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知识产权在世界卫生组织非洲区域获得药品方面的作用:《与贸易有关的知识产权协定》通过 25 年后。

The role of intellectual property rights on access to medicines in the WHO African region: 25 years after the TRIPS agreement.

机构信息

Adjunct Faculty, Daystar University School of Law, Nairobi, Kenya.

出版信息

BMC Public Health. 2021 Mar 11;21(1):490. doi: 10.1186/s12889-021-10374-y.

Abstract

BACKGROUND

It is now 25 years since the adoption of the Agreement on Trade-Related Aspects of Intellectual Property Rights (TRIPS) and the same concerns raised during its negotiations such as high prices of medicines, market exclusivity and delayed market entry for generics remain relevant as highlighted recently by the Ebola and COVID-19 pandemics. The World Health Organization's (WHO) mandate to work on the interface between intellectual property, innovation and access to medicine has been continually reinforced and extended to include providing support to countries on the implementation of TRIPS flexibilities in collaboration with stakeholders. This study analyses the role of intellectual property on access to medicines in the African Region.

METHODS

We analyze patent data from the African Regional Intellectual Property Organization (ARIPO) and Organisation Africaine de la Propriété Intellectuelle (OAPI) to provide a situational analysis of patenting activity and trends. We also review legislation to assess how TRIPS flexibilities are implemented in countries.

RESULTS

Patenting was low for African countries. Only South Africa and Cameroon appeared in the list of top ten originator countries for ARIPO and OAPI respectively. Main diseases covered by African patents were HIV/AIDS, cardiovascular diseases, cancers and tumors. Majority countries have legislation allowing for compulsory licensing and parallel importation of medicines, while the least legislated flexibilities were explicit exemption of pharmaceutical products from patentable subject matter, new or second use of patented pharmaceutical products, imposition of limits to patent term extension and test data protection. Thirty-nine countries have applied TRIPS flexibilities, with the most common being compulsory licensing and least developed country transition provisions.

CONCLUSIONS

Opportunities exist for WHO to work with ARIPO and OAPI to support countries in reviewing their legislation to be more responsive to public health needs.

摘要

背景

自《与贸易有关的知识产权协定》(TRIPS 协定)通过以来,已经过去了 25 年,在谈判期间提出的一些问题仍然存在,例如药品价格高、市场独占和仿制药延迟进入市场等问题。最近的埃博拉和 COVID-19 大流行再次凸显了这些问题。世界卫生组织(WHO)的任务是在知识产权、创新和获取药品之间的接口上开展工作,这一任务不断得到加强,并扩大到包括与利益攸关方合作,为各国实施 TRIPS 灵活性提供支持。本研究分析了知识产权在非洲区域获取药品方面的作用。

方法

我们分析了非洲区域知识产权组织(ARIPO)和非洲知识产权组织(OAPI)的专利数据,以提供专利活动和趋势的情况分析。我们还审查了立法,以评估各国如何实施 TRIPS 灵活性。

结果

非洲国家的专利申请数量较少。只有南非和喀麦隆分别出现在 ARIPO 和 OAPI 的十大原始国名单中。非洲专利涵盖的主要疾病是艾滋病毒/艾滋病、心血管疾病、癌症和肿瘤。大多数国家的立法允许强制许可和药品平行进口,而最少立法的灵活性是明确将药品排除在可专利主题之外、对专利药品的新用途或第二用途、对专利期限延长的限制和测试数据保护。39 个国家已适用 TRIPS 灵活性,最常见的是强制许可和最不发达国家过渡规定。

结论

世卫组织有机会与 ARIPO 和 OAPI 合作,支持各国审查其立法,以更有效地满足公共卫生需求。

https://cdn.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/blobs/53d4/7953536/e445d9f1c840/12889_2021_10374_Fig1_HTML.jpg

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