Newsweek

Your Mutual Fund Could Save Lives

Doctors Without Borders wants pharmaceutical company shareholders to persuade companies to reduce the price of the pneumonia vaccine, and it has just the website to help.
Nicaraguan children wait to be vaccinated against pneumonia in December 2010. The respiratory disease is the leading cause of death among children under 5.
RTXVOC5

Your retirement funds may do more than offer financial security. They might save lives. With the help of a new website, they can be a tool to prevent children dying from pneumonia. At least, that is what Doctors Without Borders is hoping.

This week, the humanitarian nonprofit, which provides emergency medical care during armed conflicts and other crises worldwide, opened an online tool for finding out whether a given investment package includes shares in Pfizer or GlaxoSmithKline (GSK). These pharmaceutical companies make the only pneumonia vaccines for children, and, the nonprofit says, they are unaffordable for many people living in countries with high rates of this potentially fatal illness.

“These people have money invested with Pfizer or GSK and can actually hold the companies accountable,” says Brienne Prusak, a spokeswoman for Doctors Without Borders (known outside the U.S. as Médecins Sans Frontières).

You’re reading a preview, subscribe to read more.

More from Newsweek

Newsweek16 min readWorld
‘We Are Facing The Most Complex Security Environment Since World War Ii’
SHORTLY AFTER RETURNING FROM HIS FIRST LEAD-ers-level visit to Washington, D.C., Japanese Prime Minister Fumio Kishida sat down with Newsweek for an exclusive interview in his Tokyo office to discuss the main takeaways from his trip, as well as the h
Newsweek13 min readWorld
Red Cows, Gaza And The End Of The World
IT IS SAID THAT THIS IS WHERE THE WORLD began—and perhaps where it will end. The true epicenter of the war in the Holy Land is not the devastated Gaza Strip, under Israeli assault since Hamas’ bloody raid last October sparked the region’s deadliest c
Newsweek1 min read
Living On The Edge
An 18th-century cottage clings to the precipice following a dramatic cliff fall in the coastal village of Trimingham on April 8. The homeowner, who bought the property in 2019 for around $165,000, will now see the structure demolished as the saturate

Related Books & Audiobooks