Support South Africa at UN – we need better & affordable TB medicines
Negotiations are currently underway in New York for a United Nations (UN) political declaration on tuberculosis. In order to have a meaningful impact on the TB epidemic, members states must make concrete commitments to address the global TB crisis – a crisis that kills more than 1.5 million people globally every year and that remains South Africa’s leading reported cause of death.
On 26 September 2018, UN member states will come together in New
York to ratify this political declaration, yet current drafts of
the declaration are woefully inadequate and undermine efforts to
ensure people living with TB have access to better and more
affordable TB medicines, vaccines and diagnostics. While current
drafts contain some good rhetoric, hardly any concrete
commitments are made. Such a lack of concrete commitments will
render the declaration and the process around it toothless.
While
the South African government is leading the way in attempting to
redraft and improve the declaration, pressure is mounting
against them, particularly from wealthy countries. For this UN
process to have any meaning for the people in South African
townships, our hard-won rights to access medicines must be
enshrined in the main text of this declaration. These rights are
not just a legacy from the last two decades of people with HIV
fighting for their lives as part of a larger access to medicines
movement, but also a lifeline for people who will need
affordable medicines, vaccines and diagnostics tomorrow. What
use are new tuberculosis medicines if high prices mean people
cannot access them? Our lives must be placed ahead of the greed
of big pharma, especially given that most big pharma companies
have abandoned TB research altogether.
There are a
number of legal safeguards allowed under international law that
protect the right to access healthcare and medicines. However,
these rights are missing from the current drafts of the
declaration. With new medicines for drug resistant TB (DR-TB)
becoming available for the first time in over 50 years, using
these safeguards will be vital for the future of treatment in
South Africa, and across the world. It will be imperative to
address patent barriers to lower prices and scale up treatment
access, as was the case with HIV treatment in the early
2000s.
Currently medicines are often priced out of
reach of those who need them. Bedaquiline for example, is a
safer and far less painful alternative to the current injectable
medicines that cause hearing loss in nearly half of those who
take them. Importantly it also saves many more lives. In South
Africa, bedaquiline is priced at USD 400 per course, and in most
other countries it costs much more, as much as USD 30,000 in
certain places. Yet, researchers estimate a six-month course can
be profitably produced for less than USD 100.
Excessive
medicine pricing is nothing new to South Africa – a
country that faces one of the highest global burdens of DR-TB,
with over 19,000 cases diagnosed in 2016. For several years,
many people with DR-TB were unable to benefit from the drug
linezolid. While it was under patent it was priced at over ZAR
700 (USD 47) per tablet, while generics in India were available
at a fraction of the cost at ZAR 25 (USD 2). People who say
medicine pricing is not an issue in TB are spitting in the faces
of people who needed linezolid and could not access it, and
turning their backs on people who cannot access the newer drug
bedaquiline.
Using these public health safeguards is
nothing new or controversial. UN member states have repeatedly
reaffirmed these rights and committed to protecting and using
these so called “TRIPS flexibilities” in the
Political Declarations emerging from the UN High Level Meetings
on HIV in 2006, 2011 and 2016, the Political Declaration signed
at the UN High Level Meeting on Non-Communicable Diseases in
2011, the UN General Assembly Resolution on Global Health and
Foreign Policy in 2014, and in the Sustainable Development Goals
(SDG3b) signed in 2015. The UN High Level Panel on Access to
Medicines in 2016 recommended that all WTO members “should
commit themselves, at the highest political levels, to respect
the letter and spirit of the Doha Declaration,” and noted
that when governments make “full use of the flexibilities
in the TRIPS Agreement, they can protect and advance public
health objectives.”
For the United States and
other countries to attempt to roll back these rights in a TB
declaration, a declaration on a disease that impacts mostly poor
people of all things, is deeply cynical. Do these countries
really not care whether we live or die? Or is their only real
concern that we will get on planes and bring TB to their
countries? Is the UN declaration nothing more than PR for
them?
In addition to excessive pricing, TB is also
typical of a wider crisis of underinvestment by both
pharmaceutical companies and governments in diseases mainly
impacting poor people. As it stands the global patent regime
skews the incentive to research and develop new medicines and
medical tools to where the most money can be made. Current
drafts of the declaration continue to include problematic
wording around this that wrongly suggests patents incentivise
R&D – a myth repeatedly peddled by the pharmaceutical
industry, and repeatedly proven to be wrong, particularly in
relation to TB.
The entire world only invests around
USD 0.7 billion on TB medicine research every year – a
third of the USD 2 billion that the World Health Organisation
estimates is needed. This means in many cases as people with TB
we are stuck with older treatments that are painful and have low
success rates. There is urgent need for new medicines,
diagnostics and vaccines. We need a new system of financing
innovation that will prioritise R&D based on need not greed.
This is something the declaration should be calling for.
Countries negotiating must remember that prioritising the health
of your people can be done without harming future innovation. We
have just such an example of an innovative drug development
framework in the Life Prize, again, with the exception of South
Africa, governments have not been willing to back this
project.
We urge the South African government to stay
strong in the face of political pressure and to ensure the
inclusion of a strong commitment on the use of TRIPS
flexibilities in the main operative text of the TB declaration.
This must include commitments to a) use to the full extent of
TRIPS flexibilities to ensure access to medicines, and b) to
ensure that intellectual property provisions in trade agreements
do not undermine the Doha Declaration.
We further
call on all other governments, and particularly other
high-TB-burden countries such as India and China, to support
South Africa’s proposals on the use of TRIPS flexibilities
and proposals on alternative models of R&D. We found
incredible international solidarity on these issues in 2001, if
countries are serious about TB we will again find solidarity on
this in 2018.
We are not alone in this. Civil society groups from across the world have made similar demands. It is time governments listen. Our people are dying of TB – governments must now show they are serious.
By Sibongile Tshabalala and Umunyana Rugege
Tshabalala is the National Chairperson of the Treatment
Action Campaign and Rugege is the Deputy Director of
SECTION27.
Source:
Daily Maverick