|
Council On Hemispheric Affairs |
|
Monitoring Political, Economic and Diplomatic Issues Affecting the Western Hemisphere |
Friday,
March 10,
2006
COHA REPORT on AIDS in Latin America:
AIDS Crisis in Latin America Compounded by Bush Administration’s Catering to U.S. Drug Multinationals, which Demonstrably are Far More Concerned with the “Bottom Line” than the Deaths of Tens of Thousands of AIDS Victims
The following is an executive summary of the AIDS in Latin
America Report. For the complete report, please scroll down.
Faced with the looming threat of a merciless humanitarian crisis,
Latin American governments must hack through an entangled web of
patent laws, corporate loopholes, and misguided U.S. initiatives,
before they can even begin to deliver life-saving drugs to a mounting
number of AIDS victims in their countries. In the shadow of the
more-publicized African crisis, the AIDS epidemic in Latin America
has slowly infected the most vulnerable, poverty-stricken stratums
of society, exacerbating the plight of an already economically
handicapped region.
In 2005 alone, 1.8 million Latin Americans were newly infected by the disease,
which claimed the lives of 200,000 victims that same year. In the Caribbean,
where the AIDS epidemic ranks second only to that of Sub-Saharan Africa, AIDS
claimed an estimated 24,000 victims in 2005, making the disease the leading cause
of death among adults in the region, ages 15 to 44. As the relationship between
AIDS and poverty is bidirectional, these alarming statistics attest to an ominous
trend. Immediate action must be taken before the epidemic further devastates
the fundamental fabric of Latin American societies.
As underdevelopment and debt tie the hands of Latin American governments, global
neglect has further prevented a strong response to the region’s growing
crisis. Meanwhile, through the White House’s good offices, pharmaceutical
companies have been able to form de facto alliances within the World Trade
Organization and the Food and Drug Administration with ease, while an aggressive
public relations
campaign is meant to drive home the thesis that pharmaceutical companies are
being good world citizens by restraining obscenely high drug prices.
Confronted by an onslaught of increasing international pressure, some drug
companies have taken piecemeal steps toward negotiating reduced prices with
their leitmotif
seemingly being let charity be more apparent than real. When reduced prices
actually resulted from negotiations, the prices still often soared above those
of generic
competitors, and remained far out of reach for the average of 40% of Latin
Americans living below the poverty line. In addition, in 2003, a year after
the U.S. blocked
a major 143-country agreement that would have allowed the world’s poorest
countries to purchase discounted pharmaceuticals, the WTO added the ‘paragraph
six’ waiver to the controversial Trade-Related Aspects of International
Property Rights (TRIPS), which institutionalizes twenty-year patents on vital
AIDS drugs. While the waiver was supposed to allow crisis-ridden countries that
cannot manufacture drugs domestically, to import cheap alternatives, no country
has yet been able to attain a license to import such reduced-price drugs due
to the hopeless rigidity and complexity of the legislation. Such gnawing practical
problems have led NGOs to call the arrangement “the present wrapped in
red tape.”
Working for the Pharmaceutical Companies
As anticipated, CAFTA already is turning out to be a highly pliable mechanism
for U.S. corporate interests, as demonstrated by the ever-increasing demands
that the U.S. is imposing on Central American members in the ongoing trade bloc
negotiations. U.S. Trade Representative Rob Portman is attempting to push beyond
the terms of previous intellectual property agreements to further extend the
life of pharmaceutical patents, and it appears that he is succeeding. Guatemala,
for example, has already agreed to repeal a law aimed at guaranteeing local access
to crucial generic drugs, despite the social unrest that the issue has incited
throughout the country.
In addition, while Bush’s highly-criticized President’s Emergency
Plan for AIDS Relief (PEPFAR) allocates approximately 50% of the plan’s
budget to invest in antiretroviral drugs, it does so in the least effective manner.
Under the leadership of Randall Tobias, former CEO and major stockholder of drug
giant Eli Lilly, it should come as no surprise that Bush’s AIDS initiative
purchases the majority of its drugs from high-priced pharmaceutical companies,
instead of turning to significantly cheaper generic alternatives. The decision
not to utilize generic drugs, which cost a fraction of the price, and could allow
for much broader distribution, indicates a truly ill-conceived strategy, if the
public good is meant to be the program’s top priority. Furthermore, the
FDA has played a role in delaying the release of generic drugs that could be
used for the initiative, by taking as long as eight months to approve drugs that
potentially could have gained a positive nod within six weeks. PEPFAR also funds
Bush-favored faith-based groups equipped with little or no health know how and
espousing an often ill-suited abstinence and fidelity approach, thus siphoning
financial resources from the urgently needed medical tactics in favor of a diamond-in-the-sky
strategy. Adding salt to the wound, the White House has further compromised the
ability of Latin American governments to cope with the AIDS crises by recently
cutting overall development aid to the region by 28.5%, making 2007 the third
consecutive year that significant aid was slashed and relocated to regions of
greater “strategic” importance.
Despite growing concern over the issue, few changes have occurred on the AIDS
drug scene, and Latin American nations basically have been left alone to navigate
a tortuous system dominated by profit-motivated corporate influence and White
House diktats. Furthermore, without a renewed international commitment to addressing
the fundamental issues of human well-being and poverty, little hope remains
for eradicating a disease that finds most of its victims among the ranks of
the already
suffering and deprived.
Complete Report on AIDS in
Latin America
Between February 5 and 8, some of the world’s most talented scientists and clinicians gathered in Denver at the 13th Conference on Retroviruses and Opportunistic Infections (CROI) to share and critique the results of this year’s breakthroughs in AIDS research. Sponsored by pharmaceutical giants such as Abbott, Boehringer Ingelheim, and GlaxoSmithKline, the purported goal of the conference was to convert clinical and laboratory research to practical ammunition in the fight against the AIDS epidemic. While the disease’s scope was originally limited to small pockets within Latin America, AIDS has now become a widespread killer, decimating all sectors of societies already stricken by the straitened living standards that are a ubiquitous feature of the region’s reality. However, before life-saving science can rescue those ravaged by the disease, it must hack through an entangled web of U.S.-backed patent laws, corporate loopholes, and U.S. HIV/AIDS initiatives seemingly more concerned with benefiting pharmaceutical giants than the AIDS victims themselves. The problem is compounded by Washington’s knack to successfully raise more hurdles to coping with the epidemic through trade negotiations, which usually leave the region on the losing side. By blocking widespread access to crucial AIDS medicine by various means, the U.S., in effect, denies Latin America a vital vehicle for alleviating the spread of the disease, and the socioeconomic devastation it intensifies. Thus, once again, governments of these sovereign nations are barred from exercising their most fundamental right: to care for their own people.
The Silent Killer
Shaded over by Africa’s more-publicized crisis, AIDS almost silently
has infected Latin America, becoming a top killer amongst society’s poorest
and most vulnerable members. By the end of 2005, the United Nations (UN) estimated
1.8 million Latin Americans were newly infected with the disease that claimed
the lives of some 200,000 that year. In the Caribbean, where the epidemic ranks
second only to Sub-Saharan Africa’s in its tenacity, AIDS killed an estimated
24,000 in 2005, becoming the leading cause of death among adults aged 15 to
44. AIDS further compounds the region’s already overwhelming problems
of poverty and underdevelopment, as it often strikes victims in the most productive
years of their lives, leaving them unable to contribute to their personal and
national economies. Furthermore, AIDS disproportionately strikes poor communities
as they not only contain high-risk groups like prostitutes and drug users,
but also have less biological resistance, as malnutrition and poor health care
have been linked to an increased likelihood of contracting AIDS. “The
relationship between poverty and AIDS and AIDS and poverty is bi-directional,” warned
a 2002 UNICEF report. “AIDS deepens poverty and increases inequalities
at every level… [and] undermines efforts at poverty reduction, income
and asset distribution, productivity, and economic growth. AIDS has reversed
progress towards international development goals.”
The Drugs Do Work
As AIDS and poverty are inextricably linked, providing drugs at reasonable
prices is essential, because, if available, antiretroviral drugs
can have a critical impact on underdeveloped communities by improving
and extending the lives of those suffering from the disease. Despite
its location in the Caribbean, one of the most afflicted regions
on the planet, the fact that Cuba has one of the lowest AIDS prevalencies
in the world (fewer than 0.2% of adults) has been attributed to
the island’s citizens’ nearly universal access to such
medicines. Pregnant women in Cuba are systematically tested for
HIV, and if found positive, are immediately provided with antiretroviral
treatment to stop the spread of the disease to the unborn fetus.
Antiretroviral drugs also have shown significant progress in fighting
AIDS in Haiti, where one the oldest AIDS epidemics in the world
plagues a population already suffering from chronic poverty, political
violence, and natural disasters.
According to a recent Cornell study in Haiti, patients who received
no drugs had a 30% chance of surviving one year after their diagnosis,
while 87% of adults and adolescents and 98% of children who received
a three-pill treatment survived. According to Dr. Jean William
Pape, who has researched AIDS in Haiti since 1979, patients
who had arrived
on stretchers, emaciated and immobile a year prior, had left the
clinic ready to return to work after receiving antiretroviral treatment,
now able to function and contribute to their families and local
economies. As Dr. Pape points out, the success of such an
experiment in the
turmoil-stricken and poorest nation in the hemisphere, demonstrates
the treatment could work anywhere. But access to new antiviral
pills is necessary, as the most updated versions of them
are not only more
effective and easier to distribute, but also have lower levels
of toxicity, and thus fewer side effects. In addition, the
second-line
antiretroviral drugs, which are the most heavily patented, are
crucial formulas for survival as they are the victim’s last line of
defense against the disease after his/her body becomes immune to
the effects of the more widely available first-line drugs.
Bound in Red Tape
International trade law upholds the authority of U.S. pharmaceutical
giants when they collide with Latin American nations struggling
to gain the right to produce or buy desperately needed anti-AIDS
drugs at affordable prices, indicating that the death of tens of
thousands is relatively easy to absorb as long as executives and
stockholders of U.S. drugs companies protect their stock prices
and bonuses.
The 1995 World Trade Organization’s (WTO) Agreement on Trade-Related
Aspects of International Property Rights (TRIPS) is perhaps the most
flagrantly biased WTO initiative, as it institutionalizes twenty-year
patents on vital medications. Through TRIPS, countries attempting
to export or produce drastically cheaper generic alternatives face
the threat of crippling U.S. and WTO sanctions. In 2003, the WTO
finally added the ‘paragraph six’ waiver to TRIPS, which
was purported to allow crisis-ridden countries unable to produce
drugs domestically, to import cheap alternatives. However, the U.S.
pushed for so many stipulations and contingencies that the complicated
structure of the waiver is all but unworkable. Meanwhile, the previous
arrangement also erects hurdles for countries wanting to produce
and export generics, leaving little chance there will be a sufficient
supply of cheap drugs for indigent nations to buy. The fact that
no country has yet been able to attain a license to import such drugs,
attests to the hopeless rigidity of the legislation, which NGO’s
are rightly calling “the present wrapped in red tape.”
Working for the Drug Companies
Outside of the WTO framework, Washington is not opposed to throwing
its weight around to intimidate Latin American nations in bilateral
or regional trade agreements, or even to block international agreements
that seek to get poor nations access to AIDS drugs. Perhaps the
best-know example of this phenomenon occurred in 2002, when the
U.S. blocked
a major international agreement preceded by two years of negotiations,
which sought to give millions of poor people access to HIV drugs
and other medications at effective prices. “One-hundred and
forty-three countries stood on the same ground,” said Canadian
representative Sergio Marchi, “we were hoping to make that
unanimous.” At a 2004 Bangkok international AIDS conference,
which was besieged by angry protestors, French President Jacques
Chirac criticized the U.S. for “dangling” favorable treatment
in bilateral trade negotiations in exchange for abandoning generic
drugs.
As presumed, the North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA)
and the Central American-Dominican Republic-United States
Free Trade
Agreement (CAFTA-DR) are turning out to be equally pliable to
U.S. corporate interests. NAFTA boasts the highest commitment
to intellectual
property rights through its Chapter Seventeen on Intellectual
Property, which is in some ways even more comprehensive than
TRIPS in its
sanctions, as violators are subject to more severe retaliation
mechanisms, as
well as criminal penalties. The U.S. is taking CAFTA-DR even
farther, as demonstrated by the ever-increasing demands that
it is imposing
on Central American members in ongoing trade bloc negotiations.
According to the journal Inside US Trade, U.S. Trade Representative
Rob Portman
is attempting to push beyond the terms of previous intellectual
property agreements to further extend the life of pharmaceutical
patents,
and it appears he is succeeding. Guatemala, for example, has
already agreed to repeal a law aimed at providing local access
to crucial
generic drugs, despite the fervent social unrest the issue has
generated within the country. “The situation for access to medicines
in Guatemala is awful, it is terrible,” said Luis Villa, who
led the Médecins Sans Frontiéres (MSF) mission in Guatemala
when the country signed the CAFTA agreement in 2003,”…there
are approximately 1500 people receiving antiretroviral treatment
in Guatemala at present, MSF is treating almost one-third of them.
We buy quality generics. If there is any compromise on the possibility
of buying such generics, then it will become almost impossible to
treat HIV/AIDS patients in Guatemala [and] virtually no patients
will receive treatment.” In several Central American countries,
as AIDS crises are more and more beginning to resemble those of their
Caribbean neighbors, the results of these agreements undeniably will
have tragic consequences.
Insufficient Gains and Even Less Sufficient Arguments
Due to astronomical prices, only 275, 000 HIV-positive individuals
in Latin America currently have access to antiretroviral treatment,
according to the Pan American Health Organization, a minuscule
number considering that last year alone 200,000 people died of
AIDS in the region. For a country like Honduras, for which AIDS/HIV
is reportedly the second leading cause of death and hospitalization,
and where medications could range up to $10,000 per year, the opportunity
for a government drug initiative is being severely limited, especially
given the scope of the problem.
Confronted by an onslaught of increasing international pressure,
some drug companies have taken piecemeal steps toward reducing
prices, with their prevailing leitmotif seemingly being,
let charity be more
apparent than real. Despite Latin America’s attempts to negotiate
discounts with drug companies, such efforts have had a minimal impact.
In January, 2006, despite Brazil’s relative success in pressuring
drug giants to reduce prices, Pedro Chequer, head of Brazil’s
HIV/AIDS program, announced that Brazil, the nation with the highest
number of AIDS cases in Latin America, was still unable to afford
antiretroviral drugs. “We pay up to 9 times the fair price”,
Chequer told the audience, boldly voicing his encouragement of Brazil’s
taking actions to break patent agreements and increasing domestic
production of generics, despite the potential retaliation the country
could face. Organizations like the Clinton Foundation have made small
steps in persuading drug companies to set fairer prices, but they
haven’t gone “fair” enough. On January 12, for
example, former President Clinton announced that agreements between
50 countries and major pharmaceutical companies had significantly
reduced some prescription costs to as low as $200 to $400 a year.
While such agreements would seem to be a step in the right direction,
many discounted drugs, which still often soar above the prices of
their generic competitors, may as well cost $1 million a year for
the 40% of the region’s citizens that live below the poverty
line, particularly those who struggled to live on $1 a day before
the disease left them unable to work.
In addition, despite various pharmaceutical companies’ promises
to lower drug prices, action has been slow to come, when it has come
at all. For example, according to Médecins Sans Frontiéres,
despite the fact that Gilead Sciences Inc. announced it would lower
the price of the drug Tenofovir for developing countries in 2002,
and claimed in 2005 that it had reduced prices in 97 countries, only
six of them actually had been registered to receive the price cuts.
Of these, the Bahamas was the only nation in the region earmarked
for discounts.
Other prescriptions are not at all available. Abbott’s new
version of the drug Kaletra is only available in the U.S., while
developing nations use an outdated version that requires refrigeration,
obviously posing an enormous obstacle in situations where such luxuries
are not readily available. On January 19, Gilead and Bristol Myers
Squibb Co. (BMS) announced the creation of a breakthrough Fixed Dose
Combination pill, which combines three existing antiretroviral drugs,
and could potentially cut the treatment costs that go into purchasing
and distributing all three existing medications. Although BMS has
pledged to allow sub-contractors in South Africa and India to “cheaply” produce
the drug, before it graces the shelves of needy clinics in Latin
America, it will be released to lucrative U.S. and European markets,
once again demonstrating that the world’s AIDS crisis ranks
second in importance to hefty corporate profits.
Proponents of protecting and extending drug patents on the part
of multinational pharmaceuticals are sounding less and less
convincing, as are their arguments that lowering drug prices
would compromise
incentives for research and development. Harvey Bale, spokesperson
and director-general of the International Federation of Pharmaceutical
Manufacturers Associations (IFPMA) repeatedly claims, “Extended
patent protection to cover [drug] improvements gives important incentives
to developers to refine existing products and to provide patients
with better treatment options.” While pharmaceutical companies
make it difficult to calculate the actual development costs required
to manufacture antiretroviral drugs, it seems clear that the majority
of their profits go into branding, corporate sponsorship, promotion,
advertising, and salaries, rather than research. And of course, one
can not overlook the generous gifts that are bestowed upon politicians,
who do the bidding of the drug giants. A recent study by the Centre
for Public Integrity, found that pharmaceutical companies spent more
than 800 million dollars on campaign contributions from 1998 to 2004.
Furthermore, the claim that generic competitors within third world
markets would inflict enough financial loss to damage innovation
incentives seems ludicrous in light of the fact that profits from
Africa, for example, comprise only 1% of the industry’s $400
billion in total global sales.
A Policy Priority?
As awareness of the vital attributes of antiretroviral drugs grows
among policy makers all over the world, they seem to have come
to the forefront of many international AIDS agendas. However, one
may ask, who are the principal beneficiaries of these new drug
policies? While President Bush’s highly-criticized President’s
Emergency Plan for AIDS Relief (PEPFAR) allocates approximately
50% of its budget toward investment in antiretroviral drugs, it
does so in the manner least conducive to truly benefiting those
in need. Not surprisingly, under the leadership of Randall Tobias,
former CEO and major stockholder of drug giant Eli Lilly, Bush’s
AIDS initiative has purchased the majority of its drugs from high-priced
pharmaceutical companies instead of investing in generic alternatives.
The decision not to utilize a greater percentage of generic drugs
(which cost a fraction of the price and could allow for an indefinitely
broader distribution)
indicates a truly ill-conceived strategy if the public good is meant to be
top priority in the program’s aims. In response to this clearly flawed
strategy, AIDS organizations are pointing a finger at Tobias, who has a history
of attempting to block poor nations’ access to generic drugs. The former
executive was a charter member of the industry group that notoriously attacked
Canada’s widely-applauded September 2003 patent-reform plan, which was
designed to allow generic producers to export drugs exclusively to poor nations. “Tobias's
appointment is a bit like trusting the CEO of ExxonMobil to lead a government
effort to promote solar power,” said Naomi Klein, writer and major criticizer
of “brand bullies.”
Beyond Tobias, the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) has also
played a role in delaying the generic drugs that could be
used for the initiative. In an
apparent attempt to slow the use of new generic drugs, PEPFAR required the
drugs receive approval from the FDA, even if the generic alternatives were
already approved by an almost identical body within the World Health Organization.
Despite the FDA’s claim that it was expediting the approval process,
its Center for Drug Evaluation and Research’s Office of Generic Drugs
(OGD) took as long as eight months to offer “tentative” approval
to some drugs, which the body could have potentially approved in as little
as six weeks. As a result, only 15 generic drugs were approved by the end of
2005, with their distribution still highly limited, as PEPFAR’s strategy
only allows for their sale and distribution “where international patent
agreements permit them to be purchased.”
Furthermore, PEPFAR funds faith-based groups, which espouse an
often ill-suited abstinence and fidelity approach while equipped
with little or no health
know how, thus siphoning financial resources from urgently needed medical
programs
in favor of diamond-in-the-sky approaches. Such has been the case in Haiti,
where PEPFAR allocates a mere 17% of its budget to antiretroviral drugs,
while focusing its attention on promoting abstinence policies, resorting
to almost
ridiculous tactics such as producing soap operas to change personal behavior.
The promising progress that even insufficient drug resources have already
made in Haiti, should clearly indicate that more resources need to be allocated
to drugs, not to flighty behaviorist approaches custom-tailored to please
the
Christian right.
Moreover, PEPFAR is required to set aside one-third of its overall
AIDS prevention budget to Bush’s highly criticized ABC strategy (Abstain, “Be Faithful”,
and use Condoms as a last resort), which seems fine in print, but it is highly
incompatible with the realities to be found in Latin America, in which women
rarely have the luxury of abstinence. Especially in the widespread situations
of extreme poverty, where young girls are forced into marriage or the sex trade,
they can not simply say “no” to sex. Once married, fidelity offers
little protection for many women. According to the 2005 U.N. AIDS Epidemic
Update, married Nicaraguan women were twice as likely as sex workers to be
living with HIV due to the irrepressible promiscuity of their husbands. "In
an age where five million people are newly infected each year, and women and
girls too often do not have the choice to abstain, an abstinence-until-marriage
program is not only irresponsible, it's really inhumane," U.S. Congresswoman
Barbara Lee told BBC last summer. Also, by specifically placing sole responsibility
on often powerless individuals, such ideology-totting approaches relieve policy
makers of initializing the courage to confront the bleak social, economic,
and cultural realities in which the AIDS epidemic thrives.
While catering to the goals of the pharmaceutical lobby and the
religious right, it is clear that the most fundamental needs
of AIDS victims lack
priority in
the President’s AIDS policies, which are geared to promote a few more
advantages for the few, to the detriment of the many. Given PEPFAR’s
controversy, AIDS and international development activists alike are appalled
by President Bush’s plan to merge U.S. aid agencies, aid accounts, and
individual programs under one director: Randall Tobias. As Deputy Secretary
of Development and administrator of USAID, the former executive, who has virtually
no experience in development work, will have unprecedented power to assert
his own agenda. Adding salt to the wound, the White House has further compromised
the ability of Latin American governments to cope with the AIDS crises by recently
cutting overall development aid to the region by 28.5%, making 2007 the third
consecutive year that significant aid was slashed and relocated to regions
of greater “strategic” importance. Thus, the AIDS agendas of Latin
American governments, already debilitated by the pervasive corporate influence
of the U.S.-dominated system of international trade, must now spread resources
even thinner as it once again compensates for cuts in development assistance.
Adverting Another Africa
As the World Bank stated in a 2003 publication on AIDS, “If the warning
signs are heeded, and appropriate prevention measures are taken in the very
near future, Latin America has the opportunity to avoid the sad stories seen
in other parts of the world. “ Yet despite the growing public outcry
over the issue, the situation is worsening, and Latin American nations have
been left to navigate a tortuous system dominated by the power of the pharmaceutical
lobby and White House diktats. The fate of Latin America not only lies within
its ability to attract international attention and support for its growing
AIDS crisis, but also in its bleak chances of outmaneuvering the system of
imbalanced trade and corporate privilege, which traditionally has had a hand
in keeping the region marginalized and impoverished. Furthermore, without a
renewed international commitment to addressing the fundamental issues of human
well-being and poverty, little hope remains for eradicating a disease that
already thrives within the ranks of the suffering and deprived, and now hopelessly
exacerbates their plight.
This analysis was prepared by COHA Research Associate Christine Crowley
The
Council on Hemispheric Affairs, founded in 1975, is an
independent, non-profit, non-partisan, tax-exempt research and information
organization. It has been described on the Senate floor as
being “one of the
nation’s most respected bodies of scholars and policy makers.” For
more information, please see our web page at www.coha.org;
or contact our Washington offices by phone (202) 223-4975,
fax (202) 223-4979,
or email coha@coha.org.
To subscribe to our free press releases, send
an email to coha@coha.org with "subscribe" as
the subject. 1
COHA Report
06.01