Ackiron E
Am J Law Med. 1991;17(1-2):145-80.
Patents and other statutory types of market protections are used in the United States to promote scientific research and innovation. This incentive is especially important in research intensive fields such as the pharmaceutical industry. Unfortunately, these same protections often result in higher monopoly pricing once a successful product is brought to market. Usually this consequence is viewed as the necessary evil of an incentive system that encourages costly research and development by promising large rewards to the successful inventor. However, in the case of the AIDS drug Zidovudine (AZT), the high prices charged by the pharmaceutical company owning the drug have led to public outcry and a re-examination of government incentive systems. This Note traces the evolution of these incentive programs--the patent system, and, to a lesser extent, the orphan drug program--and details the conflicting interests involved in their development. It then demonstrates how the AZT problem brings the interest of providing inventors with incentives for risky innovative efforts into a sharp collision with the ultimate goal of such systems: ensuring that the public has access to the resulting products at a reasonable price. Finally, the Note describes how Congress and the courts have attempted to resolve these problems in the past, and how they might best try to solve the AZT problem in the near future.
在美国,专利及其他法定形式的市场保护措施被用于促进科学研究与创新。这种激励措施在诸如制药行业等研究密集型领域尤为重要。不幸的是,一旦成功产品推向市场,这些同样的保护措施往往会导致更高的垄断定价。通常,这种结果被视为激励体系的必要之恶,该体系通过向成功的发明家承诺丰厚回报来鼓励成本高昂的研发。然而,就艾滋病药物齐多夫定(AZT)而言,持有该药物的制药公司收取的高价引发了公众的强烈抗议,并促使人们重新审视政府的激励体系。本论文追溯了这些激励计划——专利制度以及在较小程度上的孤儿药计划——的演变过程,并详细阐述了其发展过程中涉及的相互冲突的利益。接着,论文展示了AZT问题如何使为有风险的创新努力给予发明家激励的利益,与这类体系的最终目标——确保公众能够以合理价格获得最终产品——发生激烈冲突。最后,论文描述了国会和法院过去试图解决这些问题的方式,以及它们在不久的将来最好如何尝试解决AZT问题。