Improving Access to COVID-19 Vaccines: An Analysis of TRIPS Waiver Discourse among WTO Members, Civil Society Organizations, and Pharmaceutical Industry Stakeholders.

IF 2.5 3区 医学 Q2 PUBLIC, ENVIRONMENTAL & OCCUPATIONAL HEALTH
Health and Human Rights Pub Date : 2022-12-01
Jillian Kohler, Anna Wong, Lauren Tailor
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Throughout the COVID-19 pandemic, international access to COVID-19 vaccines and other health technologies has remained highly asymmetric. This inequity has had a particularly deleterious impact on low- and middle-income countries, engaging concerns about the human rights to health and to the equal enjoyment of the benefits of scientific progress enshrined under articles 12 and 15 of the International Covenant on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights. In response, the relationship between intellectual property rights and public health has reemerged as a subject of global interest. In October 2020, a wholesale waiver of the copyright, patent, industrial design, and undisclosed information sections of the Agreement on Trade-Related Aspects of Intellectual Property (TRIPS Agreement) was proposed by India and South Africa as a legal mechanism to increase access to affordable COVID-19 medical products. Here, we identify and evaluate the TRIPS waiver positions of World Trade Organization (WTO) members and other key stakeholders throughout the waiver's 20-month period of negotiation at the WTO. In doing so, we find that most stakeholders declined to explicitly contextualize the TRIPS waiver within the human right to health and that historical stakeholder divisions on the relationship between intellectual property and access to medicines appear largely unchanged since the early 2000s HIV/AIDS crisis. Given the WTO's consensus-based decision-making process, this illuminates key challenges faced by policy makers seeking to leverage the international trading system to improve equitable access to health technologies.

改善 COVID-19 疫苗的获取:世界贸易组织成员、民间社会组织和制药业利益相关者对《与贸易有关的知识产权协议》豁免讨论的分析。
在 COVID-19 大流行的整个过程中,国际上对 COVID-19 疫苗和其他保健技术的获取仍然极不对称。这种不平等对中低收入国家的影响尤为严重,引发了人们对《经济、社会、文化权利国际公约》第 12 和 15 条所规定的健康权和平等享受科学进步成果的人权的关注。为此,知识产权与公共卫生之间的关系再次成为全球关注的话题。2020 年 10 月,印度和南非提议全面放弃《与贸易有关的知识产权协议》(TRIPS 协议)中的版权、专利、工业设计和未披露信息部分,以此作为一种法律机制,增加人们获得负担得起的 COVID-19 医疗产品的机会。在此,我们确定并评估了世界贸易组织(WTO)成员和其他主要利益相关者在世贸组织为期 20 个月的谈判期间对《与贸易有关的知识产权协议》豁免所持的立场。在这一过程中,我们发现大多数利益相关者都拒绝明确地将《与贸易有关的知识产权协议》的豁免与健康权联系起来,而且利益相关者在知识产权与药品获取之间关系上的历史分歧自 2000 年代初的艾滋病危机以来似乎基本没有改变。鉴于世界贸易组织的决策过程是以共识为基础的,这就揭示了决策者在寻求利用国际贸易体系来改善公平获取卫生技术方面所面临的主要挑战。
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来源期刊
Health and Human Rights
Health and Human Rights PUBLIC, ENVIRONMENTAL & OCCUPATIONAL HEALTH-
CiteScore
5.50
自引率
5.40%
发文量
22
审稿时长
24 weeks
期刊介绍: Health and Human Rights began publication in 1994 under the editorship of Jonathan Mann, who was succeeded in 1997 by Sofia Gruskin. Paul Farmer, co-founder of Partners In Health, assumed the editorship in 2007. After more than a decade as a leading forum of debate on global health and rights concerns, Health and Human Rights made a significant new transition to an online, open access publication with Volume 10, Issue Number 1, in the summer of 2008. While continuing the journal’s print-only tradition of critical scholarship, Health and Human Rights, now available as both print and online text, provides an inclusive forum for action-oriented dialogue among human rights practitioners.
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