OPEN Health to acquire leading US-based life science strategy and advisory firm Acsel Health

London, U.K., Feb. 13, 2023 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) — OPEN Health, a pre-eminent global provider of scientific communications and HEOR & market access services, announced the acquisition of Acsel Health (“Acsel”), a New York-based life science strategy and advisory firm focused on commercial strategy, pricing and market access, and commercial excellence.

Acsel’s deep industry expertise, scientific rigor, and actionable analysis drives its success in providing valued partnership to life science companies. These capabilities will complement OPEN Health’s existing offering, broadening the range of services it offers to pharma and biotech companies.

Lujing Wang, Managing Partner of Acsel Health, said, “We are thrilled to join OPEN Health and to work with a wider team to solve for today’s demands and meet tomorrow’s expectations for pharma and biotech customers. With new colleagues and capabilities to partner with, we are equipped to answer the most challenging cross-disciplinary questions in life science across all key therapeutic areas.”

“Acsel is an extraordinary addition to OPEN Health. Acsel’s expert team and long-standing client relationships significantly strengthen our ability to support the commercialization of our clients’ assets and unlock access for patients.” said OPEN Health CEO, Rob Barker. “We are excited to welcome Acsel Health into the OPEN Health Group and look forward to working with our new colleagues to offer our clients innovative, scientific solutions around the globe.”

Fairmount Partners acted as exclusive financial advisor to Acsel Health. The terms of the transaction were not disclosed.

About OPEN Health

OPEN Health unites deep scientific knowledge with wide-ranging specialist expertise to unlock possibilities that improve health outcomes and patient wellbeing. Working in partnership with our clients, we embrace our different perspectives and strengths to deliver fresh thinking and solutions that make a difference. OPEN Health is a flexible global organization that solves complex healthcare challenges across HEOR and market access, medical communications and creative omnichannel campaigns. For more information on OPEN Health, visit www.openhealthgroup.com.

About Acsel Health

Acsel Health is a consulting firm that partners with renowned life science companies to guide life-changing innovations through their critical stages, from early development through market maturity. Acsel applies best-practice principles to develop and deliver highly individualized solutions to challenges across the product lifecycle for our clients. For more information on Acsel Health, visit www.acselhealth.com.

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Candice Subero
OPEN Health
candicesubero@openhealthgroup.com

GlobeNewswire Distribution ID 8744608

Health cooperation between China and Eritrea contributes to a lasting friendship

In the following article, which was originally carried in ChinAfrica, a publication issued under the auspices of Beijing Review, Fikrejesus Amahazion, an Eritrean educator and researcher, explains how cooperation in the healthcare sector epitomises the close friendship between China and Eritrea.

In November 2022, members of the Chinese medical team, working side-by-side with Eritrean doctors, performed complex spinal surgeries on patients in the capital Asmara for the first time in the nation’s history. This coincided with the 25th anniversary of the first dispatch of a Chinese medical team to Eritrea and served as “a timely and powerful reflection of the longstanding ties and enduring friendship between China and Eritrea.”

Contacts between China and Eritrea, the author notes, date back almost 2,000 years. However, “contemporary ties can be traced back to Eritrea’s long struggle for independence, when China offered support to Eritrea’s independence movement.”

In Amahazion’s view, “A key factor that underlies the success of health cooperation between Eritrea and China, as well as the broader relationship, is the firm commitment to the principles of mutual understanding, trust, and respect…The Eritrean government has historically insisted on establishing genuine partnerships and cooperation, while retaining firm control of its development agenda and local implementation. It encourages assistance addressing specific needs that cannot be met internally, and that complements and strengthens, rather than replacing, the country’s own institutional capacity to implement projects.”

This is rooted in a great desire to avoid crippling dependence and to foster a strong, clear sense of responsibility for and genuine ownership of the country’s future among all citizens. “For its part,” he notes, “China’s own approach to assistance has considerable similarities.”

Local media outlets in Eritrea recently reported about how members of the Chinese medical team, working side by side with Eritrean doctors, performed complex spinal surgeries on patients at Halibet Hospital in Asmara in November 2022. The extremely technical operations, which are the first-ever procedures of their kind within Eritrea, are an exciting landmark in the country’s medical sector and history.

Coinciding with the 25th anniversary of the first dispatch of Chinese medical team to Eritrea, the recent surgeries also serve as a timely and powerful reflection of the longstanding ties and enduring friendship between China and Eritrea, especially in the field of health. For a quarter of a century, health cooperation between China and Eritrea has positively contributed to the lives and wellbeing of the Eritrean people nationwide, and also helped to move the country’s health system forward.

Historical background

Although it has received significant global attention in recent years, China’s engagement with Africa actually dates back centuries and spans a number of ancient dynasties. Modern Sino-African ties can be traced to the earliest years of African independence in the 1950s and 1960s. Since then, China has become the continent’s leading trading partner, while Chinese investment in and lending to African countries have grown rapidly. Over the years, the relationship has steadily broadened to reach an array of other sectors, including culture, digital infrastructure and technology, security, and education.

Health, too, has been an increasingly critical area of cooperation, with China extending support to building or renovating many hospitals and health facilities across the continent. Prominently, the headquarters of the Africa Centres for Disease Control and Prevention, which is being funded and built with Chinese support, is expected to open its doors in the near future. Additionally, China has worked with African countries to offer thousands of scholarships and short-term training opportunities for African students, as well as provided significant funding support for health projects, medicines and equipment.

During the COVID-19 pandemic, China supported Africa’s prevention and control measures, contributing multiple batches of medical resources and vaccines, committing to making vaccines available as a global public good, and dispatching doctors across the continent to help with capacity-building and strengthening of local responses.

Crucially, with the pandemic having plunged Africa into its first recession in 25 years, China also remained at the forefront of the continent’s economic recovery. It maintained robust economic and trade cooperation with Africa, while also signing debt service suspension agreements with multiple African countries, thus becoming the biggest player in terms of relieving African debt among the G20 countries.

China’s medical teams are arguably the flagship of its multifaceted health cooperation with Africa. Since April 1963 when it first sent a group of doctors to Algeria, then recovering from war, China has sent numerous medical teams – coming to an overall total of over 20,000 doctors, nurses, clinicians and other health professionals – to most countries across the continent. These highly diverse teams have provided vital, often life-saving, services, helped to train countless local personnel, collaborated with local personnel on innovative research, and contributed to building capacity and strengthening local health systems.

Health cooperation with Eritrea

As with Africa, Eritrea’s relationship with China is not new. In fact, it stretches back almost 2,000 years to as early as about the year 100, involving maritime trade and commercial activities, as well as the dispatch of emissaries. However, contemporary ties can be traced back to Eritrea’s long struggle for independence, when China offered support to Eritrea’s independence movement.

Formal diplomatic relations began after Eritrea’s independence in May 1993. China opened an embassy in Asmara. Since then, the Eritrea-China partnership has steadily expanded and strengthened. Health has been among the most extensive and important areas of bilateral cooperation.

Opened in 2003 following three years of construction, Eritrea’s largest medical facility and first fully equipped modern hospital, Orotta Hospital, was built through the close partnership of Eritrea and China. Continued bilateral cooperation in subsequent years has resulted in regular upgrades to and considerable expansions of the facility, which serves patients from across the country. China has also donated medical equipment and medicines that are used in facilities nationwide.

In addition, since 1997, a total of 15 Chinese medical teams, comprising well over 200 doctors and health professionals, have worked in Eritrea. During deployments that have lasted one to two years, these teams have worked closely alongside Eritrean health professionals to provide high-quality medical services and support general health improvements.

Through formal training and mentoring, demonstration and observation, and introduction of new techniques or approaches such as traditional Chinese medical practices and medicines, the medical teams have helped to reinforce Eritrea’s health capacity, while also expanding and strengthening the skills of local health personnel. At the same time, the visiting medical teams have had the opportunity to learn from their Eritrean colleagues, as well as grow and develop professionally from the cases that may be unique or completely different from what they are familiar with.

Mutual respect and shared principles

A key factor that underlies the success of health cooperation between Eritrea and China, as well as the broader relationship, is the firm commitment to the principles of mutual understanding, trust, and respect. The two countries’ approaches to international assistance and development also closely align, providing a solid foundation for their health partnership to thrive and succeed.

The Eritrean government has historically insisted on establishing genuine partnerships and cooperation, while retaining firm control of its development agenda and local implementation. It encourages assistance addressing specific needs that cannot be met internally, and that complements and strengthens, rather than replacing, the country’s own institutional capacity to implement projects. This approach is rooted in a great desire to avoid crippling dependence, as well as ensure local agency and foster a strong, clear sense of responsibility for and genuine ownership of the country’s future among all citizens.

For its part, China’s own approach to assistance has considerable similarities. According to China’s Foreign Aid (2011), in providing foreign aid, “China does its best to help recipient countries to foster local personnel and technical forces, build infrastructure and develop and use domestic resources, so as to lay a foundation for future development and embarkation on the road of self-reliance and independent development.” Furthermore, China’s assistance has historically been anchored in equality and mutual benefit with no strings attached, while the country has no intention of imposing ideology, values, or development models on other countries. The quarter century of bilateral health cooperation between Eritrea and China, which is just one dimension of their larger and still growing relationship, has been extremely positive. Not only has it helped to promote the health and wellbeing of locals while contributing to building the capacity and resilience of the national health system, it has also strengthened the longstanding bonds between the two countries.

Source: Dehai Eritrea Online

Highlights of Eri-Tv and Radio Dimtsi Hafash Interview with President Isaias Afwerki

The first part of the Interview focused on the three reckless offensives that the TPLF had intermittently launched during critical harvest times for two years; the political and military underpinnings of the Cessation of Hostilities Agreement that the TPLF was ultimately compelled to sign; as well as the prospects of the peace process in the period ahead.

President Isaias underlined that the crucial question that we need to ponder is why this destructive war was necessary, why it was waged in the first place? President Isaias noted that the TPLF had inculcated huge damaged during its 27 years of repressive rule in Ethiopia. It was removed from power and subsequent 2018 Peace Agreement between Eritrea and Ethiopia had ushered in a period of hope and optimism in the region and beyond.

These developments fostered anxiety in its handlers in Washington who nudged it to indulge in reckless military offensives. Miscalculation on the balance of power was another factor behind these deplorable debacles.

The TPLF was made to sign the Cessation of Hostilities Agreement in Pretoria, worked out mainly by Washington with the over-arching intent of precluding its total military defeat. Be this as it may, Eritrea has no reservations if the Peace Agreement is implemented in good faith and in its entirety. This must be ascertained through meticulous monitoring.

The war has inculcated a huge loss of life as hundreds of thousands of Tigrayans were conscripted through various subterfuges. In this regard, the issue of accountability of the forces who instigated and pursued the war is of utmost importance.

President Isaias also elucidated with historical facts the implications of the new US National Security Strategy for global and regional peace. In this regard, President Isaias underlined that the deep-rooted political culture anchored on greed and domination by a tiny few was the primary cause of the turmoil and conflicts that have bedeviled the world in the paste decades. These tiny few do not aspire for peace and stability based on common values and interests. They relentlessly pursue a zero-sum-game policy. The New National Security Strategy does not contain novel concepts, and semantic and packaging aside, its main thrust is to revive and bolster the defunct uni-polar world order.

President Isaias referred to a Memorandum that Eritrea had sent to the Trump Administration in an effort to highlight the historical wrongs meted to Eritrea by the US for eighty long years since the denial of its rights of decolonization in the 1940s purportedly because this “did not serve US strategic interests”. This did not entail a substantive change of policy.

On the prospects of a new and balanced international order, President Isaias noted that the countries of Africa, Asia and Latin America have borne the brunt of war and destruction that emanate from the policies and proponents of greed and domination. This has engendering a growing awareness both in the countries of the Global South as well as in other powers adversely affected by the policies of “containment”. This has not crystallized to assume meaningful institutional form, but still remains a reactive and natural response or trend that can grow with time.

Second part of a four-part Interview will be done next week.

Source: Dehai Eritrea Online

US supported rebels in Tigray conflict – Eritrean leader

Eritrean President Isaias Afwerki has accused the US of supporting Tigrayan rebels during the recently concluded civil war in northern Ethiopia.

In a Sunday interview with local media, the president claimed that the peace deal signed between Ethiopia and the Tigray People’s Liberation Front (TPLF) was rushed by the US to prevent the rebels from losing in the battlefield.

The peace deal signed in South Africa in November 2022 ended a two-year civil war that killed tens of thousands and left millions in dire need of humanitarian assistance.

In the interview, Mr Isaias also admitted for the first time that hundreds of thousands of people died in the conflict, though he did not elaborate on Eritrean casualties.

Last week, the leader denied reports that Eritrean troops committed war crimes in neighbouring Ethiopia where they had been deployed to fight alongside federal troops and pro government militia.

Source: Dehai Eritrea Online