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INDIA
DENIED THE RIGHT TO PRODUCE AFFORDABLE MEDS
(14 November 2006 ).
Leading
charity Oxfam has recently taken on the pharmaceutical giant Novartis
in its campaign of putting patients before patents. Oxfam activists
are demanding that developing countries are granted the right to
produce affordable medicines. On 14 November 2006, activists recreated
a hospital ward in Victoria, Central London, posing as patients
who have been diagnosed too poor for medicines.
In
a new report entitled 'Patents v Patients: Five Years After the
Doha Declaration', Oxfam claims that that rich countries are taking
little or no action towards their obligations to help poor countries
protect public health and are in some cases actually undermining
the declaration.
PHARMS
COMPANIES CLAIM MORE COLLABORATION IS NEEDED
Pharmaceuticals
companies are concerned about the increase in generics medicines
for the export market and how this will impact their future investment
in R&D. In 2005, cancer patients groups in India used intellectual
property law to stop a patent application by the Swiss company Novartis
for its anti cancer drug, Glivec. This meant that Indian companies
could continue making generic versions of Glivec at £1,400
per year, as opposed to the Novartis monopoly priced version of
the same drug for sale at more than £14,000 per year.
However
Novartis recently appealed the courts decision. Novartis
has told Oxfam that there is no commercial market for Glivec in
India and that it is challenging India in order to align Indian
intellectual property law with TRIPS, Charveriat says. However,
India is only trying to use the flexibilities rightfully available
to it under TRIPS and Novartis is trying to block that right.
On
its corporate website, Novartis states "In an effort to quantify
the contribution made by the overall pharmaceutical industry to
sustainable development, along with other pharmaceutical companies,
Novartis participated in a survey spearheaded by the International
Federation of Pharmaceutical Manufacturers and Associations (IFPMA).
The results, unveiled in December 2005, show that, since the United
Nations proclaimed their Millennium Development Goals in 2000, the
industry has created 126 health partnerships that have made available
medicines, vaccines, equipment, health education and manpower worth
USD 4.38 billion, providing more than 540 million treatments to
patients.
Despite
this important contribution to peoples lives in the worlds
poorest countries, responding to the huge public health challenge
will require even more collaboration between the private and public
sectors, as well as creativity and hard work. The health of people
in developing countries cannot be improved simply by increasing
the amount of drugs that companies donate. It also requires infrastructural
changes, i.e. more clean water, better sanitation, improved clinics
and hospitals as well as better training and retention of healthcare
workers. Pharmaceutical companies are directly providing more and
more of this kind of grass-roots help."
Further
more, the company states that "hrough our three public-private
partnerships with the World Health Organization (WHO) to combat
leprosy, malaria and tuberculosis, we provide medicines at cost
– or sometimes free – to patients in the developing world afflicted
by these diseases. We also offer discounts and support programs
to patients in industrialized countries without medical insurance
or other financial resources."
On
the Glivec issue, the Novartis 'Access to Medicines' programme site
claims "For the breakthrough cancer therapy Gleevec/Glivec,
Novartis designed one of the most far-reaching patient assistance
programs ever implemented on a global scale. Over the last three
years, the Glivec International Patient Assistance Program (GIPAP)
has been expanded to 79 countries and in 2005 provided Glivec free
of charge to more than 15 000 patients with chronic myeloid leukemia
(CML) and gastrointestinal stromal tumor (GIST). "
We
reprint here, Oxfam's case study on from 'Patents v Patients':
IN
INDIA 1.42 BILLION PEOPLE CANNOT AFFORD MEDICINES
Premavati
is a 60-year-old widow living in the suburbs of Delhi, India. She
suffers from a type of cancer called Non-Hodgkins Lymphoma and has
spent all her savings - more than 40, 000 Rupees (c.$900) - on medicines.
"My husband died two years ago," says Premavati. "We
have absolutely no savings. Of my two sons, one is a casual labourer,
the other has no job. My daughter is 30, has two children and is
also a widow."
Because
of her desperate situation, Premavati has almost resigned herself
to the idea that she will die without medicines. "How will
I raise the money for my treatment?" she says. "Already,
I've spent what we had. If nobody helps, I'll just have to die without
medicines."
Everyone
who needs it should have access to medicines and health services,
regardless of their sex, age, or income level. Yet, in developing
countries such as India, roughly 1.42 billion people cannot get
the life-saving essential medicines they need. A major reason for
this is that they can't afford them.
80%
OF PERSONAL INCOME GOES ON MEDICINES
Gopa
Kumar, senior researcher at The Centre for Trade and Development,
an advocacy group in New Delhi, says: "In India, where the
majority of people don't have health insurance or support programmes,
estimates say that in some cases, about 80 per cent of personal
income goes on buying medicines alone."
"I
wonder if the people in power are listening," says Dr Gopal
Dabade, of the Drug Action Forum in the southern state of Karnataka.
"If we don't put pressure on the government and make medicines
available, poor people will continue to suffer and die," he
says.
INDIA:
THE WORLD'S LEADING SUPPLIER OF GENERICS
India
is the world's leading supplier of inexpensive generic medicines,
with approximately 67% of them being exported to developing countries.
A few years ago, they made a groundbreaking contribution to the
availability of affordable HIV medicines by producing and marketing
the 'first-line, triple-combination drug'. This was possible because
patenting of medicines was not allowed in India until the Indian
Patent Act was amended in 2005 to comply with requirements set out
by the World Trade Organisation's TRIPS Agreement (Trade Related
Aspects of Intellectual Property Rights). This new amendment paves
the way for a 20-year minimum period of product patent protection,
including medicines. Put simply, this raises the price of a wide
range of medicines, making them increasingly unaffordable to poor
people.
"I
know how tough it was to pay for my first-line treatment,"
says 35-year-old Umashanker Pandey. "I have lost six kilos
in weight in the last three months. My body's response to first-line
ARVs is failing and I simply can't afford the second-line treatment."
His
only wish is to stay alive to see his elder daughter, now aged 15,
get married. "I am worried, because voices like mine are not
counted by anyone, not even my government. I do not have any idea
how many like me have started counting down the days," he says.
Umashanker's wife, and the youngest of his five children, who is
eight, are also HIV-positive.
He
says he knows of 18 other people in his home town who are in the
same position that he is in - urgently needing to begin the 'second-line
treatment', but unable to afford it. Umashanker knew a man, only
35 years old, who died last month. "He would have lived if
he had been able to have medicines on time," he says.
Hundreds
of thousands of people like Umashanker can be saved if only developing
countries can ensure that their TRIPS-compliant patent laws provide
a balance of rights and obligations - ensuring that people's lives
are put before drug companies' profits.
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