Gulf Times

WHO, 37 nations set up vaccine alliance

- Reuters

Thirty-seven countries and the World Health Organisati­on (WHO) have appealed for common ownership of vaccines, medicines and diagnostic tools to tackle the global coronaviru­s pandemic, taking aim at patent laws that they fear could become a barrier to sharing crucial supplies.

While the push by mostly developing nations, called the

Covid-19 Technology Access Pool, won praise from groups including Doctors Without Borders, a drug industry alliance questioned if the effort to pool intellectu­al property would really broaden access to medicines.

Developing and some small nations fear rich countries pumping resources into finding vaccines – more than 100 are in developmen­t – will muscle their way to the front of the queue, once a candidate succeeds.

“Vaccines, tests, diagnostic­s, treatments and other key tools in the coronaviru­s response must be made universall­y available as global public goods,” said Costa Rica President Carlos Alvarado.

The effort, originally proposed in March, aims to provide a onestop shop for scientific knowledge, data and intellectu­al property amid a pandemic that has infected more than 5.8mn people and killed more than 360,000.

The WHO issued a “Solidarity Call to Action”, asking other stakeholde­rs to join the push.

“WHO recognises the important role that patents play in fuelling innovation but this is a time when people must take priority,” WHO Director-General Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesu­s told an online news briefing.

The Internatio­nal Federation of Pharmaceut­ical Manufactur­ers & Associatio­ns raised concerns about underminin­g intellectu­al property protection­s, which the group said already enable collaborat­ion and will also be needed after the pandemic is over.

“The ‘Solidarity Call to Action’ promotes a one-size-fits all model that disregards the specific circumstan­ces of each situation, each product and each country,” the federation said.

Anna Marriott, health policy manager for anti-poverty group Oxfam, said that the divide over how to handle patents illustrate­d how some regions could wind up losers.

“The pharmaceut­ical industry’s attempt to rubbish the World Health Organisati­on’s initiative suggests they care more for profits than people’s health,” she said.

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