
The World Health Organisation must continue its work on access to medicines
in developing countries
Nathan Ford; Jean-Michel
Piedagnel, Médecins Sans Frontières

“The global
privatisation of public health is one of the biggest challenges facing
the World Health Organisation (WHO), as it is the only
body whose absolute objective is to promote and protect health...
“One example
is the need to dramatically increase access to affordable antiretrovirals
for the estimated 5.7 million people with AIDS who currently
need treatment but are left without... For a long time, WHO was absent
from the debate surrounding the impact of trade agreements on access
to medicines, and every attempt to involve itself in this issue met with
fierce opposition from governments, whose first interest is the economic
growth of their domestic industries. Thankfully this has changed in the
past year and WHO has shown itself to be a powerful and necessary advocate
for putting health concerns above trade.
“One of the
most pressing issues in the health-trade arena today is that of the
right of countries to produce generic medicines for export
to other countries. Without an adequate solution, the poorest countries
of the world that lack pharmaceutical production capacity of their own
will be dependent upon the benevolence of multinational pharmaceutical
companies. While others involved in the World Trade Organisation negotiations
tried to limit the scope of diseases that might benefit from generic
imports, or even prevent any solution from being found, WHO spoke out
in clear support for allowing medicine production and export as an exception
to patent rights. This work must continue...
“There have been recent signs of WHO reasserting itself as an
international standard-setting body, in spite of considerable resistance.
The pre-qualification system for the procurement of medicines such as
antiretrovirals, which would allow developing countries to find the best
price for quality medicines, was established in spite of enormous opposition,
and needs to be supported and expanded as a core activity of the organisation’s
work...
“...In the
face of rising infectious diseases such as AIDS, TB and malaria, and
the increasing marginalisation of health problems that
do not affect the developed world, the importance of an international,
independent organisation that is brave, aggressive, and vocal in its
defence of global public health has never been more important.”
The authors are Médecins Sans Frontières’ Access
to Medicines Advisor Nathan Ford and UK Executive Director Jean-Michel
Piedagnel.
Copyright © 2003 - Information, Inc., Bethesda, MD. This information
is provided by the Centers for Disease Control & Prevention (CDC),
HIV/STD/TB Prevention News Update as a public service. Noncommercial
reproduction encouraged.