Frist: a question for our next president.

Feb 27th, 2008 10:11 AM EST
By Virginia Simmons

FristNew180For Americans, and especially our next president, President Bush’s trip to Africa last week wasn’t a victory lap. It’s a starting line. A challenge. The opening, not the closing, of a legacy in which medicine and health diplomacy serve as a currency for peace.

The trip demonstrated for the next president, whoever that may be, the tremendous opportunity that awaits in Africa. Yes, there is much work to do, and we are still confronted by staggering realities: More than 24.7 million people still have HIV/AIDS in Africa alone; thousands still die from malaria each day, and more than one billion people worldwide still don’t have access to clean water.

But never before have we had the tools we now possess to do this vital work - the medicines and technologies that are saving lives as you read these words have never been so inexpensive and so readily available. When you think about it, it’s amazing that AIDS drugs now cost as little as $1 a day . . . that a mosquito net can now protect a child from malaria for five years for $5 . . . that a well can provide clean, safe drinking water for 20 years at a cost of only $20 a person.
And never before have we had so many answers to the doubts of the past, the criticisms that dominated the debate over the effectiveness of American foreign assistance for a generation. Many of the old presumptions about Africa and other developing regions have been proved wrong, addressed through transparency and accountability, or dismissed by new approaches and 21st century technologies.

Last week President Bush visited some of the HIV-positive men, women, and children in poverty-stricken communities who are living today because of American-funded medicines. To date, around 1.4 million Africans now receive anti-retroviral pills through the president’s AIDS initiative.

Want to see health diplomacy making a difference? Want to see medicine serving as a currency for peace? Stare into the eyes of a mother whose daughter is alive thanks to America.

Critics once said that investing in Africa was worse than throwing money away, that the dollars would find their way into corrupt leaders’ bank accounts and perpetuate poverty. But the Millennium Challenge Account (MCA) has changed the way America provides foreign assistance, attacking corruption head on by engaging leaders to take the difficult steps toward government reform, accountability, and transparency.

Just last week the president signed the largest MCA grant ever, a $698 million agreement with Tanzania. More than merely sending dollars, the MCA ensures that American assistance not only reaches those it’s designed to help, but that it’s setting structures in place - the rule of law, freer economic policies - for African countries to thrive on their own.
Last week we saw what American compassion and leadership can look like when invested in proven, effective solutions we know work.

I hope our next president is paying attention. I hope he or she sees the power of American health diplomacy, of using medicine as a currency for peace: the power to save lives, to lead under the guiding principles of compassion and human dignity.

We have the science. We can afford the pills and bed nets and wells. We have answers to the classic criticisms of the past. The question that remains is simple: Do we have the will to employ all this know-how, all these answers to help countless people throughout the world?

That sounds like a question for our next president.

-Former U.S. Senate Majority Leader Bill Frist, M.D.

TAGS: Bush Africa Trip, ONE Vote 08, Sen. Bill Frist M.D., Visit Africa 2008

 

  1. willsays: Feb 27th, 2008 12:32 PM EST

    February 27, 2008 at 12:32 pm

    If you want to see some funny Animated skits with Clinton and Obama go to http://youtube.com/watch?v=W5Kboa7kSjU

  2. cathisays: Feb 27th, 2008 6:47 PM EST

    February 27, 2008 at 6:47 pm

    re: hope our next president is paying attention. I hope he or she sees the power of American health diplomacy, of using medicine as a currency for peace: the power to save lives, to lead under the guiding principles of compassion and human dignity.

    Sign me up…when you find this candidate, let me know, and he/she will have my vote!
    Well written. Thank you.

  3. Debbie Ksays: Feb 27th, 2008 9:27 PM EST

    February 27, 2008 at 9:27 pm

    Thanks for posting this from Bill Frist, Virginia. I think that he raises some VERY PERTINENT points for the next president and for all of us to consider.

    Getting people on their ARV’s has been a great success story for ONE and our movement to make extreme poverty history.

    What we now have to work on, alongside of getting MORE people on their ARV’s in Africa (while pursuing HIV prevention programs and orphan care funding), is to find ways to get more of the two million people that we have gotten on their ARV’s to find meaningful work so that they can begin to lift themselves out of extreme poverty.

    If you would like to visit a new website that addresses the needs of some of those in Africa to find a more sustainable source of income while on their ARV regimens, I invite all ONE supporters to VISIT THIS WEBSITE: http://www.mpwn-uganda.org.

    You will find there an old friend of ONE in a slightly new venture….a venture that we hope that all ONE supporters will want to assist. (that hopefully includes Mr. Frist too)

    Take very good care of each other, dear friends at ONE. Blessings will always be around.~

    ALWAYS ONE in the Spirit, debbie :)

  4. GinnyDsays: Feb 28th, 2008 8:06 AM EST

    February 28, 2008 at 8:06 am

    Bill Frist understands the ways to help the people of Africa and the people of third world countries. He knows that helping them will make America more secure.

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