Hindustan Times ST (Mumbai)

Won’t back patent waivers for tests & treatments: US

- Agencies LOOMING DEADLINE

WASHINGTON: The US won’t agree to waive intellectu­al-property protection­s for Covid-19 treatments and tests this year -aligning with developed-nation peers and delaying prospects for a World Trade Organizati­on accord aimed at boosting global access to life-saving medicines.

On Tuesday, US trade representa­tive Katherine Tai said the agency needs more informatio­n about the market dynamics for Covid diagnostic­s and therapeuti­cs, and plans to ask the US Internatio­nal Trade Commission to launch an investigat­ion into the matter.

“Real questions remain on a range of issues, and the additional time, coupled with informatio­n from the USITC, will help the world make a more informed decision,” Tai said in a release.

Such investigat­ions can take nine months to a year to complete. That means further delay for a deal that aims to water down patent rights for antiviral medication­s like Pfizer’s Paxlovid, Merck & Co’s Molnupirav­ir, Gilead Sciences’s Remdesivir and Eli Lilly & Co’s Baricitini­b.

The debate over waiving IP rights for Covid-19 therapeuti­cs and diagnostic­s has simmered since this summer, when WTO members approved a five-year decision that authorized the use of vaccine patent secrets without the right-holder’s consent.

Developing nations such as India, South Africa and Indonesia are pushing to extend the waiver to cover the production and supply of Covid-19 diagnostic­s and therapeuti­cs. WTO negotiator­s left the door open to amend the existing waiver by December 17 -- a deadline that will now be missed.

The WTO operates on the basis of consensus, which means any agreement must have the support of each of the organizati­on’s 164 members.

The US surprised negotiator­s a year and a half ago, when it backed an agreement to water down key provisions of the WTO agreement on trade-related aspects of intellectu­al-property rights for vaccines, known by the acronym Trips. Since then, the US consistent­ly opposed any effort to expand the waiver’s coverage to tests and treatments.

Britain’s health regulator backs vaccine for infants

Britain’s Medicines and Healthcare products Regulatory Agency on Tuesday authorised a Covid vaccine - made by Pfizer and Biontech - for infants as young as six months, opening the door for vaccinatin­g the country’s youngest children once the UK’S Joint Committee on Vaccinatio­n and Immunisati­on (JCVI) agrees.

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