Generic medicines are not substandard medicines.

نویسندگان

  • Nathan Ford
  • Ellen 't Hoen
چکیده

1 who work for the industry-funded Hudson Institute, advocate the use of patented drugs, pointing to what they say are risks associated with generic drugs. They confuse generic drugs with old, substandard, ineffective, and counterfeit drugs. Generic does not mean old. The 1996 World Trade Organisation (WTO) Agreements mandate all member countries to provide 20-year patent protection for medicines. Before that date, however, many countries (including Spain, Finland, and India) thought of medicines as too important to subject to market monopolies and exempted them from patentability. All drugs in these countries could, therefore, be generic. This situation is still true for countries that have not implemented the WTO Agreements. Drug quality is important. Médecins sans Frontières advocates for improved quality surveillance. We support WHO's efforts to assist countries by assessing quality of many technically complicated pharmaceutical products, including the prequalification of generic antiretroviral suppliers. Generic does not, however, mean unsafe or ineffective, just as patented does not necessarily mean safe and effective. Most medicines on the WHO Model Essential Drugs List are generic. Many vital patented drugs are excluded from the list because they do not meet the affordability criteria. For drug resistance and treatment adherence, generic companies may be in a better position to provide effective treatments by producing certain combinations and formulations that brand companies cannot or will not produce. 2 Counterfeiting is a separate issue referring to the deliberate and fraudulent mislabelling of medicines for identity or source. Counterfeiting mostly concerns expensive branded drugs. The only consistent practical difference between generic and patented drugs is their price. Because market monopolies drive prices up, generic agents are less expensive. The price of patented drugs is a barrier to access to medicines for many diseases that are common in less-developed countries. Access to AIDS medicines has increased strikingly in some countries through the use of generic drugs. 3 Affordable, high-quality, generic alternatives exist for many diseases causing substantial mortality and morbidity in the less-developed world (eg, trachoma, kala-azar, and cryptococcal meningitis 4), which, if the right prohealth policies are implemented, could be used to increase access in all countries in need. Introduction of market competition through parallel importation (competition between branded drugs) or compulsory licence (competition with generic drugs) is an important way to lower drug prices in a sustainable way. The Brazilian government, for example, has used extensive generic production and the threat of compulsory licensing to reduce …

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عنوان ژورنال:
  • Lancet

دوره 359 9314  شماره 

صفحات  -

تاریخ انتشار 2002