a good thing.
original-deccanheraldBending bigBy
D Ravi KanthThe lead taken by Indonesia at WHA is a step towards ending monopoly of the US.
Never before did the World Health Assembly (WHA) witness such fierce battles as this year. It is the highest decision-making body to oversee global health. The 60th WHA session, which ended last Thursday would be remembered as a turning point when developing countries came voiced their concern about lack of proper institutional arrangements to share biological resources and addressing public health, innovation and intellectual property issues. Faced with stiff opposition from the United States, known for consistently opposing public health to prevail over the primacy attached for strong intellectual property rights (IPR), the developing countries notched some important gains.
Until now, the WHA sessions were dominated by health issues over which the US would set the agenda. Given the predominant role played by the so-called research-based pharmaceutical companies such as Pfizer, Merck, in influencing the health agenda in the US, Washington invariably turned a deaf ear to public health problems in poor countries. Despite a rising disease burden due to HIV/AIDS, tuberculosis and malaria in many developing countries, the US would always insist that nothing should be done to undermine the stranglehold of IPRs on access to affordable medicines. It always maintained that if IPRs are weakened, research-based companies would not plough billions of dollars to discover new medicines. What is the use if there are drugs to tackle the killer diseases but patients cannot get them on time — is the argument advanced by health pressure groups world over.
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