"Every country has the right to take steps to increase access to medicines and implement a patent system in line with its public health needs. We strongly object to the pressure exerted by the US on developing countries, including India, for using legal flexibilities to protect public health," Rohit Malpani of the Doctors Without Borders told the US International Trade Commission yesterday.
USITC has conducted a hearing this week in connection with its investigation "Trade, Investment, and Industrial Policies in India: Effects on the US Economy".
The measures India has implemented to safeguard public health are of critical importance to protect the health of millions of people across the world. India has been nicknamed the "pharmacy to the developing world" in recognition of this fact, he said.
"Losing this 'pharmacy' would be devastating for patients and for treatment providers," he said and urged USITC to evaluate the decisions made by the Indian government under international trade rules taking in to consideration its impact on public health.
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"It creates both access problems due to high prices - as we have seen - and at the same time it does not stimulate innovation for many of the diseases affecting people in developing countries, where patients have limited purchasing power and the private sector sees no incentive," Malpani said.
"Today, we basically have a trade off between innovation and access. If you have wide access, says the industry, you aren't supporting innovation," he said.
"Instead of aggressively pushing governments, such as India, to ignore its legal rights under international trade rules to ensure affordable medicine prices, the US government should work with India and other countries, to invest in and develop new models of innovation that promote both innovation and access," he said.