Abstract

When the Uruguay Rounds concluded in 1994, many countries signed on to the trade agreements creating the World Trade Organization (WTO) in hopes of benefiting from a system of trade rules “dedicated to open, fair and undistorted competition” (1). WTO members also undertook to implement the Trade-Related Aspects of Intellectual Property Rights (TRIPS) Agreement. Developing countries, major development agencies and civil society raised concerns over whether TRIPS might limit access to affordable, essential medicines. The Doha Declaration on the TRIPS Agree-ment and Public Health, adopted at the WTO ministerial conference in 2001, responded to these concerns: it empha-sized that the TRIPS Agreement should not stand in the way of member govern-ments acting to protect public health and affirmed governments’ right to use the Agreement’s flexibilities (2).Oliveira et al. (pp. 815–821) pro-vide insight into the flexibilities under TRIPS that provide public health safe-guards and how they are coming under challenge despite the Doha Declaration. Their article on the implementation of TRIPS in Latin America and the Carib-bean gives a snapshot of the key areas where TRIPS flexibilities important for public health must be reflected in a country’s national legislation. Their work is particularly timely because negotiations for the Central American Free Trade Agreement (CAFTA) have been concluded (though the Agreement is not yet ratified), while efforts to move forward a United States free trade agree-ment (FTA) with Andean countries and the Free Trade Area of the Americas continue.These FTAs have sought to curtail the flexibilities under TRIPS, such as compulsory licensing or parallel imports. Have they, though, placed at risk the potential role of generic competition or weakened public sector negotiating leverage? To highlight an area of growing concern, the United States has prioritized the creation or expansion of “exclusive rights” over pharmaceutical test data in FTA negotiations (3). Under Article 39.3 of the TRIPS Agreement, WTO mem-bers must protect test data, submitted to national drug regulatory authorities for pharmaceutical registration, against “unfair commercial use”. While TRIPS does not specify how this is to be done, the United States has insisted in the FTA negotiations that countries provide at least five years of data exclusivity. Instead of generic competitors submitting bio-equivalence data, they must repeat costly tests for marketing approval, which may deter generic entry. This may also raise ethical questions, as generic manufac-turers would be forced to repeat human subject trials on drugs known to be bioequivalent.Data exclusivity provisions apply whether or not a medicine is patented, but the most serious impact is likely to be on drugs that are not under patent. In such cases, data exclusivity will create a “patent-like” barrier that will prevent generic entry during the entire period of exclusivity (4). If a drug is patented, the government could issue a compul-sory licence to overcome the patent bar-rier, but data exclusivity might prevent its market approval. This is the possible situation emerging under the CAFTA, where data exclusivity rules may delay generic competition effectively for up to ten years (5). Such FTAs are not only TRIPS-plus, but may also go beyond requirements under United States law.As developing countries seek lower barriers to their agricultural exports and greater foreign direct investment, can TRIPS flexibilities be safeguarded? How can the playing field for negotiations be levelled? First, developing countries should refuse to accept TRIPS-plus provisions in FTAs. Barring this, they should avail themselves of what the United States practises under government use provisions through non-voluntary licences and what other countries do to prevent patent abuse (6). Secondly, developing country governments deserve fair access to independent, technical assistance and counsel of their own choosing in these negotiations. In recent Andean FTA negotiations, this basic principle of fairness was undermined when the United States delegation prevented the Colombian Government from seating an adviser at the negotiation table. Ministries of trade should also ensure representation of ministries of health in negotiations that will affect public health and ac-cess to medicines. Thirdly, the public health community should insist that evidence be provided and results tracked to document whether the promised gains or the potential public health risks from stronger IPR protection are realized. The reciprocal benefits of technology transfer should be as measurable as the United States monitoring of TRIPS compliance under the Section 301 “watch list”.Finally, regional economic blocs might consider collective approaches to applying the use of public health safe-guards under TRIPS as they have for ne-gotiating price reductions and procuring pharmaceuticals. Ten countries in Latin America banded together to reduce the price of antiretroviral drugs and HIV di-agnostic tests with agreements from both originator and generic manufacturers (7). Such regional groups might benefit from exercising coordinated use of the public health safeguards under TRIPS (8).The paper by Oliveira and her col-leagues provides a useful starting frame-work for flexibilities under TRIPS, but a framework for fairness will require more. Only by taking into account the concerns of public health in trade agree-ments will we ensure that all countries have a fair deal for the future. O

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