MSF to UN General Assembly: Set Medical Priorities that Meet People’s Health Needs

Diana Zeyneb Alhindawi

New report exposes pharmaceutical industry failings and highlights new ways of researching and developing medicines that address public health needs.

NEW YORK/GENEVA September 13, 2016—Governments must do more to promote the development of desperately-needed new medicines, vaccines, and diagnostics at affordable prices, said the international medical humanitarian organization Doctors Without Borders/Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF), in a new report released before the United Nations General Assembly this week.

As the 193 UN Member States meet at the General Assembly in New York this week, countries must prioritize urgent action to address why the current system of research and development (R&D) into essential new drugs—such as antibiotics—fails to help patients across the world and often results in sky-high prices.

MSF’s report, Lives on the Edge: Time to Align  Medical Research and Development with People’s Health Needs, diagnoses the failure of the current R&D system, and outlines new ways of developing tools to better address the medical needs of people at prices they can afford. Governments must seize the opportunity to take action now, particularly in light of the forthcoming High-Level Panel on Access to Medicines report—commissioned by the UN Secretary General—on these issues, and as world leaders gather at a UN summit to agree to collective action to address the crisis of drug-resistant infections, and antimicrobial resistance.

“People in poor and wealthy countries alike are now finding that the medicines they need either don’t exist, or are priced so high they can’t afford them," said Katy Athersuch, medical access and innovation policy advisor of MSF’s Access Campaign. "Governments need to solve these problems. Governments must seize the opportunity to support measures that will ensure new affordable medicines are developed to meet urgent health needs. They cannot afford to simply prescribe the same old failed policies.”

Pharmaceutical corporations woefully under-invest in research for diseases that aren’t lucrative, while governments have failed to ensure that taxpayer-funded research addresses priority health needs. A lack of diagnostic tools, vaccines, and medicines for Ebola and drug-resistant infections, for example, illustrate that the industry’s focus is on how the financial bottom line looks for companies and their shareholders, rather than meeting pressing medical needs. With new hepatitis C medicines priced at up to $1,000 per pill, the exorbitant prices pharmaceutical corporations charge people for lifesaving medicines is under intense scrutiny across many of the 193 UN member countries.

Click Here to Read the Report 

“The needs of people in the poorest countries are going unnoticed by pharmaceutical corporations,” said Jennifer Hughes, tuberculosis (TB) doctor for MSF South Africa. In the last half century, we’ve had just two new drugs developed to treat tuberculosis—the world’s top infectious disease killer responsible for 1.5 million deaths per year. The people who MSF treats for drug-resistant TB deserve treatments whose side effects don’t leave them deaf or suicidal, and give them better odds of being cured than just one in two. But the current way new drugs get developed means that pharmaceutical corporations aren’t interested in delivering better treatments for TB; there’s not enough profit in it for them.”

Governments must introduce new approaches to R&D for medical tools to better diagnose and treat the health needs of people in all countries at affordable prices. These approaches need to break the links that tie medical research to high prices through monopoly-based market protections. One example of this new approach to R&D is the 3P Project (Push, Pull, Pool)—an initiative between MSF and other organizations involved in TB. The project aims to conduct collaborative research to develop new treatment regimens for TB by sharing data and intellectual property, and paying for research using a novel combination of grants and prizes.

“The old ways of conducting R&D for new medicines clearly no longer works—not for the poorest countries, and increasingly not for the wealthiest countries either,” Athersuch said. “We need to completely rewrite the rule-book for medical R&D; it is time to try something new.  With the UN Secretary General spearheading an effort to improve innovation of, and access to, health technologies, and a high-level global summit taking place on the global crisis of drug-resistant infections, this year’s UN General Assembly offers critical opportunities for governments to chart a new course for medical R&D.”