After 10 years and an investment of $1 billion, none of the
projects funded under the Gates Foundation’s
Grand Challenges program has yet made a significant contribution to
saving lives and improving health in the developing world, according to thisarticle in the Seattle Times.
Launched with fanfare a decade ago, the original Grand
Challenges program mobilized leading scientists to tackle some of the toughest
problems in global health. Gates handed out nearly half a billion dollars in
grants to 45 “dream teams” of researchers working on everything from
tuberculosis drugs and new vaccine strategies to advanced mosquito repellents
and bananas genetically engineered to boost nutrition. Not only did he
underestimate some of the scientific hurdles, Gates said. He and his team also
failed to adequately consider what it would take to implement new technologies
in countries where millions of people lack access to basic necessities such as
clean water and medical care.
So in 2008 he introduced a program of small, highly focused
grants called Grand Challenges Explorations. With headline-grabbing goals like
condoms that feel good and waste-to-energy toilets, the explorations initiative
has probably garnered more media attention than anything else the giant
philanthropy has undertaken. But none of those projects has yet borne fruit,
either.
“Was the program actually a success?” asked Nobel
Prize-winning biologist Harold Varmus, who served on the founding board. “We
don’t know.”
Among Bill Gates’ favorite projects is an effort to
eliminate Dengue fever by infecting mosquitoes with bacteria that block disease
transmission. Another is a spinoff biotech working on a probiotic to cure
cholera. But critics say projects like those demonstrate the foundation’s
continuing emphasis on technological fixes, rather than on the social and
political roots of poverty and disease.
Dr. David McCoy, a public-health expert at Queen Mary
University, London, said “It’s in looking constantly for new solutions, rather
than tackling the barriers to existing solutions.” The toll of many diseases
could be lowered simply by strengthening health systems in developing
countries, he said. Instead, programs like Grand Challenges — heavily promoted
by the Gates Foundation’s PR machine — divert the global community’s attention
from such needs, McCoy argues.
There exits a disconnect between laboratory science and the
field. An effort to develop vaccines that don’t need refrigeration yielded good
ideas, but it didn’t make sense to commercialize the technology because the
entire vaccine-distribution system in Africa is built around the use of
refrigeration.
Several Gates-funded, high-tech toilets were installed in
the Indian city of Raichur last year, at a cost of about $8,000 each, residents
refused to use them. Many of the other toilet prototypes funded through Grand
Challenges are so complex, with solar panels and combustion chambers, they
would never prove practical. Jason Kass, founder of Toilets for People, a
company that sells simple, composting toilets to nonprofits in the developing
world, explained in the New York Times that
“Bill Gates Can’t Build a Toilet…If the many failed development projects of the
past 60 years have taught us anything, it’s that complicated, imported
solutions do not work. ”
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