PRESS STATEMENT
May 29, 2002
HIV/AIDS DRUG DEAL IN UKRAINE PROMOTES MULTINATIONALS,
Kiev, May 24, 2002 - The international medical aid organization Doctors
Without Borders/MÈdecins Sans FrontiËres (MSF), together with
non-governmental organization the All Ukrainian Network of People Living
with HIV/AIDS, today criticized an agreement signed between four
multinational pharmaceutical companies and the Ukrainian government to
reduce prices of drugs to treat HIV/AIDS patients. MSF and the Ukrainian
AIDS activists called upon the government to improve access to the most
affordable HIV/AIDS drugs by swiftly registering generic versions and
allowing them on the Ukrainian market.
The companies involved in the agreement (GlaxoSmithKline,
BristolMeyersSquibb, Boehringer Ingelheim and Merck) agreed to provide a
70-87% discount on the price of specific HIV/AIDS medicines
(antiretrovirals), which normally cost between US$5,000 to US$9,000 per
patient per year.
However, generic drugs (copies of the original patented product) are
offered at prices six times below the agreed discount levels of the
multinational pharmaceutical companies. A combination of the drugs
zidovudine, lamivudine, and nevirapine would cost US$1,700 under the recent
agreement, whereas a similar combination by a generic manufacturer has been
offered at US$300 per patient per year. "This will ensure access to
treatment for almost 6 times as many patients as under this agreement,"
says Dr. Joost van der Meer, MSF country coordinator in Ukraine. "Although
Ukraine made big improvements in the treatment of HIV/AIDS over the past
years, we are disappointed by this deal and worried that in the end not
enough people with HIV/AIDS are getting treatment.' The average monthly
income per person in the Ukraine is approximately US$60.
The role of generic manufacturers has been recognized by UNAIDS and the
WHO. However, in Ukraine the UN stepped away from supporting generic
competition and representatives of generic companies have not been invited
to take part in the negotiations. This recent agreement was made within the
framework of the UN Accelerated Access Initiative (AAI), meant to improve
access to treatment. MSF and the Ukrainian NGO call on the UN in Ukraine to
take a real leadership role to ensure access to essential HIV medicines
rather than brokering an inadequate deal. "Experience in other countries
has shown that true market competition between generic companies and the
other manufacturers has brought down prices for HIV/AIDS drugs much more
than closed-door deals between governments and individual pharmaceutical
companies," says van der Meer.
Ukraine has one of the fastest growing numbers of HIV infections worldwide.
According to UN estimates, since 1995, 300,000 people (1% of the adult
population) were infected with the virus, the highest rate in Europe and
the former Soviet Union. MSF is involved in a program in southern Ukraine
to prevent the transmission of HIV from mother to child, and is expanding
its work to care and treatment for people with HIV/AIDS, including
treatment of children with antiretroviral medicines. MSF works in
partnership with the Ukrainian Ministry of Health and the All Ukrainian
Network of People Living with HIV/AIDS.
Contact: Kris Torgeson, +1-212-655-3764 or +1-917-913-0183
IGNORES CHEAPER
GENERICS THAT COULD TREAT MORE PEOPLE