| Indian Journal of Medical Ethics | ||||||
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DISCUSSION Unhealthy drug donations Gopal Dabade Are drug donations by pharmaceutical companies evidence of their social
commitment or are they just another marketing technique? In mid-2002, the German multinational Boehringer Ingelheim got much
publicity following its announcement that it would donate the drug nevirapine to
developing countries for programmes preventing maternal-foetal transmission of
HIV. Company spokespeople stated that this donation was a response to the AIDS
crisis in South Africa. However, this donation was actually a clever response to growing global
criticism of companies producing drugs for AIDS. These drugs are sold at
exorbitant prices which deny life-saving treatment to the majority of those who
need it. Further, multinational companies and the governments of developed
countries have been accused of undermining the efforts made by developing
countries to provide access to drugs through compulsory licensing and parallel
imports. Indeed, there are many strings attached to this offer:
Further, the safety of nevirapine is not well-established. Though
potentially useful, it can also have severe unwanted-sometimes lethal-effects.
Nevirapine is not yet licensed in Europe and the USA for preventing
mother-to-child-transmission of HIV. So the donation could also be interpreted
as a large but not well-controlled trial of the drug. Boehringer Ingelheim colluded with the German government by announcing a
'public-private partnership' for the mother-to-child HIV-transmission programme.
According to the government's calculations, the limited use of nevirapine in
three African project areas will cost approximately six million German marks per
year. The company contributes a fraction of the cost of the entire project, and
receives a good deal of publicity for this. Buko Pharma-Kampagne, Germany (www.bukopharma.de), initiated a letter
campaign against Boehringer Ingelheim and the German government telling them to
stop this unhealthy donation. It is difficult to convince the public-and even the medical profession-of
the damage done by such donations. Most would say, 'Let people have something;
they are dying without medicines now.' Often people are blinded to the politics
behind drug donations-the Boehringer donation is one such example. In general, drug donations are likely to create expensive interventions
that are not integrated into healthcare systems and take money away from a
comprehensive healthcare approach. Drug donations help corporates build their
image, control the market, or get tax exemption from the government. They don't
help people. GOPAL DABADE, Drug Action Forum-Karanataka, 57, Tejaswinagar, Dharwad
580002, Karnataka, India, e-mail:drdabade@sancharnet.in |
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