|
NUPGE hails victory in battle to end drug patent abuse
"Evergreening has sucked billions of dollars in excessive drug prices
from the wallets of Canadians over many years." - James Clancy
Ottawa
- The 337,000-member National Union of Public and General Employees (NUPGE)
welcomes the news that Ottawa will finally take action to limit the "evergreening"
of drug patents by big pharmaceutical companies and permit cheaper
generic drugs to reach the market more quickly.
Union president
James Clancy
says the announcement, expected today by Health Minister Ujjal Dosanjh,
is a victory that NUPGE has been fighting for years to win.
Canada's patent laws give big drug makers a virtual license to print
money. They now enjoy a 20-year patent on new drugs before generic
copies are let into the market to compete with them. Before this
lucrative advantage was bestowed by the Brian Mulroney Tories in the
1980s, the patent life was 12 years.
But even 20 years has not been enough to satisfy a pharmaceutical
industry hooked on huge and easy profits. Rather than let generic
companies compete after 20 years, they have resorted to abusive legal
strategies, such as routinely filing new patents on minor variations
of the same product, to extend their market monopolies.
Consumers pay huge price
The resulting expense has been borne by Canada's health care system,
and by consumers who have been forced to pay excessive drug prices for
many years beyond the legal 20-year limit. This legal finagling is
known as evergreening.
"Evergreening has sucked billions of dollars in excessive drug prices
from the wallets of Canadians over many years," says Clancy. "We can
only hope that the government will now live up to its word and bring
this abusive practice to an end," he said.
These strategies have been used to extend exclusive marketing rights
on major drugs such as the anti-depressant Paxil, the heartburn drug
Losec and Taxol, the leading treatment for breast, ovarian and lung
cancer.
According to the Canadian Generic Pharmaceutical Association (CGPA),
the practice of evergreening has cost consumers and the health care
system well over $1 billion.
The National Union played a lead role in the fight against
evergreening last year when it filed a complaint against the practice
with the Competition Bureau of Canada. Other groups involved were
Canadian Pensioners Concerned, the Canadian Health Coalition and the
Congress of Union Retirees of Canada.
Prior to that, evergreening was condemned by Roy Romanow during his
Commission on the Future of Health Care in Canada.
Billions sucked out
"Evergreening
artificially extends the patent life and market monopoly of the brand
name drug and delays (or even prevents) market entry of more sensibly
priced, therapeutically equivalent generic products," Clancy said when
the NUPGE complaint was filed with the Competition Bureau.
"The obvious effect is a substantial prevention or lessening of
competition in the pharmaceutical market. Of particular concern to
myself and the National Union of Public and General Employees is the
fact that there is no remedy whatsoever to compensate consumers when
entry of a generic drug is unnecessarily delayed."
The Competition Bureau sat on NUPGE's complaint for eight months, then
threw the issue back to the government to resolve. Many observers
feared that might end any immediate hope of reform, given the cozy
historic relationship between the Liberal party (like the Conservative
party) and major brand-name pharmaceutical companies.
However, the issue was taken up by Dosanjh, a former B.C. NDP premier,
after he was appointed health minister following the federal election
in June 2004.
Details published over the weekend in the Canada Gazette indicate that
evergreening will be effectively eliminated by minimizing the types of
patents that drug companies are allowed to file for a given product
and by restricting the number of times they can go to court to block
generic competitors.
"We hope this is a sign that the government is prepared to live up
to its promise of curbing runaway drug costs by prohibiting
direct-to-consumer drug advertising and implementing a national
pharmaceutical strategy," Clancy said. NUPGE
More information:
• Contact Mike Luff
613 228-9800
Web posted by NUPGE:
12 December 2004
More
News
News Archive
Media releases
|