Medecins Sans Frontieres march 11, 2005
For Immediate Release
Geneva/New York,11 March 2005 – Following the recent passage in Guatemala
of Decree 31-88 and the US-Dominican Republic-Central American Free Trade
Agreement (DR-CAFTA), the international medical humanitarian organization
Doctors Without Borders/Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF) reiterated its
concerns about their devastating impact on access to essential medicines in
Guatemala and throughout the region.
“We fear that our ability to ensure sustainable access to treatment for our
patients, particularly people with HIV/AIDS, will be severely affected,”
said Dr. Karim Laouabdia, Director of MSF’s Campaign for Access to
Essential Medicines.
According to the World Health Organization (WHO) and UNAIDS, as many as
13,500 people living with HIV/AIDS are in urgent clinical need of ARV
treatment while only 3,600 Guatemalans receive it –1,600 of whom are
treated by MSF in hospitals and clinics in Guatemala City, Coatepeque, and
Puerto Barrios.
MSF has been providing antiretrovirals (ARVs) to Guatemalans since 2001.
Most ARVs are not patent protected in Guatemala, and generic competition
has brought down the prices of AIDS medicines, a fact which enables more
and more patients to access treatment. The majority of patients in MSF’s
treatment programs are prescribed generic ARVs, whereas Guatemala’s social
security system has spent 20 times more for some originator drugs. For
example, MSF pays $216 per person per year for the generic version of
AZT+3TC, an important component of triple combination ARV therapy, while
Guatemala’s social security system spends $4,818 per person per year for
the same combination from GlaxoSmithKline.
“Paying more money for the exact same medicines means treating fewer people
and, in effect, sentencing the rest to death,” said Dr. Laouabdia. “We are
especially worried that Decree 31-88 and intellectual property provisions
in DR-CAFTA could make newer medicines unaffordable – our patients will
need these in order to stay alive once their first-line regimen fails.
Decree 31-88 requires that pharmaceutical test data be kept secret for a
minimum of five years, giving a de facto market monopoly to originator
"brand-name" drug manufactures, and possibly delay the availability of
generic medicines even in cases where the originator drug is not marketed
in Guatemala. MSF fears that drug prices will, as a result, be unaffordable
to the vast majority of Guatemalans. The repeal of a similar measure by the
Guatemalan government in December 2004 prompted US officials to publicly
pressure Guatemalan authorities and threaten to delay ratification of
DR-CAFTA in the US.
DR-CAFTA also includes a “data exclusivity” provision, among other harmful
intellectual property measures, all of which go far beyond what is required
in the World Trade Organization (WTO) Agreement on Trade-related Aspects of
Intellectual Property Rights (TRIPS), and directly contradict the WTO
Ministerial Declaration on the TRIPS Agreement and Public Health (Doha
Declaration).
“There is no reason that Guatemala should not be able to ensure universal
access to ARV treatment, particularly because of a $41 million grant from
the Global Fund to Fight AIDS, Tuberculosis and Malaria,” said Ellen ‘t
Hoen, director of policy advocacy for MSF’s Campaign for Access to
Essential Medicines. “But with Decree 31-88 and intellectual property
provisions in DR-CAFTA, only a fraction of those in need may be treated.
Instead of ensuring access to affordable medicines for all Guatemalans, the
Congress has apparently chosen to protect the interests of large
multinational pharmaceutical companies. This is simply unacceptable.”
Contact Kevin Phelan
1-212-655-3763 or
1-646-201-8230
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