Times-Picayune
Placing a value on human life might seem to be an issue
for ethicists rather than corporate financial officers, but the AIDS crisis in
sub-Saharan Africa is forcing multinational companies to consider the
economics of keeping HIV-positive employees alive.
Many multinationals already have programs to educate their African
workforces about AIDS, to provide free condoms and to prevent discrimination
against afflicted workers. Now, these same companies are weighing the costs
and benefits of providing the same medications in Africa that have made HIV
manageable in the developed world.
"We've lost people across the board, from senior managers to middle
managers to blue-collar workers," said Shuaib Manjra, BP's senior medical
advisor for sub-Saharan Africa. Manjra put the company AIDS death count in
Africa at 50.
Although the medicines, known as anti-retrovirals, are now provided to
African workers at a handful of companies, including BP, DaimlerChrysler and
Heineken, most multinationals are still reviewing the issue, said Ben Plumley,
executive director of the Global Business Coalition on AIDS, a New York
advocacy group. A November energy conference in New Orleans focused
extensively on anti-retrovirals.
In recent years, medication costs have dropped from as much as $15,000 per
person per year to as little as $300. Plumley hopes to see more companies
cover the medications in the years ahead.
Business response to HIV
"We're still very much at the early stages of businesses responding to
HIV," Plumley said. "We're saying, 'Here's how your peers are doing it. Here's
how you can step up to the plate.' "
Like climate change and developing-world sweatshops, the corporate response
to the African AIDS crisis has become a flashpoint in the evolving debates
over globalization. In September, Coca-Cola expanded coverage to about 60,000
workers after lobbying by nongovernmental organizations. Advocates next plan
to target the oil industry, which has flocked to Africa as an alternative to
the Middle East.
Of course, not all companies agree that taking on a medical crisis is the
proper role for a company. Some point out that there is no precedent for
multinationals taking on such a crisis and providing medications that are
otherwise unavailable in much of Africa.
Treating AIDS is not a "business core competency" for oil companies, said
Steven Phillips, international medical director for ExxonMobil, adding that
the company prefers working through existing providers to build local
infrastructure. Companies that provide anti-retrovirals are getting into
"uncharted territory," he said.
"Basically, there is not a clear template of what to do in Africa,"
Phillips said.
Absent medications
Like most U.S. health providers, Blue Cross and Blue Shield of Louisiana
and Ochsner Health Plan, two companies that serve the oil industry and other
major New Orleans employers, generally cover the medications. But the drugs
are largely absent in the AIDS-plagued developing world.
No place has more need than sub-Saharan Africa, which is home to two-thirds
of the world's total cases of HIV/AIDS. Of the 4 million to 6 million people
on the continent who need anti-retrovirals, only 40,000 are getting the
treatment, said Jeff Kemprecos, Merck public affairs director for Europe,
Middle East and Africa.
There are numerous challenges in providing the medicine to workers. For
one, it can be difficult for patients to adhere to the medical program, which
can involve a "cocktail" of at least three drugs and 25 pills throughout the
day. If patients don't follow the regimen, they can build up resistance to
treatment, experts say.
The on-the-ground realities of providing anti-retrovirals also pose a
challenge for oil companies. South Africa benefits from an extensive network
of doctors and laboratories, much of the continent has only skeletal medical
infrastructure. To overcome this problem, some companies send blood tests
under strict temperature controls to South Africa more than 1,000 miles away.
'Definitely doable'
Despite the challenges, providing the drugs is "definitely doable with
effort," Daimler human resource manager Mike Folan said. "There's a very
intense program to ensure adherence is followed."
While Daimler's calculations show that anti-retroviral treatment is cheaper
than treating full-blown AIDS, other research is less decisive.
A study for BP concluded that providing anti-retroviral medication would
cost $6.6 million in 2010, $2.5 million more than not providing the
medication. However, the estimates employed the cost of existing medications,
said Stephen Kramer, manager of AIDS research for Metropolitan, a South
African financial risk consultant that performed the study. If future
technology matches the progress of recent years, it will be cost-effective to
provide anti-retrovirals because of the cheaper outlays for death benefits,
sick leave, recruitment and other AIDS-related costs, he said.
The report depicted the AIDS crisis as an opportunity for BP.
"The potential for BP to provide leadership in its response to AIDS cannot
be overestimated," the report said. "It may well help persuade others to act
in the same way, and ultimately help redirect the course of the epidemic in
some countries by acting as a catalyst for change. It may also have an effect
on treatment, as economies of scale are likely to develop, as treatment
becomes more readily available."
Battling corruption
So far, about 20 BP employees in South Africa are getting the treatments,
plus another few dozen in other parts of Africa, Manjra said. By guaranteeing
the medications, BP has also provided an incentive for more employees to get
tested as to their HIV status.
However, some question the impetus. Fadel Gheit, an oil analyst with
Fahestock & Co., a New York investment bank, praised the coverage as "a
very noble cause," but questioned whether multinationals should assume the
duties of host governments, which recoup hundreds of millions of dollars from
multinationals in drilling royalties. A recent International Monetary Fund
report blamed corruption in Angola for the government's inability to account
for $1 billion.
"The corruption is beyond description," said Gheit. "It is incredible."
Like BP, Shell plans to cover the medications for employees and their
dependents. Starting in February, an industrial theater operation will travel
to company sites across South Africa to enact lifelike HIV-related dramas to
encourage workers to know their HIV status. The awareness campaign will be
accompanied by the roll-out of Shell's anti-retroviral program, said
Anna-Louise Olivier, a Shell employee care coordinator in Cape Town.
Doing 'the right thing'
Shell took action after learning that 200 retail employees died of AIDS
over two years. "That sent out an alarm that we had to do something," Olivier
said.
Philip Mshelbila, regional health advisor for Shell Oil Products in
Nigeria, hopes to have the program up and running by the end of 2003.
"It's the right thing to do," he said of the program. Cost has become
"almost a secondary issue."
The two leading U.S. oil multinationals, ChevronTexaco and ExxonMobil, are
reviewing their policies.
As of now, ChevronTexaco offers the medications only to pregnant women with
HIV. Stephen Simpson, the Angola-based regional medical director for
ChevronTexaco, said the company will offer the medications more widely only if
it can guarantee the supply and work through the logistical challenges.
"What we don't want to do is to start a program that's not going to
continue or won't work," Simpson said. "It's not the cost, it's the
feasibility."
'Medical apartheid'
Still, Simpson alluded to the oil industry's "slick" logistics at the
November conference here. "We can make things happen," he said.
ExxonMobil views HIV/AIDS like any other illness, meaning that it prefers
to work through community-based health options, Phillips said. In many parts
of Africa, the quality of ExxonMobil health care is "vastly higher" than that
otherwise available, he said.
At the November conference, Phillips referred to the sometimes strident
tone of AIDS activists and the media, which sometimes underestimate the
challenges associated with prescribing anti-retrovirals. If patients don't
follow the regimen, the medications can potentially violate the medical dictum
to first do no harm, he said.
Providing anti-retrovirals is a "subject of active internal review,"
Phillips said.
Previously AIDS advocacy groups have directed most of their ammunition at
pharmaceutical companies. Now that medication costs have come down, these
nongovernmental organizations are turning to companies with African operations
and highly-visible retail products.
"We won with Coke, and now we're going after oil," said Sharonann Lynch, a
spokeswoman for Health Gap, a U.S.-based non-profit that organized a global
day of protest against the soda company. Providing the medications to
employees in the West, but not in the developing world amounts to "medical
apartheid," she said.
"It means they consider the lives of people of color in developing
countries expendable," Lynch said. "Why should Africa be different?"
Back
to Top