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Peter Maybarduk pmaybarduk@citizen.org +1 202 390 5375 April 15, 2011. The Global Access to Medicines Movement. Asunto central:. Como podemos asegurar el acceso a los medicamentos y a la vez optimizar la innovación biomedica?. La Competencia y el Acceso (M é dicos Sin Fronteras).
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Peter Maybarduk pmaybarduk@citizen.org +1 202 390 5375 April 15, 2011 The Global Access to Medicines Movement
Asunto central: Como podemos asegurar el acceso a los medicamentos y a la vez optimizar la innovación biomedica?
Access: Looking forward 2nd, 3rd line HIV/AIDS treatment Heart disease & cancer in developing countries. Expensive biologics. Generics producers bought out Patent regimes in developing countries
“Intellectual Property” U.S. Constitution, Article 1, Section 8, Clause 8, empowers Congress: “To promote the Progress of Science and useful Arts, by securing for limited Times to authors and inventors the exclusive Right to their respective Writings and Discoveries” Natural right to control our ideas? Artificial concept of “IP”
Patents and IP in practice But who controls IP in practice? For how long? On what terms? Patents under WTO: 20 year exclusive right to control a technology • Data exclusivity: right to control clinical trial data • Drug monopolies
Global IP Norm-Setting WTO / TRIPS (1995) New patent rules for many countries Doha Declaration (2001) Pro-public health WTO interpretation of TRIPS See also Clinton Executive Order 13155 (2000) Free Trade Agreements EU-India, Trans-Pacific FTA Unilateral Pressure / Sanctions
TPP: Nuevo TLC, Acuerdo Estrategico Trans-Pacifico • Express goal of USA: APEC members. • 21 countries; 40% of world’s population • Consider precedent; shifts for global rules
Goal: I+A & uso racional de medicamentos Innovation plus access and rational use. How do we get there? Competition: Flexibilities in IP rules Alternative financing methods for neglected diseases Positive agenda on quality & rational use The big idea: “Delinkage.” Separating manufacturing costs from R&D.
I+A Licensing and competition Global licensing campaign Licensing of federally funded inventions Medicines Patent Pool Foundation Multi-faceted innovation system Prizes Public research & funding Global R&D Treaty
Las Licencias Uso gubernamental y las licencias obligatorias Autoriza la competencia con los medicamentos patentados Derecho soberano siguiendo la OMC Necesario para: Reducir costos, y así aumentar los servicios de salud y el acceso a medicamentos. Facilitar la fabricación nacional.
Compulsory licensing Authorize generic competition with a patented medicine Patent holder receives royalties Examples: Europe, USA, developing countries Ecuador, Colombia New UNAIDS, UNDP, WHO report
Que podemos hace nosotros? pmaybarduk@citizen.org
Asunto central: Como podemos asegurar el acceso a los medicamentos y a la vez optimizar la innovación biomedica?
Peter Maybarduk pmaybarduk@citizen.org +1 202 390 5375
Data Exclusivity EU grants marketer of new medicine 8 years exclusive use of clinical data EC Regulation 726/2004: 8+2+1 years Anyone wishing to market the same medicine must duplicate clinical trials Results in ten year monopolies
Counterfeit legislation Laws misrepresenting their ingredients Some bills enforce monopolies rather than protecting drug supply IP framework vs. DRA framework EC customs regulation 1383/2003 East African bills criminalizing generics
Positive Agenda Positive agenda on medicines quality assurance and rational use Strengthen DRAs Combat pharmaceutical fraud Access to medicines International cooperation Private sector accountability Public participation
Data exclusivity & compulsory licensing Data exclusivity could allow for exceptions in cases of compulsory licensing Safeguard for competition to protect health But according to DG Enterprise: “does not foresee any exception … in case of emergency … or compulsory license” Letter to EGMA 20 Feb. 2006 Impermeable ten year drug monopolies for EU members