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Publicprivate partnerships for health have grown rapidly in response to the perceived failure of the health systems of developing countries to address major health problems and the perceived failure of the private market to produce needed vaccines and medicines for neglected diseases such as malaria and tuberculosis. There are over 75 publicprivate partnerships for health, 60 percent of which have been established within the past five years (Initiative on PublicPrivate Partnerships for Health, available at http://www.ippph.org).
PublicPrivate Partnerships for Public Health is a collection of seven papers from an April 2000 workshop organized by Michael Reich of the Harvard
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