SOUTH AFRICA: No Political Will to Support Generic Medication
Kristin Palitza
CAPE TOWN , Nov 16 2011 (IPS) – South African health experts are calling on governments to use legally available mechanisms to promote the production or import of generic drugs in their countries.
Patented drugs limit patients access to public health care. Credit: Kristin Palitza/IPS
Pharmaceutical patents continue to drive up drug prices, making it expensive to treat patients. This often leads to limited access to health care, especially in developing countries where the disease burden is high, but public health budgets remain low, experts said.
Governments can revert to the – a declaration on the and Public Health, which was signed 10 years ago by member countries of the in Doha, Qatar – which exits to ensure that patents do not undermine the ability of countries to achieve the right to health.
Countries, like South Africa, may interpret TRIPS as they see fit. They can enact national legislation to allow fewer patents and promote generic production of drugs to promote access to medicine for all, explained (MSF) South Africa access and innovation officer Mara Kardas-Nelson.
The availability of generic medications can have drastic consequences for public health. When generics were produced for antiretroviral (ARV) treatment for HIV-patients, costs rapidly decreased from over 10,000 dollars per patient per year to about 600 dollars, said Kardas-Nelson. It allowed increased access to medicines for millions of people.
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But when the TRIPS agreement was signed in 1995, pharmaceuticals were allowed to apply for 20-year patents for their drugs, which meant that during that period, no generic versions of those medicines could be produced. This drastically reduced the global availability of generics. Only six years later, when the Doha Declaration was signed, were governments allowed to circumvent the strict patenting regulations in the interest of protecting their citizens access to health care.
Surprisingly, very few developing countries, including South Africa, have amended their Patent Acts to make use of the possibilities the Doha Declaration provided – mainly due to international pressure from the pharmaceutical industry, the United States and European Union, where many of the world s patented drugs are manufactured, health experts argue.
Countries must not bow to this pressure, warned (TAC) senior researcher Catherine Tomlinson. South Africa currently provided patent protection beyond what is required by the TRIPS agreement, she said.
Unlike South Africa, India, Brazil and Thailand have used flexibilities allowed under TRIPS to curb excessive patenting of pharmaceuticals and promote public health. While South Africa granted 2,442 pharmaceutical patents in 2008 alone, Brazil only granted 278 pharmaceutical patents between 2003 and 2008, Tomlinson explained.
Publicly, the South Africa government repeatedly confirmed the need for generics. In a joint declaration with India and Brazil, South African President Jacob Zuma officially acknowledged earlier this year that the impact of intellectual property on health, access to drugs and prices can best be tackled by scaling up production of generic medicines. But up until now, such declarations have remained lip service.
We demand Zuma lives up to his commitment. We have not yet seen any concrete indications that government will take steps to change the Patent Act law, said Tomlinson. There is lack of political will.
TAC and MSF also demand stricter and independent review of patent applications, as well as for third parties to be able to oppose patents pending approval and the first year after they have been granted.
Moreover, South Africa should make use of its right to issue compulsory licenses under the Doha Declaration that would allow it to access generic versions of otherwise patented medicines in cases where prices are prohibitively expensive, the organisations say. In contrast to other developing nations, such as Thailand, South Africa has not once made use of this option.
The consequences of South Africa s strict patent protection are high medicine costs and the delayed availability of affordable generic medicines. South African pharmaceutical benefit management company Mediscor reported in its 2010 medicines review that drug expenditure increased by 25.2 percent between 2008 and 2010, while medicine use only increased 5.8 percent.
For patients receiving chronic, life-saving medication, such as ARVs, availability of generic medication can mean the difference between life and death.
Nokwanda Pani, an HIV-positive woman who lives in South Africa s third-largest township, Khayelitsha, near Cape Town, has been receiving ARV treatment since 2005. Four years later, when she developed resistance to the drugs, she was put onto a second line of medication.
She now worries about what will happen to her if her body stops responding to the medication again. Because, in South Africa, third-line treatment is only available in the private health care sector, at a high cost of 4,200 dollars per patient per year – an amount that Pani cannot afford.
Without generic competition, the cost of second- and third-line ARVs can be up to 20 times more expensive than first-line ARVs, confirmed MSF. Such price differences do not only apply to HIV treatment but to all drugs, including those needed to treat cancer, tuberculosis, diabetes or high-blood pressure.
Because I rely on the public health sector, third-line treatment is not available to me. If I build up resistance again, it s the end of the road for me, Pani says. For her, it all comes down to one central question: Why is our government putting the profits of pharmaceutical companies before our lives?