<div dir="ltr"><br><div class="gmail_quote">From: <b class="gmail_sendername">David Legge</b> <span dir="ltr"><<a href="mailto:D.Legge@latrobe.edu.au">D.Legge@latrobe.edu.au</a>></span><br>From: Ip-health [mailto:<a href="mailto:ip-health-bounces@lists.keionline.org">ip-health-bounces@lists.keionline.org</a>] On Behalf Of Joanna Keenan-Siciliano<br>
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As posted yesterday, Bayer's CEO Marijn Dekkers commented at a drug industry forum that they "..did not develop this medicine for Indians; we developed it for western patients who can afford it." (Here's the article if you missed it:<br>
<a href="http://www.businessweek.com/news/2014-01-21/merck-to-bristol-myers-face-more-threats-on-india-drug-patents" target="_blank">http://www.businessweek.com/news/2014-01-21/merck-to-bristol-myers-face-more-threats-on-india-drug-patents</a>).<br>
He was referring to Nexavar, a drug that India issued a compulsory licence on in 2012. This statement sums up, in one sentence, everything that is wrong with the R&D system today; that R&D can only be rewarded by a patent and through high prices to recoup the R&D costs, and that those who can't afford to pay are basically cut out of the system, and that if diseases aren't profitable enough, there will be no R&D investments and no new drugs.<br>
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Médecins Sans Frontières issues the quote below in response:<br>
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<a href="http://www.msfaccess.org/content/msf-response-bayer-ceo-statement-medicines-developed-only-western-patients" target="_blank">http://www.msfaccess.org/content/msf-response-bayer-ceo-statement-medicines-developed-only-western-patients</a><br>
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"The Bayer CEO going on record to say that they did not develop a cancer medicine for Indians but only for 'western patients who can afford it' sums up everything that is wrong with the multinational pharmaceutical industry.<br>
Bayer is effectively admitting that the drugs they develop are deliberately going to be rationed to the wealthiest patients.<br>
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This is a side-effect of the way drugs are developed today. Pharmaceutical companies are singularly focused on profit and so aggressively push for patents and high drug prices. Diseases that don't promise a profit are neglected, and patients who can't afford to pay are cut out of the picture.<br>
Drug companies claim to care about global health needs, but their track record says otherwise.<br>
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It doesn't have to be this way. Medical innovation can be incentivised differently, and research paid for in ways that deliver drugs but without high prices that exclude millions of people from access. Instead of being part of the problem, drug companies should work to be part of the solution and change the dire state of medical research and development today."<br>
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- Dr Manica Balasegaram, Executive Director, Médecins Sans Frontières<br>
Access Campaign<br>
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Joanna Keenan<br>
Press Officer<br>
Médecins Sans Frontières - Access Campaign<br>
E: joanna.keenan[at]<a href="http://geneva.msf.org" target="_blank">geneva.msf.org</a><br>
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