Designing an ethical complement to the patent regime for pharmaceutical innovation. Pharma-Innovation Patent-2

Similar documents
Draft for consideration

70 th World Health Assembly May 2017 MSF Briefing on Medical Research and Development

An Introduction to China s Science and Technology Policy

Erwin Mlecnik 1,2. Keywords: Renovation, Supply Chain Collaboration, Innovation, One Stop Shop, Business models. 1. Introduction

An Essential Health and Biomedical R&D Treaty

Draft Plan of Action Chair's Text Status 3 May 2008

Virtual Mentor American Medical Association Journal of Ethics December 2006, Volume 8, Number 12:

International initiatives in data sharing: OECD, CODATA and GICSI. Yukiko Fukasaku Innovmond Padova 21 September 2007

Lucinda Longcroft, Head, New York Office, World Intellectual Property Organization (WIPO)

Patents & Innovation In the Pharmaceutical Industry: Literature Review. Jonathan Gock POL 459 Prof. Hira Fall 09

ETHIOPIAN EXPERIENCE By Girma Bejiga October 2014 Harare / Zimbabwe

South South Cooperation on IP and Development: Approaching IP Governance from a Development Perspective

IP and Technology Management for Universities

Science, Technology & Innovation Policy: A Global Perspective. Dr Lauren Palmer Australian Academy of Technological Sciences & Engineering (ATSE)

Innovating together Collaborations between multi-national companies and academia in China

CERN-PH-ADO-MN For Internal Discussion. ATTRACT Initiative. Markus Nordberg Marzio Nessi

12 December Peter Beyer Senior Advisor Essential Medicines & Health Products Switzerland

[Definitions of terms that are underlined are found at the end of this document.]

Impact for Social Sciences and the Handbook for Social Scientists

Global strategy and plan of action on public health, innovation and intellectual property

Standing Committee on the Law of Patents

Access to Technology in the Post-2015 Development Agenda. Alessandra Casazza Policy Advisor UNDP Asia-Pacific Regional Center

Universities and Sustainable Development Towards the Global Goals

The Standardization and the Patent Issue in Telemedicine

TRAINING SEMINAR PHARMACEUTICALS AND INTELLECTUAL PROPERTY ACCESS TO MEDICINE: Exploitation of pharmaceutical patents: compulsory licences SESSION 4

Wael Al-Delaimy MD, PhD. President, Society for Advancement of Science and Technology in the Arab World

Patents and Clean Energy Technologies in Africa

Flexibilities in the Patent System

Patient and doctor-centric health ecosystem in specialised medicine engineered on blockchain.

ACP/84/047/02 Final Cape Town, 28 July 2002 PAHD Dept. CAPE TOWN DECLARATION ON RESEARCH FOR SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT

National Innovation System of Mongolia

UNCTAD Ad Hoc Expert Meeting on the Green Economy: Trade and Sustainable Development Implications November

INTELLECTUAL PROPERTY (IP) SME SCOREBOARD 2016

INTELLECTUAL PROPERTY (IP) SME SCOREBOARD 2016

ASEAN Regulatory Harmonisation and Approval Process

Engineering: UNESCO Report. Issues and Challenges for Development

The TRIPS Agreement and Patentability Criteria

American Chamber of Commerce in Taipei

A NEW INCENTIVE SYSTEM FOR TECHNOLOGICAL INNOVATION IN DEVELOPING COUNTRIES

WIPO REGIONAL SEMINAR ON SUPPORT SERVICES FOR INVENTORS, VALUATION AND COMMERCIALIZATION OF INVENTIONS AND RESEARCH RESULTS

Intellectual Property Management Medicines for Malaria Venture. Life Sciences Symposium WIPO 15 December 2008

Enforcement of Intellectual Property Rights Frequently Asked Questions

Draft global strategy on public health, innovation and intellectual property

Cross-Border R&D in China Understanding the Regulatory Challenges

31 August Background

Delhi High Level Conference on Climate Change: Technology Development and Transfer Chair s Summary

University IP and Technology Management. University IP and Technology Management

Second APEC Ministers' Conference on Regional Science & Technology Cooperation (Seoul, Korea, Nov 13-14, 1996) JOINT COMMUNIQUÉ

Interim Report on the Heiligendamm Process at the G8 Summit in Hokkaido Toyako 7 to 9 July 2008

Infrastructure, International

Table Of Content. Stichting Health Action International... 2 Summary... 3 Coordinator, Leader contact and partners... 6 Outputs...

A Focus on Health Data Infrastructure, Capacity and Application of Outcomes Data

European-South African Cooperation in Scientific and Technical Research

1. Recognizing that some of the barriers that impede the diffusion of green technologies include:

Draft executive summaries to target groups on industrial energy efficiency and material substitution in carbonintensive

International IP. Prof. Eric E. Johnson. General Principles

Submission to the Productivity Commission inquiry into Intellectual Property Arrangements

The Global Alliance for Chronic diseases (GACD)

Results in 2014 Program Highlights 2015

B) Issues to be Prioritised within the Proposed Global Strategy and Plan of Action:

IPRs and Public Health: Lessons Learned Current Challenges The Way Forward

IP Strategies to Enhance Competitiveness: India s Experience

Biotech Concerto #6 Investment Process December 2008

Intellectual Property

Firm Foundation, Forward Focus

International Research Collaboration. - Why do it?

UTILITY MODELS A USEFUL NATIONAL STRATEGY FOR PROMOTING INNOVATION?

Vietnam Navigating the future of IT services sector

Intellectual Property

The TRIPS Tightrope public health, innovation, incentives and access

Data-Driven Evaluation: The Key to Developing Successful Pharma Partnerships

European Charter for Access to Research Infrastructures - DRAFT

Building an enterprise-centred innovation system

A Research and Innovation Agenda for a global Europe: Priorities and Opportunities for the 9 th Framework Programme

Intellectual Property Policy. DNDi POLICIES

The New Delhi Communiqué

Practical measures to encourage the diffusion of green technologies: Licensing Fast tracking of green patents The GreenXchange Platform

The Developing World and the Role of Information and. Communication Technologies

Meanwhile in rural Ethiopia a 19 year old woman waits in the health centre

Elements of a global strategy and plan of action

Intellectual Property Rights and Development CARLOS M. CORREA

Asking Questions on Knowledge Exchange and Exploitation in the Business R&D and Innovation Survey

The Copenhagen Accord and Climate Innovation Centres

GENEVA COMMITTEE ON DEVELOPMENT AND INTELLECTUAL PROPERTY (CDIP) Fifth Session Geneva, April 26 to 30, 2010

The Investigation of Bio-medical Science and Technology Innovation Service Platform in Guangzhou

Biomedical Innovation Has Science Overtaken the System?

COUNTRY: Questionnaire. Contact person: Name: Position: Address:

An Innovative Public Private Approach for a Technology Facilitation Mechanism (TFM)

World Intellectual Property Organization. Topic C: Healthcare and Pharmacological Patents

Building Sustainable and Resilient Communities

BOOK REVIEW INTELLECTUAL PROPERTY, PHARMACEUTICALS AND PUBLIC HEALTH: ACCESS TO DRUGS IN DEVELOPING COUNTRIES

Innovation Economy. Creating the. Dr. G. Wayne Clough President, Georgia Institute of Technology

What Makes International Research Ethical (Or Unethical)? Eric M. Meslin, Ph.D Indiana University Center for Bioethics

The Green Economy: Trade and Sustainable Development Implications. From Rio to Rio:Technology Transfer, Innovation and Intellectual Property

When universities collide with global grand challenges

Chinese Intellectual Property Right Regime and Independent Innovation of Enterprises

GROUP OF SENIOR OFFICIALS ON GLOBAL RESEARCH INFRASTRUCTURES

Tapan Ray Director General Organisation of Pharmaceutical Producers of India ALCAN PACKAGING UNIVERSITY OCT 8, LONAVALA

Medical Technology Association of NZ. Proposed European Union/New Zealand Free Trade Agreement. Submission to Ministry of Foreign Affairs & Trade

Addressing the Innovation Imperative

Transcription:

Designing an ethical complement to the patent regime for pharmaceutical innovation

Innova-P2 Project Background Innova-P2 is a 3-year Collaborative Project funded by the European Community s Seventh Framework Programme under grant agreement 217665. 1 June 2008-31 May 2011 Currently, one-third of all human deaths (18 million every year) are from diseases that could have been prevented, treated or cured. Hundreds of millions of people suffer from these diseases, while the lives of their families are shattered by severe illness and premature deaths. Most of these cases occur among poor people in poor countries, creating a disease burden which perpetuates their poverty. Often these same diseases have been almost eliminated in the developed world. Many poor countries have an inadequate health infrastructure and a severe shortage of trained medical staff. As a result, 2 billion people lack access to essential medicines, even when these are offpatent and therefore available in cheap generic versions. Moreover, under the global Trade Related Aspects of Intellectual Property Rights (TRIPS) agreement, inventors of new drugs can obtain 20-year monopoly patents in most countries. This regime facilitates high prices for new medicines, well beyond the reach of the global poor. In addition, because pharmaceutical innovators are rewarded through these patent-protected high prices, they have little incentive to carry out research on diseases concentrated among the global poor. Under the present system, it is far more profitable to develop a me-too product to treat a minor ailment common in affluent countries, for which remedies already exist, than it is to invent the first ever treatment for a neglected tropical disease. As a result, so-called neglected diseases, which account for a majority of the global disease burden, receive only a small fraction of medical research funding worldwide. Of 1556 new drugs approved between 1975 and 2004, only 18 were for tropical diseases that affect hundreds of millions of people. Innova-P2 was launched 26-27 August 2008, hosted by the Centre for the Study of Mind in Nature, University of Oslo.

Innova-P2 - the Research Project Innova-P2 has established an international, interdisciplinary team with expertise in social philosophy, economics, statistics, intellectual property rights (IPR), policy making and advice, gender, medicine and development, in order to: Advance knowledge and ethical insight into reform plans for the current intellectual property rights system Finalise the existing plan to amend the current IPR system in the area of pharmaceutical innovation Provide a reality check and obtain support for the proposed system from the world s two most powerful developing/emerging country actors - India and China Promote urgent policy developments on IPR by forging a consensus for the proposed system and providing a policy action plan. The team is undertaking the development of strong ethical and policy arguments in support of an IPR reform plan based on the Health Impact Fund proposal. These claims will be supported by the detailed specification of a suitable measure of the global disease burden and ways of assessing the contributions that various treatments make to its reduction, in order to develop a transparent model for the proposed reform plan to adopt when collecting data and determining monetary rewards. The team will investigate the attitudes of policy groups and industry representatives towards the scheme Project Workshop Beijing May 2009. in order to identify barriers and solutions, and produce a road-map to ensure the final proposals for international policy action are realistic and appropriate. INNOVA

Partners Professor Thomas Pogge, Dr Miltos Ladikas, Julie Cook Lucas, (Project Co-ordinators) Centre for Professional Ethics, University of Central Lancashire, Preston, UK jmlucas@uclan.ac.uk Professor Arjun Sengupta, Dr Nagesh Kumar, Dr Sachin Chaturvedi, Research and Information System for Developing Countries (RIS), New Delhi, India Sachin@ris.org.in Professor Gao Zhiqian, Dr Guo Lifeng, Dr Li Zhe, Chinese Academy of Science and Technology for Development (CASTED), Beijing, China guolf@casted.org.cn Professor Peter Singer, Professor Doris Schroeder, Centre for Applied Philosophy and Public Ethics (CAPPE), University of Melbourne, Melbourne, Australia doriss@unimelb.edu.au Professor Fatima Alvarez Castillo, University of the Philippines Manila, The Philippines Fatima.castillo@up.edu.ph WAGENINGEN UNIVERSITY WAGENINGEN UR Professor Lynn Frewer, Dr David Coles, Wageningen University, Wageningen, The Netherlands Lynn.Frewer@wur.nl External Advisors Professor Joseph Stiglitz, Professor of Economics, Columbia University, USA, Nobel Laureate for Economics, 2001, Senior Vice-President and Chief Economist World Bank, 1997-2000 Dr Tikki Pang, WHO Director for Research Policy & Cooperation Dr Klaus Leisinger, President and CEO of the Novartis Foundation for Sustainable Development, Professor of Development Sociology, University of Basel, Switzerland Roger Chennells, Legal Consultant, Stellenbosch, South Africa Dr Matthew Rimmer, Specialist in Intellectual Property Law, Australian National University, College of Law Dr James Orbinski, Professor of Medicine, University of Toronto, Canada, Ex-President, Médecins Sans Frontières, Co-founder of Drugs for Neglected Diseases Initiative and Dignitas International Dr Gorik Ooms, Researcher, Institute of Tropical Medicine, Antwerp, Former Director, Médecins Sans Frontières, Belgium

Ensuring access to health care for populations everywhere is crucial to the fulfilment of human rights and sustainable development worldwide. Innova-P2 aims to develop a complement to the patent regime to stimulate pharmaceutical innovations that would be immediately accessible to all.

For more information contact: Julie Cook Lucas Project Manager jmlucas@uclan.ac.uk +44(0)1772 892549 Centre for Professional Ethics, Brook 317 School of Nursing and Caring Sciences University of Central Lancashire Preston, PR1 2HE, UK www.uclan.ac.uk/innova