Public health, innovation and intellectual property rights: report of the Commission on Intellectual Property Rights, Innovation and Public Health (2006; 218 pages) [ Arabic] [ Chinese] [ French] [ Russian] [ Spanish]
Abrégé
Against the background of an ongoing international debate concerning the relationship
between intellectual property rights, innovation and public health,
in international organizations and more generally among governments and
civil society organizations, the World Health Assembly decided in May 2003
to give an independent Commission the task of analysing this key issue.
The World Health Organization considered that its mission demanded it
should play a part in this debate, with the objective of illuminating how intellectual
property rights might affect public health. There was the need for
governments in the north and south, pharmaceutical companies, scientists
and other stakeholders, to consider how diseases which disproportionately
affect developing countries could best be addressed, and to seek solutions.
Our terms of reference made it clear that the focus of our enquiry should
be the development of new diagnostics, vaccines and medicines to treat these
diseases. But we quickly concluded that innovation was pointless in the absence
of favourable conditions for poor people in developing countries to access
existing, as well as new, products. The price of medicines is an important
factor in determining access, but so also are poverty and the lack of infrastructure
for delivering health care to poor people. It is not just neglected
diseases, but rather neglected people, that should be our main concern.
The international debate has strengthened awareness and produced some
very positive effects. Many stakeholders have responded to the challenge of
promoting more research and development (R&D) relevant to the needs of
developing countries. New partnerships have been formed, and initiatives
taken, to create new products for developing countries, and to promote their
delivery...Intellectual property rights are important, but as a means not an end. How
relevant they are in the promotion of the needed innovation depends on context
and circumstance. We know they are considered a necessary incentive
in developed countries where there is both a good technological and scientific
infrastructure and a supporting market for new health-care products. But
they can do little to stimulate innovation in the absence of a profitable market
for the products of innovation, a situation which can clearly apply in the case
of products principally for use in developing country markets. The effects of
intellectual property rights on innovation may also differ at successive phases
of the innovation cycle – from basic research to a new pharmaceutical or vaccine.
We considered the impact of TRIPS, the flexibilities in TRIPS confirmed
by the Doha Declaration, and also the impact of bilateral and regional trade
agreements as they might affect public health objectives.
Whereas there is an innovation cycle in developed countries which broadly
works to provide the health care required by their inhabitants, this is far
from being the case in developing countries to meet the needs of their people,
in particular poor people. Our task was to consider how this difference might
be addressed...
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