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WHO COMMITTEE
MAKES PROGRESS, BUT FALLS SHORT OF AGREEMENT ON HEALTH INNOVATION
Government negotiators
in a World Health Organization committee last week fell short of
finalising a potential plan to encourage pharmaceutical innovation
that better responds to the needs of people in poor countries. Although
they agreed on much of the content of a draft global strategy, they
had to leave some of the most contentious issues on the links between
intellectual property and innovation unresolved.
The WHO's Working
Group on Public Health, Innovation and Intellectual Property (IGWG)
was created in 2006 with a two-year mandate to develop a global
strategy - and financing plan - for identifying needs and promoting
the discovery, development, and delivery of medicines. The committee
was mandated to pay special attention to neglected diseases that
predominantly affect people in poor countries. It was also charged
with finding ways to encourage pharmaceutical innovation in developing
nations.
The committee's
recent meeting, which ran from 28 April to 3 May, was supposed to
agree on a strategy and implementation plan to submit to the World
Health Assembly later this month. Instead, the WHO's top decision-making
body will have to determine how to deal with a number of potential
provisions on which negotiators proved unable to find common ground.
Although this
was scheduled to be the IGWG's last session, it is conceivable that
the World Health Assembly could call for the group's work to be
continued.
WHO Director-General
Margaret Chan, in her opening remarks to the session, called the
committee's work "a unique opportunity for public health"
that could spur innovation and make healthcare products more affordable.
"In essence, you are forging ways to tackle the gaps in access
to healthcare, and, in so doing, to reduce the gaps in health outcomes,"
she said. "You are making the benefits of advances in medicine
and science more inclusive."
Some have viewed
the group's deliberations as an opportunity to explore alternatives
to drug patents as a means of encouraging research, innovation and
the development of new and affordable drugs. They argue that the
patent-based model, which rewards innovation by allowing inventors
to charge high monopoly prices, provides no incentive to respond
to medical conditions suffered predominantly by poor people in developing
countries. And by relying on high drug prices, it fails to balance
innovation with affordability and access, they claim.
Certain public
health advocacy groups expressed dissatisfaction with the outcome
of the IGWG meeting, arguing that it had not prescribed any concrete
action. Médecins Sans Frontières said that the negotiations
had "failed to capitalise on the historic opportunity."
Governments had failed to prescribe concrete change to a "broken
system," said Tido von Schoen-Angerer, who heads MSF's Access
Campaign. "What we need to see is a wider, more ambitious framework
for R&D and political leadership, in particular from [the] WHO.
The negotiations have left the greater part of the job undone."
Campaigners
called it absurd that a provision stating that drug prices could
impede access to treatment -- a point that they deem obvious --
was the subject of much heated debate before negotiators agreed
on it. A number of issues were ultimately left within square brackets
signalling disagreement, dealing with the right to health, the use
of policies to prevent anti-competitive practices with respect to
medicine and other healthcare products, and ensuring that future
bilateral trade agreements do not provide intellectual property
protections on healthcare that go beyond WTO requirements.
Others, including
some government officials, countered that even the consensus parts
of the draft strategy text represented an unprecedented affirmation
of the WHO's ability to address intellectual property concerns.
As critically, the text, brackets and all, did not close the door
to future work on establishing incentives for innovation that would
separate R&D costs from drug prices, such as prizes or creating
a global treaty on medical research and development.
MSF acknowledged
that proposals for research and development reform had remained
on the table, crediting the efforts of their developing country
sponsors. "It is now up to the World Health Assembly in May
to translate bold ideas into concrete action, since this meeting
failed to do so," said MSF in a press release.
James Love,
of civil society group Knowledge Ecology International, said that
the WHO negotiations were likely to continue beyond the May World
Health Assembly into 2009 - and a new US presidential administration.
Although he praised the draft strategy for mentioning issues such
as prizes and patent pools, he said that it was "weak on the
details of the follow-through." The committee had done little
to identify research and development priorities or lay the groundwork
for future funding, he said.
The International
Federation of Pharmaceutical Manufacturers and Associations' Guy
Willis said that his organisation's members were "pleased that
the IGWG process has
resulted in agreement on many practical measures to help address
remaining gaps" in improving healthcare in developing countries.
The 18-page
draft strategy reached by 3 May, like earlier versions, focuses
on eight elements: prioritising research and development needs;
promoting research and development; building and improving innovative
capacity; technology transfer; managing intellectual property for
innovation and public health; improving delivery and access; promoting
sustainable financing; and establishing monitoring and reporting
systems.
In a provision
from which the US is currently withholding consensus, the draft
calls for the WHO to "play a strategic and pro-active role
in contributing to pursue the agenda on 'public health, innovation
and intellectual property'."
A consensus
paragraph specifies that "Intellectual property rights are
an important incentive in the development of new health care products.
However, this incentive alone does not meet the need for the development
of new products to fight diseases where the potential paying market
is small or uncertain."
The text outlines
several objectives for supporting research and development, particularly
in developing countries, from creating public health libraries to
making the results of government-funded research publicly available.
It also calls for government to consider a "research exception"
to address public health needs in developing countries, consistent
with the WTO Agreement on Trade-Related Aspects of Intellectual
Property Rights (TRIPS).
One potential
provision would have urged governments to consider pursuing competition
policies in order to prevent "anti-competitive practices related
to health products." Governments such as Italy have suspended
patent protection for some drugs after finding patent-holders to
have abused dominant market positions. However, US opposition meant
that the provision remained within brackets, said Knowledge Ecology
International's Thiru Balasubramaniam, who described it as "distressing"
to see progress on remedying anti-competitive practices "roadblocked."
Fundamental
disagreements notwithstanding, Health Action International's Christian
Wagner-Ahlfs observed that governments had managed to find "consensus
on items which some years ago they would not have even talked about."
The fate of
remaining roadblocks will first be determined at the World Health
Assembly, scheduled for 19-24 May.
The draft strategy
text is available at http://www.who.int/phi/documents/IGWG_Outcome_document03Maypm.pdf.
ICTSD reporting.
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