In 2000, the international aid organization Doctors Without Borders
launched small HIV/AIDS treatment projects in Thailand, South Africa and
Cameroon. At the time, the cost of treating one person with
anti-retroviral drugs was about $10,000 a year, posing a significant
challenge for humanitarian groups fighting HIV/AIDS in developing
countries.
Then, in 2001, the price of HIV/AIDS treatments suddenly dropped
by 96 percent, as generic drug manufacturers in India began competing
in the anti-retroviral drug market. At the time, India's patent law
excluded patents for live-saving drugs, ensuring that market competition
would keep the prices down for Indian consumers.
The cost of anti-retroviral drugs has continued to drop, and the
annual cost of treating one person is currently about $140, according to
Doctors Without Borders. Research has shown that treating HIV patients
early can significantly reduce transmission rates, and now the group
provides HIV/AIDS treatment in 24 developing countries.
"These generics have been a game changer in terms of being able to
provide medical care in developing countries," said Judit Ruis, the US
policy advisor for Doctors Without Borders' Access Campaign.
India has since updated its patent laws to meet international standards
set by the World Trade Organization (WTO), but took advantage of
flexibilities within the WTO framework to protect its domestic generic
drug industry and keep drug prices low for its people, many of whom
continue to live in poverty even as India emerges as a major world
economy.
But big drug manufacturers in the United States and Europe are not
happy with these flexibilities. A Truthout investigation has revealed
that an aggressive lobbying effort by pharmaceutical interests pushed
Congress and the White House to put mounting pressure on India to change
its patent laws, despite India's current role as the "pharmacy of the developing world."
[Information here re patents, patent laws, pharmaceutical companies and lobbying efforts, - all of which point to enormous conflict between those seeking maximum profit and those hoping to deliver improved healthcare around the world.]
Modi has also made it clear that he sees both sides of the issue.
During his recent US visit, the CEOs of Merck and other drug companies
pressed Modi on India's patent laws during a breakfast meeting with US
businesses leaders.
"I understand that you want to be compensated for your investments in [research and development]," Modi was quoted as saying in India's Economic Times. "At the same time, India needs medicines that are affordable for its population."
He apparently stressed that the issue was not just about India, but the entire developing world.
Doctors Without Borders said it would continue to monitor the patent
situation in India and demand that its government resist pressure from
the United States and the pharmaceutical industry. The group also
publishes a database of information on challenging patents in countries across the world to help people and governments fight to remove barriers to affordable medicine.
taken from here
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