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Overview of Public Health-Related TRIPS Flexibilities

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Title: Overview of Public Health-Related TRIPS Flexibilities


1
Overview of Public Health-Related TRIPS
Flexibilities
  • Sisule F. Musungu,
  • IQsensato
  • (http//www.iqsensato.org)

2
Conceptual and Legal Basis for Flexibilities
  • The Preamble
  • There are three important paragraphs in the
    Preamble of the TRIPS Agreement that are relevant
    to public health considerations. First, there is
    the recognition that IPRs are private rights.
    This paragraph is particularly relevant with
    respect to enforcement of IPRs. Second, is the
    paragraph recognizing the public policy
    objectives underlying the protection of IP,
    including developmental and technological
    objectives. Finally, is the recognition of the
    special needs of least-developed countries (LDCs)
    which necessitate maximum flexibility in the
    domestic implementation of laws and regulations
    in these countries with a view to enabling them
    establish a viable technological base.

3
Conceptual and Legal Basis for Flexibilities
  • The Objectives of IP Protection under TRIPS (art
    7)
  • The protection of IP contributing to the
    promotion of technological innovation and to the
    transfer and dissemination of technology, to the
    mutual advantage of producers and users of
    technological knowledge and in a manner conducive
    to social and economic welfare, and to a balance
    of rights and obligations

4
Conceptual and Legal Basis for Flexibilities
  • Principles for Guiding the formulation of
    implementing legislation (art 8)
  • Members in formulating or amending their laws
    may adopt measures necessary for the protection
    of public health and nutrition and take measures
    to promote public interests in sectors of vital
    importance to their socio-economic and
    technological development and, they may adopt
    appropriate measures to prevent the abuse of IPRs
    by right holders or the resort by them to
    practices that unreasonably restrain trade or
    adversely affect the international transfer of
    technology.

5
Freedom to determine Appropriate Method of
Implementing TRIPS Obligations
  • Article 1
  • The relevant provisions here are the provisions
    of paragraph 1 which provides inter alia that WTO
    Members may, but shall not be obliged to,
    implement in their law more extensive protection
    than is required and that they shall be free
    to determine the appropriate method of
    implementing the provisions of the Agreement.
    See India-Mailbox case Appellate Body (AB)
    interpretation

6
Freedom to Determine Exhaustion Regime (parallel
imports)
  • Article 6
  • The TRIPS Agreement states that the issue of
    exhaustion is left to each Member to decide. In
    other words, TRIPS does not create minimum
    standards on this matter. The Doha Declaration on
    the TRIPAS Agreement and Public Health confirms
    this interpretation of article 6 in Para....
    Which provides that .........

7
Patentable Subject Patentability Criteria
  • Article 27
  • The general rule on patentable subject matter
    and the criteria for patentability under the
    TRIPS Agreement is contained in article 27(1)
    which provides inter alia that, subject to the
    exceptions set out in the Agreement, patents
    shall be available for all inventions, whether
    products or processes, in all fields of
    technology, provided that they are new, involve
    an inventive step and are capable of industrial
    application. Article 27(2) provides discretion
    for Members to exclude from patentability subject
    matter where its is necessary to prevent the
    commercial exploitation of such inventions to
    protect ordre public or morality including to
    protect human health and the environment. Article
    27(3) provides further discretion with respect to
    the patentability of diagnostics, therapeutic and
    surgical methods for the treatment of humans or
    animals and plants and animals and provides for a
    review.

8
Permissibility to Impose Certain Conditions on
Patent Applicants
  • Article 29
  • Article 29 in addition to establishing one
    mandatory disclosure condition also establishes
    two optional condition that WTO Members may
    require patent applicants to fulfil before they
    are granted patent rights. The mandatory
    requirement is that Members shall require that
    the applicant for a patent shall disclose the
    invention in a manner sufficiently clear and
    complete for the invention to be carried out by a
    person skilled in the art. This is what in
    patent law is commonly referred to as enabling
    disclosure. The two optional disclosure
    conditions, that is conditions which WTO Members
    may choose to impose on applicants, are (1) that
    Members may require the applicant to indicate the
    best mode for carrying out the invention as known
    to the inventor at the filing date, or where
    priority is claimed at the date of the priority
    claim and (2) that they may require the
    applicant for a patent to provide information on
    corresponding foreign applications and grants.

9
Freedom to include Exceptions to Patent
Rights, subject to three-Step-Test
  • Article 30
  • Article 30 of the TRIPS Agreement establishes
    the general parameters for exceptions to the
    exclusive rights envisaged in article 28 the
    Agreement. The rule is that exceptions to the
    patent rights are permissible provided that,
    taking into account the legitimate interests of
    third parties, the exceptions (1) must be
    limited (2) should not unreasonably conflict
    with the normal exploitation of the patent and
    (3) should not unreasonably prejudice the
    legitimate interests of the patent owner. Note
    there is no closed list of exceptions but
    includes, among others, research and
    experimentation exception, the early working
    exception (bolar exception), preparation of
    medicines for personal use and prior use.

10
Freedom to Issue Determine the Grounds for
Issuing Compulsory Licenses
  • Article 31
  • In addition to the exceptions permitted under
    article 30, which can be used without any other
    formal requirement other than fulfilling the
    three-step-test, article 31 of TRIPS establishes
    an additional exception, referred to in the
    Agreement as use without the authorisation of the
    right holder, and special rules for the use of
    the exception. In common parlance, compulsory
    licensing. Compulsory licensing as a policy
    mechanism can be used to address a number of
    situations in the context of public health
    including, among others high prices of
    medicines anti-competitive practices by
    pharmaceutical companies failure by
    pharmaceutical patent holders to sufficiently
    supply the market with needed medicines
    emergency public health situations and, the
    needs for establishing a pharmaceutical
    industrial base.

11
Freedom to Revocation Patents and Require
Forfeiture subject to Judicial Review
  • Article 32
  • The TRIPS Agreement does not regulate the
    question of revocation or forfeiture. The
    Agreement only imposes a procedural requirement
    to be met in cases of revocation or forfeiture a
    patent. In particular, article 32 provides that
    An opportunity for judicial review of any
    decision to revoke or forfeit a patent shall be
    available. In certain circumstances, a patent
    can be revoked or forfeited. Various grounds for
    revocation and forfeiture exist in national laws.
    Under the European Patent Convention (CPC), for
    example, a patent can be revoked if it is
    determined that the invention did not meet any
    of the patentability criteria the patent was
    granted to a person not entitled to it and
    failure to provide enabling disclosure.

12
No Requirement for Patent Term Extension
  • Article 33
  • The TRIPS Agreement, under article 33,
    establishes the patent term to be at least 20
    years from the filing date. The length of this
    period is of critical importance. The longer the
    period, the longer the monopoly on the protected
    product or process.

13
Except for Process Patents no Reversal of Burden
of Proof in Infringement Actions
  • Article 34
  • The general rule of evidence is that he who
    alleges proves. This general rule applies under
    TRIPS except with respect to process patents. In
    this regard, article 34 provides that, subject to
    the conditions set out under the article where
    there is a patent for obtaining a product, the
    defendant can be ordered to prove that the
    process for obtaining an identical product is
    different from the patented process

14
Protection of Undisclosed Information No Data
Exclusivity Requirement
  • Article 39
  • In addition to patent protection for
    pharmaceuticals, the TRIPS Agreement also
    requires protection for test data that may be
    submitted by pharmaceutical and agro-chemical
    companies to regulatory authorities. The article
    provides that in ensuring the effective
    protection against unfair competition as provided
    for in article 10bis of the Paris Convention
    Members, when requiring, as a condition of
    approving the marketing of pharmaceutical or of
    agricultural chemical products which utilize new
    chemical entities, the submission of undisclosed
    test data or other data, the origination of which
    involves a considerable effort, shall protect
    such data against disclosure. Article 39
    therefore only requires protection of test data
    from unfair competition when such data relates to
    new chemical entities and where the origination
    of the data involved considerable effort and
    provides for exceptions, such as where disclosure
    is necessary to protect the public

15
Freedom to Control of Anti-competitive in
Contractual Licenses
  • Article 40
  • The article establishes a regime for the control
    of anti-competitive practices in contractual
    licenses which allows countries to prohibit the
    use of terms such as exclusive grant back
    clauses, clauses that preclude challenges to
    validity of the patent and coercive packaging.

16
Flexibilities in the TRIPS Enforcement Regime
  • Part III (21 articles)
  • The minimum standards established here cover
    from general obligations on enforcement to
    specific rules on evidence, injunctions, damages,
    remedies, border measures as well as the
    application of criminal procedures. the
    provisions on enforcement have a direct impact of
    public health because they determine the
    practical effect of patent rights at the national
    level including the extent to which the
    individuals and groups can protect their access
    to medicines. For example, while article 44(2)
    permits members to exclude government use
    licenses from injunctions, if this is not done,
    pharmaceutical companies can easily frustrate
    governments effort to acquire essential medicines
    even in the cases of emergency by obtaining
    injunctions. Another example relates to the
    balance of rights between applicants and
    defendants contemplated in article 42. Ensuring
    that both the patent holder and defendants have
    practical means of exercising the rights
    contemplated is important to public health
    policy.

17
Transition Periods
  • Articles 65 66.1
  • 1996 for developed
  • 2000 2005 for developing countries
  • 2005, 2013 2016 for LDCs
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