Pfizer
owns patents on three important drugs for infectious diseases - the
antifungal flucanazole, the antiretroviral nelfinavir and the antibiotic
azithromycin. In each of these cases Pfizer charges very high prices
in the developing world as well. Typically, the company does not even
pretend that the drugs are being made available "at cost"
since that is so hard to justify given the variety of prices available.
The
case of flucanazole has received special worldwide attention because
of its life-saving role in treating opportunistic infections associated with
HIV-AIDS. Cipla of India makes a generic equivalent that costs $0.65,
while Biolab of Thailand produces one at a price of only $0.29. By contrast,
Pfizer charges $8.25 for the drug in South Africa, $10.50 in Kenya,
$12.20 in the US and $20.24 in Brazil. There is clear evidence of Pfizer
charging very high prices for the other drugs as well.
In fact, where generic
substitutes are available, as in Thailand, Pfizer has significantly
reduced its prices to compete, although it has led the fight to prevent
such substitutes being made available through parallel imports in other
countries. The company has also not responded to the offer by Cipla
in December 2000, to pay royalty of up to 5 per cent of sales in return
for licenses to produce flucanazole.
The
irony is that it is not as if all the research involved in developing
the drug was conducted within or solely funded by Pfizer. Like all private
companies, Pfizer has benefited greatly from and extensively used the
results of publicly funded research in this area, although it has been
quick to file patents for final results.
It is now much more widely recognised that there is no correlation between socially desirable and
necessary R&D in drug development, and a tight patent regime which
is supposed to encourage innovation by offering pecuniary rewards. Indeed,
much of the major research in pharmaceuticals and medicine, both in
the past and currently, is under the aegis of publicly funded institutions
across the world.
The
response of Pfizer and other drug companies to widespread public criticism,
has been to engage in "philanthropy" in the form of some limited
but well-publicised drug donation programmes. However, as the Oxfam
report points out, such programmes not only are minuscule compared to
the scale of the problem, but tend to be "piecemeal, reversible
and frequently conditional".
Of
course, citizens in developing countries are not the only victims of
the power of the multinational drug companies. Oxfam's previous
Company Briefing Paper was about GlaxoSmithKline, the second largest
drug multinational. That company was in the news again recently, for
hiring a public relations agency in the US to "spread awareness"
about a new psychological problem called "social anxiety disorder",
apparently a debilitating form of shyness, which could be treated with
a drug - Paxil - coincidentally patented by the company. The
advertising campaign covered newspapers, radio and TV, satellite and
Internet communications, and used testimonials from advocates and
doctors who said social anxiety was America's third most common mental
disorder with more than 10 million suffer.
Subsequently health experts in the US have been alarmed at sudden rise of both
media reportage of the spread of social anxiety disorder, and the number
of people who have taken to using the drug. Paxil, which had been lagging
behind other antidepressants in the market such as Prozac, has now jumped
in sales and is on the way to becoming market leader. As one bioethics
professor pointed out, "the way to sell drugs is to sell psychiatric
illness."
Of course, such misuse
of advertising power, while reprehensible, is still not on par with
pricing and marketing policies that effectively deny access to life-saving
drugs to the world's poor. But they point to a similar problem
- that of increasing concentration and lack of regulation of an international
drug industry that has been given much greater power by the current
multilateral trade regime.