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Hu Yuanqiong China Access to Medicines Research Group OSF Seminar Bangkok; 2011.12.13 Access to Medicines and IPR Advocacy in China -- Review and initial SWOT discussion

Access to Medicines and IPR Advocacy in China -- Review and initial SWOT discussion

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Access to Medicines and IPR Advocacy in China -- Review and initial SWOT discussion. Hu Yuanqiong China Access to Medicines Research Group OSF Seminar Bangkok; 2011.12.13. Context. International MSF launched campaign in 1999 Major players: WHO, Clinton Foundation, TWN, HAI, ITPC… - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Access to Medicines and IPR Advocacy in China -- Review and initial SWOT discussion

Hu YuanqiongChina Access to Medicines Research Group

OSF Seminar Bangkok; 2011.12.13

Access to Medicines and IPR Advocacy in China

-- Review and initial SWOT discussion

Page 2: Access to Medicines and IPR Advocacy in China -- Review and initial SWOT discussion

Context International

◦ MSF launched campaign in 1999

◦ Major players: WHO, Clinton Foundation, TWN, HAI, ITPC…

◦ Local groups in developing countries: South Africa, Brazil, India, Thailand…

◦ Spotlight: ARV

National◦ 2003, Chinese

government launched national ARV treatment program, first revealed access issues

◦ Major players: INGOs, UN Agencies, local PHA groups

◦ Spotlight: ARV ( 3TC, TDF, EFV, LPV… )

Page 3: Access to Medicines and IPR Advocacy in China -- Review and initial SWOT discussion

Context National law in nutshell

◦ Patent law Started product patent on medicine from 1992 WTO accession in 2001, no transition time to implement TRIPS Flexibilities in law: CL, government use, Bolar exception,

parallel import… Patentability: combination, formulation, new form, new use Opposition/Invalidation: rare between MNC and generic

◦ Drug regulatory Proxy exclusive rights: administrative protection… Data exclusivity: 6 years, not in force Linkage: non-infringement claim, start changing in practice Fast track registration: ARVs, national emergency

Page 4: Access to Medicines and IPR Advocacy in China -- Review and initial SWOT discussion

Evaluation

Goal: what?Goal: what?

Subject: who is advocating?

Subject: who is advocating?

Target: advocate to whom?

Target: advocate to whom?Content: what?Content: what?Approach: how?Approach: how?

Justification: why?Justification: why?Locating advocacy

Page 5: Access to Medicines and IPR Advocacy in China -- Review and initial SWOT discussion

Justification

Lamivudine:•1990 process patent, no product patent •thick layers of proxy exclusive protection • HIV formulation no marketing •GSK donation to gov •Supply unstable •2007 process patent due, GSK warning •2009 generic registered, no production •2010 generic invalidation won, 4 months margin

TDF:•2006, more than 5000 Chinese PHA opposition •2007 , TDF and pre-drug patented in China•2006 , Brazilian and Indian PHA opposition•2008 and 2009,TDF patent rejected in Brazil and India

Others……•All second line ARV patented •Intermediate and API patented?

What’s wrong and how to change?

Page 6: Access to Medicines and IPR Advocacy in China -- Review and initial SWOT discussion

Goal Sustainable access

to affordable, reliable, stable supplied essential medicines

Prioritize health in public policies and laws

Scope of advocacy determined by objective and expertise:

Quality control

Supply chain

IPR policy

Pricing

Essential medicines

ARV

Page 7: Access to Medicines and IPR Advocacy in China -- Review and initial SWOT discussion

Who is advocating? International in China:

◦ MSF CAME◦ Oxfam *◦ TWN◦ WHO◦ Clinton Foundation◦ UNAIDS◦ UNDP◦ UN Theme group – Sub-

working group ◦ DFID *

National: ◦ ITPC-China◦ AIDS Care China◦ Ark of Love◦ Mangrove◦ Aizhixing◦ Yirenping◦ China Global Fund Watch

Initiative◦ Shanghai Beautiful Life◦ China Access to Medicines

Research Group◦ Grass roots PHA groups…

Page 8: Access to Medicines and IPR Advocacy in China -- Review and initial SWOT discussion

Key messaging

Maximizing patent flexibility in law◦ Expanding CL grounds ◦ Balancing protection on patent holder and

licensee Utilizing patent flexibility for public health

◦ ARV as potential breakthrough ◦ Feasibility of CL and non-commercial use◦ Patentability discussion – which is suitable?

Page 9: Access to Medicines and IPR Advocacy in China -- Review and initial SWOT discussion

Target and Approaches

Target: Government – MOH, MofCom, SIPO, SFDA

Approaches: ◦ Law review, comments ◦ Civil motion to NPC ◦ Ally with academic & gov think tank

Examples: ◦ CL motion ◦ Patent law, CL rules revision

comments ◦ MOH submission

Target: MNC Approaches:

◦ Price Negotiation ◦ Patent opposition ◦ Boycott campaign

Examples: ◦ EFV negotiation with Merk

(ACA)◦ TDF opposition ◦ 2007 Abbott boycott

Crosscutting approaches: ◦ Seminar, workshop (international, national)

◦ Research (joint), translation, information sharing, publication◦ Network building and maintaining

Page 10: Access to Medicines and IPR Advocacy in China -- Review and initial SWOT discussion

Evaluation Raising issue?

◦ Gov increased use of language (CL, public interest…)◦ Gov – NGO intercourse in law making started shifting ◦ Informal intellectual network set, incl. media ally◦ Law and policy progress in paper

Setting agenda? ◦ Drug based, issue based◦ Face-to-face lobby based ◦ Opportunistic, individual

Actual change? ◦ No actual breakthrough in using flexibility

Sensitive to external change? ◦ Little done on new phenomena of FTA, ACTA, IMPACT…◦ Little done on innovation discussion

All stakeholders engagement?◦ not enough strategic engagement with generic companies

Page 11: Access to Medicines and IPR Advocacy in China -- Review and initial SWOT discussion

Tentative SWOT Strength: -Existing intellectual network -Experiences with ARV advocacy -Potential technical allies with patent practitioners -Right political will in SIPO and SFDA -Developing civil society culture -Regional and international NGO network

Weakness:-Local knowledge building and research -Transparent and collaborative NGO culture in making -Civil society and capacity in developing -MOH not on board -Local linking to regional & international -Restricted to ARV -Public engagement low

Opportunities:

-Health reform -Global Fund phase out ?-Continued IP network engagement -Evolving civil society -Power of new media -Increasing local industry awareness -Positive research ally and advocate

Threats:-Corruption and non-transparent policy making -Access to information and data -Freedom of speech and assembly -Overwhelmed pro-WTO/IP phenomena -NGO policy in general -Global financial crisis

Page 12: Access to Medicines and IPR Advocacy in China -- Review and initial SWOT discussion

Thanks!