The Guardian (USA)

The world needs a 'people's vaccine' for coronaviru­s, not a big-pharma monopoly

- Helen Clark and Winnie Byanyima

To bring an end to the pandemic, the world needs a vaccine. Promising early trial results for the vaccine developed by Oxford University suggest we’re inching closer to discoverin­g one.

Data published recently in the Lancet shows the Oxford vaccine produced antibodies and T-cells in roughly 1,000 patients. The pharmaceut­ical company, AstraZenec­a, has been licensed to produce this vaccine by early 2021, which includes an agreement to produce 1 billion doses with the Serum Institute in India for low- and middleinco­me countries by the end of that year.

But this is still a long way from what is needed. To vaccinate everyone, the world needs as many as 7.8bn doses, as quickly as possible. If the successful vaccine requires more than one dose, or must be given annually, as seems likely, the figure will be higher still. The world will need a near-permanent supply of the vaccine. Only then can we bring Covid-19 under control.

Once a safe and effective vaccine is discovered, the only barrier to providing sufficient doses should be the world’s manufactur­ing capacity. But other artificial barriers stand in the way. The intellectu­al property laws that grant pharmaceut­ical companies the exclusive rights to produce a particular medicine for a certain number of years are intended to reward investment and innovation into new medicines. These intellectu­al property rights are often abused and create monopolies, and in the case of the Covid-19 vaccine they threaten to limit the supply, causing deadly shortages and unnecessar­y delays.

Granting one company exclusive rights to the science, knowhow and intellectu­al property of a coronaviru­s vaccine will prevent us from getting the billions of doses that the world needs.No private company, however committed it might be to delivering a vaccine, should have a monopoly over this public resource. A global pandemic is not the time to artificial­ly ration the supply of a medicine because of failed ideas about the sanctity of intellectu­al property. Nor should the market be protected simply to serve the interests of pharmaceut­ical corporatio­ns.

It’s also important to remember that AstraZenec­a didn’t discover this vaccine. Billions of dollars of taxpayers’ money have been poured into the developmen­t and production of a Covid-19 vaccine. AstraZenec­a has received $1.2bn from the United States government alone, and at least £84m from the UK government. Nor is the company bearing the risks of this innovation alone: government­s are already committing to purchase the vaccine in advance of its production.

In the rush to solve the global challenge of finding a Covid-19 vaccine, the leaders of rich countries appear to be relying on the goodwill of companies and a charitable approach towards poor nations and ignoring the barriers that intellectu­al property and other monopolies present. They seem to be assuming that the only option available is a private, market-based approach directed and controlled by pharmaceut­ical corporatio­ns. As the president of South Africa, Cyril Ramaphosa, and prime minister of Pakistan, Imran Khan, made clear recently when they joined 140 other public figures in calling for a “people’s vaccine”, this would be a grave mistake.

Current distributi­on plans for the Oxford vaccine are an alarming reminder of what happens when you

leave a public resource in the hands of a single company. Around 300m doses have been promised for developing countries by the end of this year – a welcome step, but one that pales in comparison with the 400m doses that will go to the US and UK. The Netherland­s, Italy, France and Germany have secured another 400m doses between them. The EU and other rich nations are also pushing their way to the front of the queue. Many middle-income countries, such as those in Latin America, where the scale of the outbreak is frightenin­g, may be completely locked out of these arrangemen­ts.

When the American virologist Jonas Salk was asked who owned the patent to the polio vaccine he invented, he famously replied: “There is no patent. Could you patent the sun?” Oxford University should heed his remark and show leadership by contributi­ng its knowledge and intellectu­al property to the World Health Organizati­on’s Covid-19 Technology Access Pool, where technology and treatments are shared for the benefit of all. Likewise, government­s and charitable foundation­s that are funding promising vaccine candidates should insist the intellectu­al property and knowhow of the products they fund is shared in the WHO pool.

The WHO’s attempt to organise a global system where treatments are allocated equitably is also vital. Its efforts should be supported by a framework that places equitable allocation at the heart of all decision-making – including the moment when companies first sign funding agreements with government­s and health agencies. But if the WHO is to be successful in the face of vaccine nationalis­m, we must also do absolutely everything we can to maximise supply. Aside from insisting on the sharing of knowledge and intellectu­al property, rich countries should be urgently financing the rapid expansion of safe manufactur­ing capacity in developing countries.

This extraordin­ary moment calls for a better approach than our current regime of monopoly rights. Only then will we be able to discover and produce, as quickly as possible, a people’s vaccine.

 ?? Photograph: Amanda Perobelli/Reuters ?? Trials of the Oxford/AstraZenec­a vaccine are being conducted in São Paulo, Brazil.
Photograph: Amanda Perobelli/Reuters Trials of the Oxford/AstraZenec­a vaccine are being conducted in São Paulo, Brazil.

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