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Access to Medicines Report, Green Light to Action

The much-anticipated report by the United Nations (UN) High Level Panel on Access to Medicines went public on 14 September. Hopes that its forward-looking recommendations could speedily succeed are threatened, however, by the load of conflicting issues still on the table worldwide

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by Daniele Dionisio*

Policies for Equitable Access to Health (PEAH)

Access to Medicines Report, Green Light to Action

 

The United Nations High Level Panel on Access to Medicines was established in November 2015 and tasked with reviewing and weighing proposals and making recommendations for ending the misalignment among the right to health, trade rules and the patent system, as the main barrier to the equitable access to health priorities.

The much-anticipated report by the Panel finally went public on 14 September. Its well-grounded recommendations and requests to the interested parties make it a cornerstone for all relevant decisions to the fair access to treatments and care not just at a poor country level. Admittedly, access to medicines is a problem of global concern at a time when extortionate drug prices are laming healthcare systems throughout the world.

Relevantly, the Panel calls for WTO members to comply with and globally implement the WTO Doha Declaration on TRIPS (WTO Agreement on Trade-Related Aspects of Intellectual Property Rights) and public health. This includes facilitating the issuance of compulsory licences, rejecting the so-called ever-greening of patents and restricting patents to genuine inventions only.

The report says that “Governments and the private sector must refrain from explicit or implicit threats, tactics or strategies that undermine the right of WTO Members to use TRIPS flexibilities.” It maintains that “Instances of undue political and commercial pressure should be reported to by the WTO Secretariat during the Trade Policy Review of Members.” As per its terms, “WTO Members must register complaints against undue political and economic pressure which includes taking punitive measures against offending WTO Members.”

Coherently, the report calls on governments engaged in international trade and investment negotiations to ensure that these do not include clauses contrary to their obligations to the right to health. The public health impact of the agreements should, instead, be carefully weighed throughout the negotiations and made publicly available.

The Panel insists that the UN agencies (UNCTAD, UNDP, WHO, WIPO among others) should mutually collaborate at their best, including with the WTO and all relevant bodies, to support governments to introduce public health-friendly patentability standards.

As the Panel stresses, “universities and research institutions that receive public funding must prioritize public health objectives over financial returns in their patenting and licensing practices.” That includes the use of non-exclusive licences while giving up intellectual property (IP) rights and joining public sector patent pools and other mechanisms equipped for the maximization of innovation and access.

Relevantly, governments are asked to enhance their levels of investment in health technology innovation to meet neglected needs.

Moreover, the report calls for all the relevant parties to “test and implement new and additional models for financing and rewarding public health research and development (R&D), such as the transaction taxes and other innovative financing mechanisms.”

What’s more, the Panel urges to begin negotiations at the WHO for a binding research and development treaty up to delinking R&D costs from the end prices of medicines. The treaty “should focus on public health needs, including but not limited to, innovation for neglected tropical diseases and antimicrobial resistance and must complement existing mechanisms.”

Furthermore, the Panel contends that “Governments should strengthen national level policy and institutional coherence between trade and intellectual property, the right to health and public health objectives by establishing national inter-ministerial bodies to coordinate laws, policies and practices that may impact on health technology innovation and access.”

Meanwhile, the United Nations Secretary-General is asked to set up an independent review body tasked with assessing progress on health technology innovation and access, while monitoring the challenges and advances on innovation and the enjoyment of technologies for health under the UN 2030 Agenda perspective. Membership should encompass representatives from governments, the UN and multilateral organisations, civil society, universities, and the private sector.

The UN Secretary-General is also requested to establish an inter-agency taskforce on health technology innovation and access working “toward increasing coherence among United Nations entities and relevant multilateral organizations like the WTO.”

The report contends that “Governments should require manufacturers and distributors of health technologies to disclose to drug regulatory and procurement authorities information pertaining to:

(1) the costs of R&D, production, marketing and distribution of health technology being procured or given marketing approval with each expense category separated; and

(2) any public funding received in the development of the health technology, including tax credits, subsidies and grants.”

Relevantly, the WHO is invited to establish and keep up with an “accessible international database of prices of patented and generic medicines and biosimilars in the private and public sectors of all countries where they are registered.” At the same time, governments are asked to establish, preserve and update publicly accessible databases with patent information status and relevant figures to drugs and vaccines.

Falling Short of Expectations?

It is strict duty for the UN system to work with governments to ensure the report’s recommendations are carried into effect with no delay. Unfortunately, since the Panel asks all counterparts to act in unison toward the best collaboration, coherence, accountability and transparency, the percentage of success is unpredictable at the moment.

Admittedly, in today’s global landscape, which is torn by misalignment, litigations and frictions among the involved parties, governments look like they wouldn’t be ready to embark on these recommendations as an opportunity to advance public health over political and commercial interests.

From bad to worse, the current governments’ directions and trade agreements, largely by the European Union (EU) and the United States (US), run contrary to the Panel’s principles while turning IP agendas into policies that protect monopolistic interests at the expense of equitable access to care and lifesaving treatments in resource-limited settings.

Just for example, the Panel’s request for transparency in costs to help curb extortionate drug prices looks like a difficult task now that pharma companies and their allies are lobbying policy decision makers  to scupper any rules that would force them to disclose the real R&D costs and profits of their medicines and the rationale for charging what they do.

As such, it comes as no surprise that the report was opposed by the US Chamber of Commerce and the pharmaceutical industry.

These circumstances bode ill at a time when the US administration is lobbied by the pharmaceutical corporations, the European authorities are doing almost nothing to check the tide of ‘me-too’ drugs, and the European Medicines Agency keeps testing new medicines only in terms of safety and efficacy compared with a ‘pretend’ drug.

To conclude, what expectations for the world landscape mentioned above? Hopes that comprehensive, non-discriminatory health goals could speedily be reached are threatened by the load of conflicting issues still on the table.  As argued, “Achieving health equity is not just a matter of coming up with technical solutions and providing the means to finance them. We have to consider the political landscape and rectify the dysfunctions in global governance that undermine health…”

All things taken together, the Panel’s report recommendations look like a hard bet. Yet, they matter against all the odds as an overarching voice hammering the point that prospects for global health goals only depend on non-stop, multi-sector engagement worldwide to pressure governments into making “U-turn” changes by common measures on a shared agenda.

 

————————————————————————–

*article originally published in IHP – International Health Policies  http://www.internationalhealthpolicies.org/access-to-medicines-report-green-light-to-action/

Daniele Dionisio is a member of the European Parliament Working Group on Innovation, Access to Medicines and Poverty-Related Diseases. He is an advisor for “Medicines for the Developing Countries” for the Italian Society for Infectious and Tropical Diseases (SIMIT), and former director of the Infectious Disease Division at the Pistoia City Hospital (Italy). Dionisio is Head of the research project PEAH – Policies for Equitable Access to Health. He may be reached at d.dionisio@tiscali.it http://www.peah.it/ https://twitter.com/DanieleDionisio

 

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Chagas Disease: A Reflection on the Lack of Access to Treatment

The response to Chagas disease still needs inclusive protocols, sustainable and adequate financing and does not have a robust portfolio of investigation of new treatments and diagnosis. Beyond that, production capacity and supply of Benznidazole (BZN) medication is far from being minimally sufficient. The price factor also strongly impacts access to medication. A point deserving attention in the analysis of BZN’s prices is the need, as in the response to other diseases in general, to maintain competition as a factor of market regulation

by Eloan Pinheiro *, Lucia Brum ***, Renata Reis **, Juan-Carlos Cubides ***

*Consultant in Public Health Policy; ***Brazilian Medical Unit (BRAMU), Médecins Sans Frontières–Brazil; **Advocacy and Interinstitutional Relationships, Médecins Sans Frontières-Brazil

Chagas Disease

A Reflection on the Lack of Access to Treatment

Trypanosoma_cruzi_crithidia

 

Introduction
Chagas disease or American trypanosomiasis is a potentially fatal disease caused by the protozoan Trypanosoma cruzi and endemic in 21 countries in the Americas region, being mainly transmitted by Triatominae insects. The World Health Organization (WHO) recognizes Chagas as a neglected disease due to two elements: the fact that mainly affects people who are unaware of their rights to health and low investment in innovation and development, especially in access to diagnosis and treatment [1].

Over the past 30 years, there has been a significant reduction in the number of cases of the disease due to actions to combat the vector developed by national programs under the intergovernmental initiatives in the Americas. However, little progress has been made in relation to the component of care and treatment for people who were already infected. Currently the WHO estimates that there are approximately 6 million people infected by Chagas disease in the world, which generally face known limitations in access to diagnosis and treatment [2].

Benznidazole (BZD) and Nifurtimox are the only drugs available for the treatment of Chagas disease in the world. Launched in 1967 and 1972, respectively, these drugs quickly proved to be effective in the treatment of acute infections, but were largely ignored for the treatment of chronic infections due to the high frequency of undesirable side effects, low apparent cure rates and a lack of international consensus on the diagnostic criteria and parasitological cure.

Unfortunately, the portfolio of molecules currently investigated for this neglected disease is reduced, reducing as well the possibility of developing new treatments. Nifurtimox is manufactured by Bayer Health Care as Lampit® and Benznidazole was produced by Roche as Rochagan® or Radanil®. Originally, Roche had the registration for the drug in Argentina, Brazil, Bolivia, Uruguay, Peru, Nicaragua and Japan. After Roche stopped its BNZ production on April 2003, the Brazilian laboratory LAFEPE figured as the only global producer, providing the finished product directly to Bolivia, Paraguay, Ecuador, Colombia, Venezuela, Honduras, El Salvador, Chile, Switzerland, Mexico, Argentina and Brazil.

Brazilian production always had problems in both the normative aspect (especially in relation to greetings rules of health authorities) and in relation to production. The lack of supply on the active ingredient (API-BZD) led to the shortage of the drug in 2011. After years of monopoly drug production by LAFEPE, another BZD producer stepped in: the Argentine laboratory ELEA part of the international group Chemo. This new production is not enough to cover the necessities in countries with high burden of the disease and bring to the picture another variable to analyze on the private production of drugs: high costs.

Access to BZD: Needs vs. Production Capacity
The annual production capacity of the two producers is a ton (1,000 kg) per year each, and may double this quantity, in exceptional cases. Thus, the current annual production capacity of API varies between 2,000 kg and 4,000 kg/year and the latter quantity is a possibility.

For treating an average adult patient; tablets of 100 mg in 3 daily doses for 60 (sixty) days are required. It takes 180 (one hundred eighty) tablets for an adult to complete their treatment equivalent, to 0.018 kg of raw materials. Pediatric use also requires sixty 60) days to comply with the treatment, taking tablets of 12.5 mg, 6 times per day; this is equivalent to 0.0045 kg of raw material (Table 1).

Eloan FINALtable 1

Table 1. API-BZD quantitative estimation necessary for treatment of an adult and a child

The number of patients and API-BZD required in order to provide their treatments in four endemic countries in Latin America, namely Argentina, Bolivia, Brazil and Mexico is shown in Table number 2. Considering the amount noted for the treatment of adults and children only in the selected countries, 77.4 tons of API-BZD are required while the production mentioned above (4.4 tons of total maximum capacity of both producers) responds only to 5.7% of the actual need.

Eloan FINALtable 2

Table 2. API-BZD quantitative estimation necessary to meet the demand of BZD medicines in countries with larger epidemiological indices [3]

Right to Health and Access to Essential Medicines
The right to enjoyment of the highest attainable standard of physical and mental health even though it is crystallized in various international legal instruments today is far from assured for a substantial part of the population. This right was first proclaimed in the Constitution of the World Health Organization (WHO) in 1946, whose preamble defines health as “a state of complete physical well-being, mental and social and not merely the absence of disease”. The Universal Declaration of Human Rights of 1948 also brings health as part of the right to an adequate standard of living (Art. 25)[4]. The right to health was also recognized as a human right in the International Covenant on Economic, Social, 1966, and is reinforced in numerous international treaties and documents.

In recent years, it has been given greater attention to the right to the highest attainable standard of health. Thus, the organs that monitor the implementation of human rights treaties, the WHO and the UN Human Rights Council has sought to observe and report misrepresentation of a wider range of rights, among them the right to access essential medicines. Over time, it became increasingly apparent the direct link between access to essential medicines and the progressive realization of the right to health. This broad global recognition imposed the translation of this recognition in public policy enforcement of this right.

Chagas disease is an emblematic case of disrespect to the right of access to treatment according to the statements mentioned. Considered one of the most widely distributed diseases in the Americas, Chagas disease completed in 2009 a hundred years of its discovery and even today lacks inclusive protocols, is not sustainable and adequate funding, capacity and supply BZD medicine is far to be minimally sufficient.

The information exposed before (Table 1) brought illustrative data on the deficit of the world production capacity of BZD taking into account the four Latin American countries with high prevalence making urgent to discuss the issue. Currently the existing amount of BZD in the world allows only treat about 111,000 patients (taking into account the real world production of 2 tons of raw material per year) or about 222,222 patients (if produce 2 tons more per year); this equates to only 3.22% of treatments currently needed in the referred countries.

In summary, many lobbying efforts and medical advocacy can be undertaken by social organizations, affected groups of people, but a pressure to governments and producers must accompany those actions, so that the productive capacity of BZD be expanded and the current monopolized production of BZD be stopped. Over the years, given the experience on treatment of Chagas disease in multiple countries it is important to acknowledge the socio-cultural and political-economic aspects involving inequity issues, which are often not considered. The disease affects the most vulnerable and deprived populations in countries were the problem remains under a huge invisibility. Unfortunately, the perception of many public managers is that Chagas is the disease of backwardness and poverty, so it is better to hide it than to face it; when the real solution lies on breaking the cycle of neglection by offering appropriate diagnosis and treatment to all in need.

References
[1]. Lee, B.Y., Bacon, K.M., Bottazzi, M.E., Hotez, P.J., 2013. Global economic burden of Chagas disease: a computational simulation model. Lancet Infect. Dis. 13 (4), 342–348.
[2]. Available http://www.who.int/mediacentre/factsheets/fs340/en/, Source: WHO, 2010.
[3]. Institute for One World Health. Estimative on BZD for T. cruzi infected people in the Americas. 2007
[4]. Available  http://www.ohchr.org/EN/UDHR/Documents/UDHR_Translations/por.pdf

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Nelson Mandela (2005)

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by Daniele Dionisio*

Member, European Parliament Working Group on Innovation, Access to Medicines and Poverty-Related Diseases

UNCTAD 2016: Mappa della Povertà

 

Quante povertà?

Il rapporto UNCTAD 2016 suddivide la povertà in ‘relative’, ‘consistent’, ed ‘extreme-absolute’, dove l’ultima definizione chiaramente attiene alla condizione di quanti impossibilitati al godimento di sufficienti livelli di nutrizione e di buona salute. Per queste fasce di popolazione la Banca Mondiale ha introdotto nel 1991 la soglia di 1.25 dollari di introito giornaliero (poi elevata a 1,90 dollari nel 2015, ma tuttora presente nel target 1.1 dei recenti Sustainable Development Goals-SDGs delle Nazioni Unite) quale standard di povertà assoluta nei Paesi più poveri.

Nel 1990 circa 1.9 miliardi di persone (più di un terzo della popolazione mondiale) sopravvivevano con meno della soglia giornaliera predetta. Entro il 2015 la percentuale era però scemata al 12% significando che più di un miliardo di persone erano state sottratte alla più pesante miseria. Indiscutibilmente un grande successo, anche se circa 836 milioni di persone versano tuttora in povertà assoluta.

Progresso disomogeneo                           

I successi più eclatanti sono documentati in Asia orientale e Pacifico dove la proporzione di quanti in povertà estrema (soprattutto in Cina e India) è crollata da più dell’80% negli anni ottanta del secolo scorso a meno dell’8% oggi. Meno drammatico, ma significativo, in Asia meridionale nello stesso periodo la percentuale si è ridotta dal 59% al 19%, mentre in Africa sub-sahariana il dato ha visto una flessione dal 57% degli anni novanta  al 43% odierno.

Al di là dei progressi, povertà estrema sfortunatamente permane in aree asiatiche, caraibiche e, soprattutto, sub-sahariane. In Madagascar versa in povertà assoluta l’82% della popolazione, il 78% in Burundi, il 77% nella Repubblica Democratica del Congo (RDC), il 71% in Malawi.

Almeno in 15 Paesi sub-sahariani il 50% delle rispettive popolazioni è in povertà estrema. E il problema non interessa solo l’Africa se è vero che Haiti e molta parte dell’arcipelago della Micronesia mostrano livelli di povertà estrema coinvolgenti più del 50% degli abitanti.

Questi dati indicano che, nonostante il declino globale, la riduzione della povertà è tuttora disomogenea nelle diverse aree geografiche.

Al riguardo, povertà estrema permane concentrata in Africa sub-sahariana e Asia meridionale, con l’80% della popolazione legata ad un introito giornaliero inferiore a 1.25 dollari. Nel 2011 le Nazioni Unite riferivano che, mentre il 60% delle fasce più povere era confinato in 5 precisi Paesi (Bangladesh, Cina, RDC, India e Nigeria), i progressi delle regioni caraibiche nella riduzione della povertà tra gli anni novanta e il 2011 avevano sofferto di eccessiva lentezza.

In questo contesto, la povertà delle fasce giovani di popolazione è destinata a configurarsi nei prossimi decenni quale sfida maggiore per i Paesi a crescita demografica rapida.

Un approccio allargato

Con l’obiettivo primario di eradicare la povertà estrema, il Goal 1 dei Sustainable Development Goals-SDGs è imperniato su una visione ampia della povertà quale fenomeno poliedrico e multidimensionale in un mix complesso di cause economiche, sociali e ambientali. Coerentemente, i targets del Goal 1 chiamano alla eradicazione della povertà estrema in generale, ma pure alla riduzione di quella propria delle fasce più giovani o di quella correlata alla discriminazione sessuale; esortano alla introduzione di ridistribuzione sociale per proteggere poveri e vulnerabili; alla adozione di uguali diritti e uguale accesso alle risorse economiche e ai servizi; al contenimento dell’impatto di shock climatici, economici e sociali; all’implementazione da parte dei  Paesi di politiche e dinamiche atte a ridurre ed eliminare la povertà.

La mina delle disuguaglianze

L’impegno internazionale ad eradicare la povertà dovunque e in ogni suo aspetto è racchiuso dunque nel Goal 1 degli SDGs quale naturale prosecuzione del Goal 1 dei precedenti Millennium Development Goals. 

Purtroppo, la mina vagante delle disuguaglianze rende arduo scommettere sul conseguimento di povertà zero entro il 2030. Quale fondato ottimismo, infatti, se ad oggi circa 830 milioni di persone ancora sopravvivono con meno di 1,90 dollari di introito giornaliero, se 1.8 miliardi di persone guadagnano meno di 2,50 dollari al dì, se, infine, un guadagno medio giornaliero di 250 dollari finisce nelle tasche di solo l’1% della popolazione mondiale mentre il 50% non supera i 7 dollari?

PER APPROFONDIRE

Mandela calls for action on ‘unnatural’ poverty https://www.theguardian.com/world/2005/feb/03/hearafrica05.development

UNCTAD: Goal 1 No Poverty http://stats.unctad.org/Dgff2016/people/goal1/index.html

UN: Sustainable Development Goals – SDGs https://sustainabledevelopment.un.org/?menu=1300

UN: The Millennium Development Goals Report 2015 http://www.un.org/millenniumgoals/2015_MDG_Report/pdf/MDG%202015%20rev%20(July%201).pdf.

UN: World population prospects, the 2015 revision https://esa.un.org/unpd/wpp/Download/Standard/Population/

UN: Transforming Our World: The 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development https://sustainabledevelopment.un.org/content/documents/21252030%20Agenda%20for%20Sustainable%20Development%20web.pdf

World Bank (2005). Poverty lines. In: Introduction to Poverty Analysis. Chapter 3. Washington, D.C. http://siteresources.worldbank.org/PGLP/Resources/PovertyManual.pdf

Ferreira F, Jolliffe D M and Prydz E B (2015). The international poverty line has just been raised to $1.90 a day, but global poverty is basically unchanged. How is that even possible? Let’s Talk Development – A blog hosted by the World Bank’s Chief Economist  http://blogs.worldbank.org/developmenttalk/international-poverty-line-has-just-been-raised-190-day-global-poverty-basically-unchanged-how-even

United Nations Economic Commission for Africa (2015). Economic Report on Africa: Industrializing through trade. UNECA. Addis Ababa http://www.uneca.org/publications/economic-report-africa-2015

Woodward D and Abdallah S (2010). Redefining Poverty: A Rights-based Approach. New Economics Foundation London http://dnwssx4l7gl7s.cloudfront.net/nefoundation/default/page/-/publications/RBPLTechPub.pdf.

 

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*Daniele Dionisio is a member of the European Parliament Working Group on Innovation, Access to Medicines and Poverty-Related Diseases. Dionisio is former director of the Infectious Disease Division at the Pistoia City Hospital (Italy), and Head of the research project PEAH – Policies for Equitable Access to Health.

d.dionisio@tiscali.it  http://www.peah.it/  https://twitter.com/DanieleDionisio