NewsHour Features Two Health Experts on President Obama's Global Health InitiativeJune 24, 2009 On the NewsHour Insider Forum, Ray Suarez interviews global health experts Michele Moloney-Kitts, assistant U.S. global AIDS coordinator, and Christine Lubinski, head of the Center for Global Health Policy and Advocacy about President Obama's $63 billion global health initiative. The online interview, which features questions by NewsHour viewers, looked at how the Obama Administration's approach to global health differs from the approach of President Bush, among a range of global health topics. Compared to President Bush, who "was very focused on three diseases" -- "AIDS, TB and malaria," Moloney-Kitts explained Obama wants to "build on some of our great successes in PEPFAR and start to really look at a more balanced, perhaps, portfolio." "[U]nfortunately, the resources proposed to the president's global health initiative don't really match the rhetoric," Lubinski said. "[W]e already have a critical piece of legislation that's law that would authorize 48 billion over five years for AIDS, TB and malaria, alone. And $63 billion over six years would shortchange both that program or provide little additional funding for priorities like family planning and maternal and child health. And the president's FY10 budget, in fact, did not provide significant increased resources for any of these critical global health initiatives." The program also addressed the U.S. investments in the areas of HIV/AIDS, TB, nutrition and workforce training worldwide (Suarez, NewsHour, 6/23). Back to other news for June 2009
This article was provided by Henry J. Kaiser Family Foundation. It is a part of the publication Kaiser Daily Global Health Policy Report.
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