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Title: Evidence, Access and Sustainability from a Population Health Perspective


1
Evidence, Access and Sustainability from a
Population Health Perspective
  • Chan Chee Khoon
  • Womens Development Research Center
  • Universiti Sains Malaysia
  • ckchan50_at_yahoo.com
  • March 27, 2007

2
Gro Harlem BrundtlandDirector-General, World
Health Organisation (July 5, 2003)
  • SARS (Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome) can
    be contained despite the absence of robust
    diagnostic tests, a vaccine, or any specific
    treatment. When awareness, commitment, and
    determination are high, even such traditional
    control tools as isolation, contact tracing, and
    quarantine can be sufficiently powerful to break
    the chain of transmission.

3
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4
Simon Szreter Amer J Public Health 92722-725
(2002)
  • The medical professions scientific leaders
    have, since McKeowns time, had to change their
    tack and concentrate on the future, rather than
    the past, as the field in which they can stake
    the claim that they can save humanity from all
    its ailments with science.

5
Biomedical Science Human Health
  • The ongoing campaigns for access to
    anti-retrovirals testify to the potential impact
    of treatment for the public health control of the
    HIV/AIDS pandemic. Access to lifesaving
    treatment for infected individuals is
    emphatically a moral and ethical imperative.
    Beyond that, the availability of effective
    therapy may also encourage those at high risk to
    come forward for voluntary testing, and hence
    reduce the pool of infected-but-unaware
    individuals who constitute one of the drivers of
    the pandemic.
  • It is nonetheless noteworthy that, just as with
    the SARS epidemic, the Nipah outbreak in Malaysia
    (1998-1999) was rapidly brought under control
    without vaccines or efficacious therapies, once
    the modes of transmission were established. The
    knowledge that Nipah encephalitis was linked to a
    newly recognised paramyxovirus which could be
    transmitted through close proximity to live,
    infected pigs but not via insect vectors, fomites
    or suspended airborne particulates, or contact
    with raw or prepared meats (ascertained from
    virological studies, field epidemiology, and
    clinical medicine), allowed for its rapid control
    in humans.

6
In appraising the contributions of modern
biomedical science to disease control and human
health, it may be useful to distinguish between
knowledge-based practices and coping responses,
as opposed to consumable commodities. This
distinction is especially pertinent when we
consider the strategic priorities of
market-driven research and product development,
in contrast to publicly funded, needs-driven
research in the biomedical sciences.
7
Biomedical Advances Human HealthSome
pertinent questions
  • how important are biomedical advances (incl.
    genomics) to population health and to patient
    care? what is the relative significance of
    genetics in the etiology (and social ecology) of
    health and disease?
  • what are realistic expectations of the advances
    that genomics can contribute to disease control,
    diagnostic aids, and treatment? in what ways can
    pathogen genomics be most useful in epidemic
    control strategies?
  • what are the likely trajectories of genomics RD
    in the foreseeable future, given the current
    modalities for funding of biomedical research,
    the associated regimes of patents, intellectual
    property rights, and market-driven product
    development, and the chronically unresolved
    problems of neglected diseases of the poor?
  • what would be an enabling environment for the
    realization of the useful potential of genomics?
    for an equitable harvest of benefits and a humane
    deployment of genomic technologies that can avoid
    the emergence of a marginalized genetic
    underclass and the imposition of arbitrary,
    constructed norms?

8
.drug research and development for diseases that
disproportionately affect poor people in
developing countries is at a virtual standstill.
According to a Lancet article by Patrice
Trouiller et al (June 22, 2002), of the 1,393 new
drugs approved between 1975 and 1999, only 16 (or
just over 1 percent) were specifically developed
for tropical diseases and tuberculosis, diseases
that account for 11.4 percent of the global
disease burden. Doctors Without Border (Médecins
Sans Frontiéres, 1999 Nobel Peace Prize) has
called attention to the problem of "neglected
diseases" -- seriously disabling or
life-threatening diseases such as malaria,
tuberculosis (TB), Human African trypanosomiasis
(sleeping sickness), American trypanosomiasis
(Chagas' disease), and visceral leishmaniasis
(kala azar) -- which mainly affect people in
developing countries, for which treatment options
are inadequate or do not exist, and for which RD
is insufficient or non-existent. Those stricken
with neglected diseases do not constitute a
valuable enough market to stimulate adequate RD
by the multinational pharmaceutical industry.
With a global system that relies on private
companies to bring drugs to market, this
situation has left much of the world without
prospect for treatment and cure of the diseases
that take a dreadful toll on their populations.

Médecins Sans Frontières (2002)
9
Michael Kremer Rachel Glannerste, Creating a
Market for Vaccines (New York Times, June 1,
2001).
  • for 13 out of those 16 drugs, two were
    modifications of existing medicines, two were
    produced for the US military, and five came from
    veterinary research.
  • Only 4 were developed by commercial
    pharmaceutical companies specifically for
    tropical diseases in humans.

10
Abbott Backlash Activists push for global
boycott The Nation, March 20, 2007
  • Bangkok-based health advocacy groups yesterday
    began a mass campaign to boycott giant US
    drug-maker Abbott Laboratories and vowed to bring
    the campaign to a global level. The company
    withdrew its applications for registration of its
    new drugs in Thailand in protest at the
    government's decision to use compulsory licensing
    for the company's blockbuster Aids medication.
  • The health groups, including the powerful Rural
    Doctors Society which once brought down a public
    health minister, a group representing pharmacists
    around the country, the globally-respected
    Medicins Sans Frontieres (MSF) and various
    consumer networks vowed to boycott Abbott
    products until the company changed its mind.
  • Kannikar Kitjiwatchakul, a campaigner at the MSF
    Bangkok office, said MSF offices around the world
    are now discussing whether to raise the boycott
    campaign to a global level. Saree Aongsomwang,
    (Foundation for Consumers), said more than 220
    members of Consumers International in 115
    countries would join the boycott. "Since Abbott
    has challenged Thailand and shown it doesn't care
    about Thai consumers, please stop using any of
    its products," she said. This act by Abbott is
    totally unacceptable.

11
Flu virus samples not for profiteering, says
Jakarta The Nation, March 15, 2007
  • Indonesia will not share bird flu samples with
    the World Health Organisation without a legally
    binding agreement promising the virus will not be
    used to develop an unaffordable commercial
    vaccine, the health minister said yesterday.
    Health Minister Siti Fadilah Supari said last
    months letter of guarantee from WHO
    Director-General Margaret Chan was not good
    enough. Thats just an agreement in principle
    Supari said.
  • Supari said the system, which enables influenza
    virus samples to be freely passed throughout
    the global community for public health purposes,
    needs to be revised so it is fair for developing
    countries, poor countries, affected countries.
    We will not share our virus sample without a
    change in the rules. Indonesia is worried that
    large drug companies will use its H5N1 strain to
    make vaccines that will ultimately be
    unaffordable for developing nations. It stopped
    sending samples of its bird flu virus to WHO-
    affiliated laboratories at the start of this year.

12
Lancet editorial (February 17, 2007)
  • To protect the global population, 6.2 billion
    doses of pandemic vaccine will be needed, but
    current manufacturing capacity can only produce
    500 million doses. In November 2004, a WHO
    consultation reached the depressing conclusion
    that most developing countries would have no
    access to vaccine during the first wave of a
    pandemic and possibly throughout its
    durationIndonesias move to secure an affordable
    vaccine supply for its population is
    understandable the country has made a
    controversial decision not to share its H5N1
    virus samples with WHO. Indonesia is instead
    planning to provide a US pharmaceutical company
    Baxter with the strains in exchange for
    technology to manufacture a pandemic vaccine.
    This strategy is a marked departure from the
    existing WHO virus-sharing system, in which
    influenza viruses are donated by countries and
    flow freely to the global community for vaccine
    development. Indonesia fears that vaccines
    produced from their viruses via the WHO system
    will not be affordable to them. The fairest way
    forward would be for WHO to seek an international
    agreement that would ensure that developing
    countries have equal access to a pandemic
    vaccine, at an affordable price.

13
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