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Unitaid

Unitaid

@unitaid

We save lives by making new health products available and affordable for people who need them most – fast. Hosted by WHO. www.unitaid.org

18 videos

Health innovation alone doesn’t change lives. For 20 years, we have focused on closing the gap between innovation and access, helping expand 150+ health innovations. Innovation moves fast—the challenge is turning it into impact at scale for those who need it most.

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Health solutions must adapt to a warming world. Heat-stable carbetocin helps prevent severe bleeding after childbirth and remains effective without refrigeration, supporting safer births everywhere.

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150+ innovations introduced over 20 years. From HIV and TB to malaria and maternal health, we have seen innovation continue to play an essential role in expanding access to quality care worldwide.

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Malaria cases are rising in Rwanda. At Masaka District Hospital in Kigali, infections have increased sixfold from 2023 to 2025. Dr Fulgence Niyomugaba cites drug resistance, highlighting the need for STOP-AMDR to protect treatment effectiveness.

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Children living with HIV are especially vulnerable, as their immune systems are still developing and the disease can progress quickly. Through the Unitaid funded THRIVE project, we are expanding access to child friendly tools and care so every child can grow and thrive. 👇

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Health solutions must adapt to a warming world. Heat-stable carbetocin helps prevent severe bleeding after childbirth and remains effective without refrigeration, supporting safer births everywhere.

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HIV often shows few symptoms at first, so many people do not know their status until their immune system is severely weakened. This is advanced HIV disease. Through the THRIVE project, we are expanding access to the tools to prevent, detect and treat it. Watch to learn more! 👇

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Children living with HIV are especially vulnerable, as their immune systems are still developing and the disease can progress quickly. Through the Unitaid funded THRIVE project, we are expanding access to child friendly tools and care so every child can grow and thrive. 👇

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Malaria cases are rising in Rwanda. At Masaka District Hospital in Kigali, infections have increased sixfold from 2023 to 2025. Dr Fulgence Niyomugaba cites drug resistance, highlighting the need for STOP-AMDR to protect treatment effectiveness.

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Malaria cases are rising in Rwanda. At Masaka District Hospital in Kigali, infections have increased sixfold from 2023 to 2025. Dr Fulgence Niyomugaba cites drug resistance, highlighting the need for STOP-AMDR to protect treatment effectiveness.

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Health solutions must adapt to a warming world. Heat-stable carbetocin helps prevent severe bleeding after childbirth and remains effective without refrigeration, supporting safer births everywhere.

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Midwives are on the frontlines of maternal and newborn health. With the right tools, training and support, they can better prevent, detect and treat postpartum hemorrhage, one of the leading causes of maternal death worldwide.

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The medicines that have saved millions of lives from malaria are becoming less effective. Drug resistance is no longer a distant risk. It is already impacting patients and health systems. We highlight why protecting these tools matters now more than ever.

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Preventing maternal deaths requires strong health systems and trained health workers. Through SafeBirth Africa, Unitaid and the EU are expanding access to WHO-recommended PPH tools in five African countries. cc. Delegation of the European Union to Nigeria and ECOWAS, European Union in Zambia

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Malaria cases are rising in Rwanda. At Masaka District Hospital in Kigali, infections have increased sixfold from 2023 to 2025. Dr Fulgence Niyomugaba cites drug resistance, highlighting the need for STOP-AMDR to protect treatment effectiveness.

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As artemisinin resistance takes hold, Noella Umulisa highlights the urgency of solutions like multiple first-line therapies, with STOP-AMDR led by @jhpiego.org working to preserve the effectiveness of antimalarial drugs and sustain progress.

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Malaria cases are rising rapidly, with infections increasing sixfold between 2023 and 2025, according to Dr Fulgence Niyomugaba, who points to drug resistance as a key driver, underscoring why the STOP-AMDR project is essential to protect the effectiveness of current treatments.

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The medicines that have saved millions of lives from malaria are becoming less effective. No longer a distant risk, drug resistance is already impacting patients and health systems. Ahead of World Malaria Day, we highlight why protecting these tools matters now more than ever.

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