On the road with Bill and Melinda Gates
"Gates’s money also helped to develop a special ink for the labels of vaccine vials that changes colour at higher temperatures to show health workers when the vaccine has been spoilt and should not be used.As the story later explains, this approach too has been criticized by those believing funds could be better spent making proven therapies more widely available. Either way, it's hard to argue that any group has more influence than the Gates Foundation in shaping the future of global health.Both these simple but important technological developments have been supported by the Global Alliance on Vaccines and Immunisations (GAVI), a group set up with strong pressure from Gates, comprising representatives from governments, drugs companies and charities, that picked up the baton on immunisation in 2000 at a time when the large-scale campaigns of Unicef and the World Health Organisation were running out of steam.
GAVI is Gates’s response to criticism that he is obsessed with “blue sky” scientific research: supporting academics and pharmaceutical groups to develop vaccines and drugs for diseases such as HIV, malaria and tuberculosis which face such funding and scientific obstacles that they will take years to come to fruition, and may never prove successful."








