Would demanding the right to use competition laws for an aids patient undergoing treatment be a good way to put pressure on the pharmaceutical industry.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
© Medlinks consulting. Are they afraid they will not get their moneys worth or worse still, get duped by a charlatan? ©Medlinks Consulting.
Advertisements

European RTD programmes and global benefits 6CP Workshop, Helsinki June 2004 Pirjo Kutinlahti & Marjo Uotila.
Thailand’s fight for national sovereignty - the issue of compulsory licenses Since coup Sept 2006, the new interim government issued compulsory licenses.
EU Cross-Border Care Directive from the Primary Care perspective Results of a simulation Rita Baeten Gothenburg, 3 September 2012.
Benjamin Blasco Anna Ferretti Sophie Venet BIO615 Fall 2009.
XIX International AIDS Conference July 2012 Washington DC, USA The Brazilian experience: the campaign for access to lopinavir/ritonavir and efavirenz compulsory.
“Using Competition Law to Promote Access to Health Technologies” Access to Innovation: Making Generic Versions of Newer ARVs Affordable 24 July 2014 Melbourne,
Does Trade with Low Wage Countries Create Unemployment Richard Stansfield.
1 Game Theory Here we study a method for thinking about oligopoly situations. As we consider some terminology, we will see the simultaneous move, one shot.
Presenter: Joseph Reid Paper: The Market for Health Care Date : 6/04/07.
Chapter 8 Economic Integration.
LABELLING, CERTIFICATION AND FAIR TRADE Fabrice Leclercq October, 13th 2009.
Trade Arguments.  The following slides contain a set of arguments for and against the development of free trade.  I would like you to consider each.
INTERNATIONAL MARKETING Cansu KÖROĞLU Dokuz Eylul University Industrial Engineering Department 1.
Drug Pricing in Canada Victoria Brown, Anureet Sohi, Lisa Weger SPHA 511.
Command vs. Market Economies, 1/25 WARM UP
Presented by : Nadine Youssry Soha El-Baktoushy Walaa Samy Presented to : Dr.Nagwa Mohamed.
The Role of TNCs and AIDS drugs – “Lives before profits”? L.O.s 1.To define the terms: TNC, Generic, “Big Pharma”, ARVs, HAART, Tiered Pricing. 2.To describe.
ECONOMIC SYSTEMS. Different Economic Systems – Economic Questions  WHAT IS ECONOMICS? The study of how resources are managed in the production, exchange,
Business in a Global Economy
MT 219 Marketing Unit Nine The Global Marketplace Social Responsibility and Ethics Note: This seminar will be recorded by the instructor.
Human Rights Act 1998 The European convention on human rights The European convention on human rights The Convention rights The Convention rights How does.
2.7 Employer & Employee Relations
Chapter 7.1 Trade Between Nations.
Thailand, TRIPS, and Compulsory Licensing Tanyaporn Wansom Global Health Chair, American Medical Student Association 2006 WHO Duke University.
Global Markets and Marketing Chapter 3 McGraw-Hill/Irwin Copyright © 2004 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved.
Principles of Marketing Lecture-41. Summary of Lecture-40.
How to determine medicines benefits policy and program needs?
Imperfectly Competitive Markets. Oligopolies – market structure in which a few large sellers control most of the production of a good or service 3 ConditionsOnly.
Economic Systems 1. Scarcity Means There Is Not Enough For Everyone Government must step in to help allocate (distribute) resources 2.
Protectionism vs Free Trade.
Unit 7 – North and South Lesson 41 – People in the North.
Social Care and Inclusion Talk about charging. Thank you for taking time to talk to us about charging for community social services The Council has to.
Complaints, Disputes & Inappropriate Behaviour: Dealing with demanding family members.
A L ESSON IN H EALTH E CONOMICS C HAPTER 13 Code Blue Health Science Edition 4.
1 Chapter 8 Economic Integration. 2 Learning Objectives To review types of economic integration among countries To examine the costs and benefits of integrative.
Moving from Microeconomics to Macroeconomics. Our textbook defines microeconomics as the area of economics that deals with behavior and decision making.
1/7 Are Patients Today Sufficiently Informed? Right and Ethics 10 October 2007.
Title Page A commercial agreement under which distributors sell products of a given class at no less than a minimum price set by the manufacturer Fair.
Marketing mix Pricing strategies.
Mobi - Ad Konsta Suuronen, Anders Broberg, Henrik Engberg, Christoffer Hagelberg.
Essential Question: What is the right price?.  Putting _____ and ________ together  If you are a seller, how do you know how much to charge for your.
Medicines and the Poor: What Role for Competition Law & Policy? Mariana Tavares de Araujo Competition Department, Head SDE, Ministry of Justice, Brazil.
Chapter 2 ECONOMIC SYSTEMS.
The World Trade Organisation. What is the WTO?  Multilateral body responsible for overseeing the conduct of international trade.
Economics LEAP Review. Market System Market System: free enterprise or capitalist system  People are allowed to own property and operate businesses with.
 Introduction  Justification and objectives  Methodology (selection of countries)  Outputs and potential impacts.
Opaque, translucent or transparent? Defining relationships between UK health consumer and patients’ organisations and the pharmaceutical industry Paper.
BUSINESS MANAGEMENT PAVONE 3-2 ECONOMIC SYSTEMS. INTRODUCTION Remember that no country has enough resources to satisfy all the wants of all people for.
1 COMPETITION LAW FORUM Paris 21 June 2006 Competitiveness versus Competition Presentation by Humbert DRABBE Director for Cohesion and Competitiveness,
Unit 1: Basic Economic Concepts 1.2 Economic Systems 1.
MT 219 Marketing Unit Nine The Global Marketplace Social Responsibility and Ethics Note: This seminar will be recorded by the instructor.
ECONOMIC SYSTEMS Business Management. Today’s Objective  Compare economic systems, free markets, and economic-political systems  3 major economic systems.
Section 1 A Republican Takes Office
THE AFFECTS OF ECONOMIC ISSUES AND GOVERNMENT ON BUSINESS Bus101.
 In the Middle Ages, beer was consumed more than water because it was safer to drink alcohol than to drink polluted water  In Mexico, artists can pay.
Economics “Econ, Econ” Econ. Economics Activity Kit-Kat scarcity.
Things to Study Chapter question work sheets (terms, opening questions, question sheet you did with the sub) TERMS! Practice term sheet again Notes Spectrum.
OTHER ECONOMIC SYSTEMS THE THREE ECONOMIC QUESTIONS. Question #1.  Which goods and services should be produced? All countries have their own economic.
People in Business Trade Unions. By the end if the lesson you will…  Be able to explain what a Trade Union is and can affect workers, customers, the.
Access to medicines challenges in Europe: What is wrong and the way forward Presented by: Rohit Malpani Director of Policy & Analysis, Access Campaign.
TRADE NEGOTIATION ON PHARMACETICALS PRESENTED BY CHOGO,MALESO (092SIS10).
Chapter 10: Business in a Global Economy
Consent to Medical Care
Economic Systems Business Management.
Chapter 8 Economic Integration.
A Presentation on Child Labour
Ch.10 The Global Economy 10.2 Global Competition.
Competitive Industry Report and Calculations
Competitive Industry Report and Calculations
Presentation transcript:

Would demanding the right to use competition laws for an aids patient undergoing treatment be a good way to put pressure on the pharmaceutical industry ?

THE CASE OF THE COMPLAINT MADE AGAINST ACT-UP BY ABBOT IN FRANCE Vincent PELLETIER Managing Director of AIDES Director of PLUS

DAVID AND GOLIATH

ABBOT IS GOLIATH  Billions of capsules and tablets  Budget of 26 billions dollars  associates  In 130 countries Biggest fear = generics Abbott decided to take retaliatory measures towards Thailand

ACT-UP PARIS IS DAVID  Medicine should not be regarded as a commodity  Few methods but well known  Often extreme but effective

LIKE DAVID, MILITANTS ATTACKED  Flooding the Abbott website with a tone of s  Sending a tone of faxes

ABBOT STRIKES BACK  Bringing Act-Up to court  Act-Up may be condemned to pay  Act-Up risks to collapse

THEN CAME AIDS IMPACT OPENING CEREMONY Marseille, France, 1-4 July 2007 AIDSImpact

STARTING POINT HYPOTHESIS  If manufacturers can’t agree that medicines are not a commodity, perhaps we should begin to think like the manufacturers :  If medicine are a commodity, then patients are consumers  Consumers have rights and methods of action = competition

CONCLUSIONS  ABBOTT retreated and withdrew its complaint  Battle is not over, all those who need treatment don’t have access to the best one  But a step has been taken : some patients and doctors now have choice

QUESTIONS  Would it be conceivable to have an international alliance between patients who have no problems with medicine and those who have?  Are we capable of solidarity?

OTHER QUESTIONS  When, with how many different medicines available, with how many firms present in the country can we decide that we have enough choice and can therefore use the competitors’ products?  How can we mobilize patients with other illnesses to boycott the products of a company which acts unacceptably towards aids patients?

AND MORE  How can we assess the effectiveness of such measures so they are not in vain and have a real impact on access to care and fair prices?  How do we make social Science researchers aware of these issues?  How do we mobilize patients in the North countries, who have free access to care with their social security systems, to rally for the patients in the south, who are victims of industrial and political blackmail?

Abstract n° MOAE0104 V. Pelletier, B. Spire, E. Chateau THANK YOU