the Mirena IUS. For those who meet the eligibility
criteria, the foundation provides Mirena free of charge. Assistance may also
be available for qualified patients who require removal of Mirena. The ARCH
Foundation has been in operation since 2002, is governed by a board of
trustees that includes several eminent practitioners and researchers in the
reproductive health field as well as representatives of the Population
Council and Bayer HealthCare Pharmaceuticals, and has served the needs of more than 25,000 women since
inception.
The Contraception Foundation
Wyeth Pharmaceuticals established the Contraception Foundation (formerly the
Norplant Foundation) under the terms of its agreement with the Population
Council to market Norplant in the United States. The foundation’s mission
was to improve the health and lives of women in the United States through
the support of education, health services, and family planning. The
foundation, which operated until early 2006, was governed by a board that
included eminent reproductive health practitioners and researchers as well
as representatives of public-sector agencies and the Council. The decision
to end the foundation's operations resulted from the withdrawal of the product
by its marketer.
In addition to its Norplant System (levonorgestrel implants) Removal
Program, from 2003 to 2005 the foundation donated more than 2 million cycles
of Alesse® (0.1 mg levonorgestrel/20 mcg ethinyl estradiol
tablets) oral contraceptive clinic packs to a network of nonprofit agencies
and clinics that distributed Alesse.
See Also
- "The Population Council joins forces with Schering to establish the
International Contraceptive Access Foundation" (2004) (news
release)
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