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	<title>건강과 대안 &#187; pharmaceutical patents</title>
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		<title>[NCDs] 의약품 특허와 비전염성질환의 치료접근권</title>
		<link>http://www.chsc.or.kr/?post_type=reference&#038;p=3083</link>
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		<pubDate>Mon, 26 Sep 2011 18:46:38 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>건강과대안</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[식품 · 의약품]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[NCD]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[pharmaceutical patents]]></category>
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		<category><![CDATA[의약품특허]]></category>

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		<description><![CDATA[http://theconversation.edu.au/blueprint-for-making-medicines-more-affordable-for-everyone-3503&#160; Hot Topics Non-communicable diseases Plain packaging Media and democracy Manufacturing Sovereign debt Explainer Academic journal debate More… 26 September 2011, 6.38am AEST Blueprint for making medicines more [...]]]></description>
				<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><A href="http://theconversation.edu.au/blueprint-for-making-medicines-more-affordable-for-everyone-3503">http://theconversation.edu.au/blueprint-for-making-medicines-more-affordable-for-everyone-3503</A><BR><BR><SECTION id=hot-topics class=clearfix>&nbsp;<br />
<H3>Hot Topics</H3><br />
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<LI><A href="http://theconversation.edu.au/pages/non-communicable-diseases" jQuery1317021257968="15">Non-communicable diseases</A> </LI><br />
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<DIV id=body class=clearfix closure_uid_k85fq7="237"><ARTICLE id=article class=hentry closure_uid_k85fq7="246" data-id="3503"><HEADER class="prepend-three eight"><TIME class=updated datetime="2011-09-26T06:38" pubdate>26 September 2011, 6.38am AEST</TIME><br />
<H1 class="entry-title five instapaper_title">Blueprint for making medicines more affordable for&nbsp;everyone</H1></HEADER><br />
<DIV style="POSITION: absolute; LEFT: -999em" class=entry-summary><br />
<P>Non-communicable diseases – Philip Soos examines the importance of essential drugs and technologies to the world’s poor, a priority action area noted by the Lancet NCD Action Group and the NCD Alliance. The magnitude and severity of preventable and treatable NCDs – diabetes, stroke, cancer and heart…</P></DIV><ASIDE id=meta class=three><SECTION id=authors><br />
<H4>Author</H4><br />
<OL><br />
<LI class="hcard author"><A href="http://theconversation.edu.au/profiles/philip-soos-3405" rel=author><IMG alt="Philip Soos" src="http://cdn.theconversation.edu.au/avatars/3405/thumb36/philip-soos-1312432808.jpg" width=36 height=36><br />
<H3 class=fn>Philip Soos </H3><br />
<P><SPAN class=role>Researcher, School of International &#038; Political Studies at Deakin University</SPAN> </P></A></LI></OL></SECTION><SECTION id=disclosure><br />
<H4>Disclosure Statement</H4><br />
<P>Philip Soos does not work for, consult to, own shares in or receive funding from any company or organisation that would benefit from this article, and has no relevant affiliations.</P><br />
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<p>This article was originally published at <a href="http://theconversation.edu.au">The Conversation</a>.<br />
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<DIV class="eight last" closure_uid_k85fq7="245"><br />
<DIV class="content five entry-content instapaper_body" closure_uid_k85fq7="244"><FIGURE id=slot1 class=image1 closure_uid_k85fq7="248"><IMG alt=6127242068_23c80ef94f_b src="http://cdn.theconversation.edu.au/files/3811/width440/6127242068_23c80ef94f_b.jpg" closure_uid_k85fq7="247" data-id="3811"> <FIGCAPTION>Better ways to finance pharmaceutical research and development could make medicines more accessible. <SPAN class=source title=Source>Images_of_Money</SPAN> </FIGCAPTION></FIGURE><br />
<DIV class=body closure_uid_k85fq7="243"><br />
<P closure_uid_k85fq7="249"><STRONG><EM><A href="http://theconversation.edu.au/pages/non-communicable-diseases">Non-communicable diseases</A> – Philip Soos examines the importance of essential drugs and technologies to the world’s poor, a priority action area noted by the Lancet NCD Action Group and the NCD Alliance.</EM></STRONG></P><br />
<P>The magnitude and severity of preventable and treatable NCDs – diabetes, stroke, cancer and heart disease – has brought the affordability of medicines to the forefront of global public health.</P><br />
<P>For more than a decade, a worldwide campaign has been agitating for more <A href="http://www.msfaccess.org/">timely and affordable access to medicines</A> for the world’s poor.</P><br />
<P closure_uid_k85fq7="250">This is because hundreds of millions of people around the world don’t have access to the medicines they require to combat and alleviate suffering from a plethora of NCDs.</P><br />
<H2>Patently obvious</H2><br />
<P>One of the direct causes of the lack of affordability of pharmaceuticals is the patents system.</P><br />
<P>Patents are a monopoly granted by the government ostensibly to promote greater levels of research and development (R&#038;D) than would exist without some form of intervention.</P><br />
<P>But the problem is that monopolistic pricing makes medicines less affordable to individuals.</P><br />
<P>While traditional forms of protectionism such as tariffs result in markups of 20% to 30%, patents can increase medicine prices by a thousand or even ten thousand percent above market competitive prices.</P><br />
<P>And monopolistic pricing is not <A href="http://theconversation.edu.au/patent-controversy-its-time-big-pharma-took-its-medicine-2697">the only hurdle</A> to making medicines more affordable and accessible.</P><br />
<P>It is compounded by perverse incentives for pharmaceutical companies to spend R&#038;D on creating largely non-innovative medicines for high-income markets.</P><br />
<P>Add to this, the temptation for pharmaceutical companies to withhold clinical research that indicates negative side-effects of some drugs.</P><br />
<P>Merck knew before Vioxx was released on the market, for instance, that it substantially increased the incidence of heart attack and stroke, resulting in <A href="http://www.consumersunion.org/pub/core_health_care/001651.html">tens of thousands of preventable deaths</A> in the United States.</P><br />
<P>It’s pointless to advocate policies that result in cheaper medicines if they are defective so consumers are harmed rather than treated.</P><br />
<P>But under the patent system, firms are faced with such perverse incentives that are clearly not aligned with the common good.</P><br />
<H2>All over the world</H2><br />
<P>It’s wrong to assume that patents are the sole cause for lack of medicines&#8217; affordability.</P><br />
<P>The lack of a well-functioning public health-care systems and medicine subsidy schemes; sales taxes; poverty; government corruption; and the high cost of on-going medical treatment are also reasons why many individuals and entire populations lack timely and affordable access to pharmaceuticals.</P><br />
<P>One of the oddities of the access to medicines campaign is that many assume only developing nations are in need of help.</P><br />
<P>In fact, the affordability crisis also strikes closer to home in many of the wealthier Western nations.</P><br />
<P>The United States, for instance, lacks a comprehensive national subsidy scheme and there’s an expectation that private insurers provide coverage alongside Medicare and Medicaid.</P><br />
<P>Despite this, many millions of Americans can’t afford to purchase medicines, which are often sold at grossly inflated prices.</P><br />
<P>Australia has one of the best medicine subsidy schemes in the world: the Pharmaceutical Benefits Scheme (PBS). But the PBS cannot subsidize every medicine on the market for the simple reason of containing costs.</P><br />
<P>The PBS will soon cost $10 billion and is expected to continue to grow. And even now there are instances of Australians who cannot afford unsubsidised medicines and are placed at an economic (and health) disadvantage.</P><br />
<H2>True cost</H2><br />
<P>The US pharmaceutical market recently reached US$300 billion in size. It would actually only be worth approximately US$30 billion at competitive market prices.</P><br />
<P>If medicines were priced at the cost of production under an alternative R&#038;D system, not only would they become more afford but the budgets of government subsidy programs and charities would be able to provide greater coverage and treatment to those who need it.</P><br />
<P>It’s critical for activists driving the access to medicines campaign to examine the assumptions and justifications that uphold the pharmaceutical patents system.</P><br />
<P>They shouldn’t accept what the industry and the economics profession say in support of an R&#038;D system that’s grossly inefficient in both economic and social terms.</P><br />
<P>There are <A href="http://www.cepr.net/index.php/Publications/Reports/financing-drug-research-what-are-the-issues">much better systems</A> to promote research and development.</P><br />
<P>And there’s no plausible rationale for relying on 15th century government monopolies to finance R&#038;D – a creation from the time of the feudal guild system.</P><br />
<P>Overturning pharmaceutical patents, rather than fiddling around the margins, should comprise a core focus of the access to medicines campaign.</P><br />
<P>This will help bring our scientific and innovation research structures into the 21st century, and most importantly, improve the affordability of medicines at a time when the world is facing an epidemic of non-communicable diseases</P></DIV></DIV></DIV></DIV></p>
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