BusinessLine (Chennai)

Bristol Myers Squibb selects two Indian groups for equity grant

- OUR BUREAU Our Bureau Mumbai

India is part of an initiative by multinatio­nal biopharmac­eutical company Bristol Myers Squibb to advance health equity. BMS said the $1.8million health equity grant initiative addresses the social determinan­ts of health in four countries with underserve­d patient needs — namely Brazil, India, Thailand and the UK.

The grant is an extension of the company’s longterm commitment to invest $150 million in health equity by 2025, it added.

MAJOR CHALLENGE

The grant will support eight organisati­ons addressing the root causes of inequities to deliver a lasting impact at the community level, BMS said, adding they were selected in countries with underserve­d communitie­s living with cancer and blood disorders. Based on the outcome of this pilot programme, BMS would consider expansion to other geographie­s and communitie­s to remove systemic barriers to care, it added.

The World Health Organizati­on (WHO) defines social determinan­ts of health as nonmedical factors that influence health outcomes, including income and social status, education, physical environmen­t, social support networks, genetics, health services and gender.

Cari Gallman, BMS Executive Vice President (Corporate Affairs), said that access remains a significan­t challenge for many patients and the social determinan­ts of health present barriers to people attaining their full potential for health and wellbeing.

The two grantees in India are the Gabriel Project (Mumbai), which creates

The two grantees in India are the Gabriel Project (Mumbai) and West Bengal’s Liver Foundation

innovative and comprehens­ive solutions to treat sickle cell anaemia and oral cancer among underserve­d tribal villages; and West Bengal’s Liver Foundation, which was chosen for training rural healthcare providers to be advocates, referral points and dropout counsellor­s at the grassroots level and align them with public health linkages

for the prevention of hepatocell­ular carcinoma in rural Indian communitie­s, BMS said.

OTHER GRANTEES

The other organisati­ons chosen for the grant are: Brazil’s Instituto Lado a Lado pela Vida (serving rural population and patients with cancer) and The Instituto Oncoguia (training nonmedical people on cancer informatio­n and care); Thailand’s Foundation for Education and Developmen­t (working to improve prevention and primary care in Burmese migrant communitie­s living close to the southern border with Myanmar); and the UK’s Patients Associatio­n (which aims to bridge the gap between social care and healthcare, and improving access to quality care for underserve­d population­s); Blood Cancer UK (aimed at reducing inequality in clinical trial recruitmen­t for people from ethnic minority communitie­s with blood cancer); and The Less Survivable Cancer Taskforce (through Pancreatic Cancer UK, working to ensure government­s and health services commit to concrete actions for less survivable cancers, with the goal of doubling survival rates over the next decade), the BMS note said.

 ?? REUTERS ?? THE RECIPIENTS.
REUTERS THE RECIPIENTS.

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