4.7 Editorial Material

Nanomedicine for the poor: a lost cause or an idea whose time has yet to come?

Journal

NANOMEDICINE
Volume 16, Issue 14, Pages 1203-1218

Publisher

FUTURE MEDICINE LTD
DOI: 10.2217/nnm-2021-0024

Keywords

COVID-19; Gini coefficient; intellectual property; nanotechnology; QALY; SARS-CoV-2; social equality; vaccines

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The most effective COVID-19 vaccines, which utilize nanotechnology, are high-cost and mainly purchased by wealthy countries, while middle- and low-income countries have less access to these vaccines. The economic gains of using nano-vaccines in countries like the USA translate to high costs in other countries.
The most effective COVID-19 vaccines, to date, utilize nanotechnology to deliver immunostimulatory mRNA. However, their high cost equates to low affordability. Total nano-vaccine purchases per capita and their proportion within the total vaccine lots have increased directly with the GDP per capita of countries. While three out of four COVID-19 vaccines procured by wealthy countries by the end of 2020 were nano-vaccines, this amounted to only one in ten for middle-income countries and nil for the low-income countries. Meanwhile, economic gains of saving lives with nano-vaccines in USA translate to large costs in middle-/low-income countries. It is discussed how nanomedicine can contribute to shrinking this gap between rich and poor instead of becoming an exquisite technology for the privileged. Two basic routes are outlined: (1) the use of qualitative contextual analyses to endorse R&D that positively affects the sociocultural climate; (2) challenging the commercial, competitive realities wherein scientific innovation of the day operates.

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