10 facts on essential medicines
12 February 2010
The essential medicines list is an inventory of medicines that treat pressing global health concerns. Medicines are identified through an evidence-based process and quality, safety, efficacy and cost-effectiveness are key selection criteria. A model list - first assembled by a World Health Organization (WHO) expert panel in 1977 and revised every two years to reflect current health challenges - gives Member Countries an example to adapt to national needs.
In 1977 the first list identified 208 essential medicines to battle the global disease burden at the time. Today's list of 340 medicines treats such priority conditions as malaria, HIV/AIDS, tuberculosis, reproductive health and, increasingly, chronic diseases such as cancer and diabetes.
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Related links
Events
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Sixty-fifth World Health Assembly
21–26 May 2012 -
World No Tobacco Day
31 May 2012 -
World Blood Donor Day
14 June 2012
Corporate resources
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The world health report
Report on global public health and key statistics -
World health statistics report
WHO's annual compilation of data from its Member States -
International travel and health
Publication on travel risks, precautions and vaccination requirements -
International Health Regulations (IHR)
Global rules to enhance national, regional and global public health security