India Changes Patent Law to Meet WTO Treaty, Making New Medicines Less Available to Most Citizens, Other Countries
By presidential decree India changed its patent law in December 2004 to meet a January 2005 deadline to allow patents on the chemical molecules used in drugs -- not only for new drugs starting in 2005 but also for many others that were patentable after 1995 (an estimated 6,000 patent applications have already been filed for these drugs). Until now
Doctors Without Borders / Medecins Sans Frontieres (MSF) and other non-governmental organizations are worried that newer AIDS and other drugs will become much more expensive, and therefore less available to patients in poor countries.
According to a widely reprinted December 30 Reuters report from India, 60,000 generic brands in 60 therapeutic areas are now available in that country -- which accounts for 1% of the money value of the pharmaceuticals sold in the world but 8% of the volume, figures reflecting the low prices [1].
Other articles reported that protests were planned throughout
An important article in Nature Medicine, December 30, notes that
Some generic companies, especially Ranbaxy, the largest pharmaceutical company in
Comment
The Reuters story cited above quoted an unnamed pharmaceutical executive who inadvertently diagnosed the problem. "There could easily be 70 to 80 million people [in India] who can afford expensive medicines, just as they go out and buy expensive cars, branded clothes and consumer goods. That is equal to the size of a
Reuters also noted that the new law had provisions allowing for compulsory licensing in case of national emergencies, or for exporting medicine to countries facing public-health emergencies. However, compulsory licensing provisions have proved very difficult to use when opposed by much better financed multinational corporations. And millions of other people will fall through the cracks because their cancer or other major disease is not deemed a public emergency.
The January 2005 trade-treaty deadline has long been well known (it was originally earlier, but was extended for some countries including
The real issue for the multinationals is not the poor-country markets, which are financially small, but the poor-country examples. How will thousands of people in rich countries, especially the
There are other ways to organize and finance drug development that do not sacrifice the great majority of the world's people when they need a new medicine, so that those who do have the money can be compelled to pay. And the current system is failing badly even at the innovation, is its main selling point -- denying new treatments to everyone, not only the poor. Unless effective consensus is built, the world is headed into a catastrophe where millions of lives will be sacrificed so that a few who are already very rich and influential can hold onto current arrangements, and get a little richer.
References
1. Arackaparambil, R. India's new patent law to shake up drug industry. Reuters, December 30,
http://www.reuters.co.uk/newsArticle.jhtml?type=reutersEdgeNews&storyID=646411
2. Jayaraman KS. New patent rules drive Indian drug firms to research. Nature Medicine (published online December 30, 2004).




