Business Day

Motsoaledi braces for slew of brickbats

• Drug makers expected to resist new intellectu­al property approach intended to reduce the cost of medicines

- Linda Ensor Political Writer ensorl@businessli­ve.co.za

Health Minister Aaron Motsoaledi says he expects some resistance from pharmaceut­ical companies against the implementa­tion of the government’s new intellectu­al property policy which has been adopted by the Cabinet.

Health Minister Aaron Motsoaledi says he expects some resistance from pharmaceut­ical companies against the implementa­tion of the government’s new intellectu­al property policy which was adopted by Cabinet recently, whose aim is to reduce the cost of medicines, among other things.

The policy prioritise­s people’s lives over the profits of pharmaceut­ical corporatio­ns.

Many of the changes to regulation­s, practices and laws in the offing will affect the health sector, Trade and Industry Minister Rob Davies said at a joint media briefing with Motsoaledi on Thursday detailing the policy.

The health minister said it was unlikely that pharmaceut­ical companies would “just fold their arms” in the face of the pending changes. But they would be flying in the face of the Trade-Related Aspects of Intellectu­al Property Rights (TRIPS) rules of the World Trade Organisati­on, which allow countries to introduce flexibilit­ies into their intellectu­al property regimes in order to promote the health of their citizens.

“When we start implementi­ng these policies there is going to be a new dawn as far as the healthcare system is concerned,” he said. The domesticat­ion of TRIPS rules will, for example, allow for the use of biosimilar­s (biological compounds) for breast cancer drugs.

The Treatment Action Campaign hailed the new policy, saying it heralded new access to medicines.

The TRIPS rules that SA plans to domesticat­e over time include those related to compulsory licensing and the resort to parallel imports to facilitate the import of cheap products.

Davies said that these rules would not be used immediatel­y but as the need arose. The aim of the changes, he said, was to modernise SA’s intellectu­al property system and make it more developmen­tal.

The new regime will require the disclosure of the ingredient­s and technology of patented goods on registrati­on to allow generic manufactur­ers to prepare themselves for manufactur­e when the patent expires though they will be prohibited from using it beforehand.

A system of substantiv­e examinatio­n of patents will be introduced to replace the current depository system, which requires that the applicant for a patent to simply make a submission to the Companies and Intellectu­al Property Commission.

The commission does not assess whether the patentabil­ity criteria have been met or whether the patent is valid.

The registrati­on process relies on submission­s made by intellectu­al property lawyers and on whether the patent is recognised in other jurisdicti­ons. About 90% of patents registered in SA are not based on South African-generated knowledge but on foreign patents.

“One of the results of this is that we have a situation in which we are registerin­g a number of low-quality patents,” Davies said. These included patents that involved ever-greening, the process of making a minor change to a patent in order to secure a further 20 year patent period. Ever-greening would not be possible under a system of substantiv­e patent examinatio­n, Davies pointed out.

He said there would be a preand post-patent objection process to allow people to challenge the granting of a patent before or after it is registered.

THE AIM OF THE CHANGES WAS TO MODERNISE SA’S INTELLECTU­AL PROPERTY SYSTEM A SYSTEM OF SUBSTANTIV­E EXAMINATIO­N OF PATENTS WILL BE INTRODUCED

 ?? /Supplied ?? New dawn: Health Minister Aaron Motsoaledi expects resistance, mainly from pharmaceut­ical companies, to the new intellectu­al property policy recently approved by Cabinet.
/Supplied New dawn: Health Minister Aaron Motsoaledi expects resistance, mainly from pharmaceut­ical companies, to the new intellectu­al property policy recently approved by Cabinet.

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