Leslie Dan Faculty of Pharmacy, University of Toronto, Toronto, Canada 144 College Street, Toronto, ON M5S 3M2, Canada.
Global Health. 2007 Dec 6;3:12. doi: 10.1186/1744-8603-3-12.
Following the Implementation of Paragraph 6 of the Doha Declaration on TRIPS and Public Health, Canada was among the first countries globally to amend its patent law, which resulted in Canada's Access to Medicines Regime (CAMR). CAMR allows the production and export of generic drugs to developing countries without the requisite manufacturing capacity to undertake a domestic compulsory license. CAMR has been the subject of much criticism lodged at its inability to ensure fast access to urgent medicines for least developing and developing countries in need. Only recently did the Canadian government grant Apotex the compulsory licenses required under CAMR to produce and export antiretroviral therapy to Rwanda's population.
The objective of this research is to investigate whether the CAMR can feasibly achieve its humanitarian objectives given the political interests embedded in the crafting of the legislation. We used a political economy framework to analyze the effect of varied institutions, political processes, and economic interests on public policy outcomes. In-depth, semi-structured interviews were conducted with nineteen key stakeholders from government, civil society and industry. Qualitative data analysis was performed using open-coding for themes, analyzing by stakeholder group.
CAMR is removed from the realities of developing countries and the pharmaceutical market. The legislation needs to include commercial incentives to galvanize the generic drug industry to make use of this legislation. CAMR assumes that developing country governments have the requisite knowledge and human resource capacity to make use of the regime, which is not the case. The legislation does not offer sufficient incentives for countries to turn to Canada when needed drugs may be procured cheaply from countries such as India. In the long term, developing and least developing countries seek sustainable solutions to meet the health needs of their population, including developing their own capacity and local industries.
CAMR is symbolically meaningful but in practice, limited. The Rwanda case will be noteworthy in terms of the future of the legislation. To meet its intended international health objectives, this legislation needs to be better informed of developing country needs and global pharmaceutical market imperatives. Finally, we contend that serious public policy change cannot strike a balance between all vested interests. Above all, any feasible policy that aims to facilitate compulsory licensing must prioritize public health over trade or economic interests.
在执行《多哈宣言与知识产权和公共卫生》第六段之后,加拿大成为全球首批修改专利法的国家之一,这导致了加拿大药品获取制度(CAMR)的产生。CAMR 允许在没有必要的生产能力来实施国内强制许可的情况下,向发展中国家生产和出口仿制药。CAMR 一直受到许多批评,批评其未能确保最不发达国家和有需要的发展中国家能够快速获得急需的药品。直到最近,加拿大政府才根据 CAMR 向 Apotex 授予了生产和出口抗逆转录病毒疗法到卢旺达人口所需的强制许可。
本研究的目的是调查在立法中嵌入的政治利益的情况下,CAMR 是否可以切实实现其人道主义目标。我们使用政治经济学框架来分析各种制度、政治进程和经济利益对公共政策结果的影响。我们对来自政府、民间社会和行业的 19 名主要利益相关者进行了深入的半结构化访谈。使用开放式编码对主题进行定性数据分析,并按利益相关者群体进行分析。
CAMR 脱离了发展中国家和药品市场的实际情况。该立法需要包括商业激励措施,以激励仿制药行业利用这项立法。CAMR 假设发展中国家政府拥有必要的知识和人力资源能力来利用该制度,但事实并非如此。该立法没有为国家提供足够的激励,使其在需要时从印度等国家廉价采购药物时,不会转而向加拿大寻求药物。从长远来看,发展中国家和最不发达国家寻求可持续的解决方案来满足其人民的健康需求,包括发展自己的能力和本地产业。
CAMR 具有象征意义,但实际上作用有限。卢旺达的案例将是该立法未来的一个重要标志。为了实现其预期的国际卫生目标,这项立法需要更好地了解发展中国家的需求和全球制药市场的必要性。最后,我们认为,重大的公共政策变革不能在所有既得利益之间取得平衡。最重要的是,任何旨在促进强制许可的可行政策都必须将公共卫生置于贸易或经济利益之上。