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Government Medicine

World Health Leaders Stress Need For Sharing of Vaccines (theguardian.com) 127

Long-time Slashdot reader tomtermite shares a report from The Guardian: Ministers and officials from every nation will meet via video link on Monday for the annual world health assembly, which is expected to be dominated by efforts to stop rich countries monopolising drugs and future vaccines against Covid-19... The leaders of Italy, France, Germany and Norway, together with the European commission and council, called earlier this month for any innovative tools, therapeutics or vaccines to be shared equally and fairly.

"If we can develop a vaccine that is produced by the world, for the whole world, this will be a unique global public good of the 21st century," they said in a statement.

The sole resolution before the assembly this year is an EU proposal for a voluntary patent pool. Drug and vaccine companies would then be under pressure to give up the monopoly that patents allow them on their inventions, which means they can charge high prices, so that all countries can make or buy affordable versions. In the weeks of negotiations leading up to the meeting, which is scheduled to last for less than a day, there has been a dispute over the language of the resolution. Countries with major pharmaceutical companies argue they need patents to guarantee sufficiently high prices in wealthy nations to recoup their research and development costs....

Oxfam's health policy manager, Anna Marriott, said: "This week's letter calling for a people's vaccine, which was signed by more than 140 world leaders and experts, sets the bar for the scale of ambition we need to meet the challenge before us...." [Research charity] Wellcome published a poll on Sunday of 2,000 people in the UK which found 96% supported the idea that national governments should work together to ensure that treatments and vaccines can be manufactured in as many countries as possible and distributed globally to everyone who needs them.

"We need vaccines and treatments that will work for the world, and any advances must be available to all countries equally, without exception," said Alex Harris, the head of global policy at Wellcome.

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World Health Leaders Stress Need For Sharing of Vaccines

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  • Will the Donald even share it with anyone else but himself?
    • Trump won't even wear a mask. Do you think he'll get a vaccine?
      • by gtall ( 79522 )

        Sure he will, he'll just lie about. He's above lying like a brick is above the Sargasso Sea (Douglas Adams).

    • Re:Donald Trump (Score:5, Informative)

      by arglebargle_xiv ( 2212710 ) on Sunday May 17, 2020 @07:34PM (#60071880)
      He's not included. The title says "World Leaders", which implicitly excludes Trump.
      • Thank goodness! We Americans have done a totally shit job as "world leader". It's good someone finally decided to put an end to it. All we ever did is launch wars of aggression against countries of brown people who never attacked us. We spent ourselves broke trying this crap. And who asked us to be world leader, anyway? World bully is more like it.

        World leadership does not employ or feed your starved citizens. It's a white elephant. Any country looks after its own interest first and then only other

        • I nominate the King of Tonga to be the next world leader. Sure, he's not perfect, there's a bit of royal scandal now and then, and lacks a lot of global economic acumen. But he's far away and few people pay attention to him, which is what I look for in a world leader.

        • by Corbets ( 169101 )

          If you think Angela Merkel has been quiet lately, then perhaps you should use a different news source. The fact that you haven’t heard anything is simply indicative of the media you choose to consume.

  • Who couldn't have predicted this concern.
    • Because pandemics have never happened? Because science didn't tell us how viruses reproduce and that it was just a matter of time?
      • They may understand science, but their understanding of economics isn't so good.

        They seem to believe that the best way to spur innovation is to ensure no one can profit from it.

        • They understand economics as well as the next person, the thing is it not about 1 or the other things can have levels, It is not allow millions of people to die because people need to make money, or complete communism where everything is shared no matter the amount of work you do. There is a middle way. Having either party being able to set a price will not work out well if it is the consumer it will be 0, if it the producer as much they can charge and have no relation at all to the actual cost of productio

          • by ShanghaiBill ( 739463 ) on Sunday May 17, 2020 @01:43PM (#60070762)

            There are nearly 8 billion people in the world. Let's say 4 billion of them get the vaccine. Let's say the inventor charges a $10 fee. That is $40B. That is quite an incentive, but it is far less than the economic cost of the pandemic for ONE DAY just in America.

            If a potential profit of $40B speeds up the vaccine by a single day, it is worth it.

            The entire world-wide profit of the pharmaceutical companies last year was about $400B.

            That is far less than the cost of the lockdowns for a single week.

            We need to fix the problem, not fret that the people actually solving the problem may be rewarded for their efforts.

            • Why do you think the inventor will charge ONLY a $10 fee? More likely a $10000 fee, until supplies ramp up. Whether they ramp up because of licensed producers or whether a country that is smart enough to indulge in state-supported industrial espionage is delivering it, doesn't matter. Trump can shout about Huawei all he wants, but the rest of the world is going to buy their gear. It's only Americans dumb enough to be conned by economic philosophy to paying ridiculous prices.

              What's the US going to do. Bomb a

              • The objection to Huawei involves more than economic philosophy, there's also the issue of spy firmware that makes Huawei unsuitable for any infrastructure.
              • Why do you think the inventor will charge ONLY a $10 fee? More likely a $10000 fee, until supplies ramp up.

                That only works if you manage to be out in front of everyone else. If several companies are on similar timelines then you are only going to have a short time of exclusive sales before facing competition. I expect what will happen is several vaccines will be approved at about the same time and the company that profits the most will be the one who can ramp up production and keep costs down the most.

        • by cdsparrow ( 658739 ) on Sunday May 17, 2020 @01:38PM (#60070736)

          A vaccine this widely distributed can be made cheaply though. Medicine has to amortized across how many doses will be used of it. If you spend 1bil making a medicine that 100 people will take, it's gonna be stupid expensive, but if 1bil people take it, can make it cheap. On the other hand, even if you license it out for others to use, you aren't going to use your own production capacity to help others until your country is covered, after that can make it for others. So countries with good biomed production will obviously get their people fixed before helping the countries that can't make it.

          • So countries with good biomed production will obviously get their people fixed before helping the countries that can't make it.

            This is true, but it is not a sensible policy.

            We should focus on vaccinating the over-50s and perhaps the over-40s. But younger people face little risk and children face almost no risk.

            Once we get the at-risk people vaccinated, it will save more lives to start sending the vaccines to poor countries rather than vaccinating low-risk people at home.

  • by Rick Schumann ( 4662797 ) on Sunday May 17, 2020 @12:41PM (#60070576) Journal
    No 'proprietary' bullshit. Once developed, you tell everyone how to make it, and it becomes public domain.
    Furthermore any pharmaceutical company with a lick of sense sells it at cost.
    • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 )

      I doubt they could keep it secret anyway. Every spy agency in the world would be after it, through hacking or through physical theft or even kidnapping the people who know about it. No multinational company could be involved in discovery or manufacturer for fear of heavy sanctions in every country it has any presence which doesn't get the vaccine.

      In fact even trying to make money off it will be next to impossible. Once places like India and China get hold of it they will be producing generic versions regard

    • by Brain-Fu ( 1274756 ) on Sunday May 17, 2020 @01:07PM (#60070648) Homepage Journal

      The traditional answer is that doing the research to produce reliable vaccines (or medicines of any kind) has a very, very high upfront cost. It is a huge amount of capital that a company must fork over while taking on a huge risk (since it might just not pan out, and all that money will be lost). The only way to keep the business viable is to award them patents so they can recoup those costs and actually make a profit on all that research. Without that, they just won't be able to afford to do the research, and the world won't get the resultant medicines.

      So, this argument has nothing to do with morality, it is entirely a matter of practicality. If the money ain't there, the research can't happen.

      It seems like there is an obvious answer, though: fund the research through taxpayer money. A government-run medical drug and vaccine research lab can assume the same risks without being destroyed when some research doesn't pan out, and anything produced by such a lab will automatically be public domain. Problem solved.

      Personally I tend to favor the capitalist approach to problem solving, but I am no extremist, and in this case I think medical research is a specific institution that works better if it is publicly owned and the results of the research are automatically in the public domain. It feels like a very appropriate balance.

      • The only way to keep the business viable is to award them patents

        Why are patents the "only way"?

        I can think of several ways for medicine to be profitable without creating artificial scarcity.

      • Consider this: If you have no customers, then you can't sell your product. If our civilization completely collapses because half the world or more is dead then your company won't exist anymore. This isn't about marketing strategy anymore this is about survival. I wouldn't even be surprised if the government of whatever country the company is that develops the vaccine is in strong-arms them into releasing all manufacturing data and furthermore forces them to limit the price.
        • by aardvarkjoe ( 156801 ) on Sunday May 17, 2020 @01:40PM (#60070746)

          Consider this: If you have no customers, then you can't sell your product. If our civilization completely collapses because half the world or more is dead then your company won't exist anymore.

          You realize that neither of those scenarios is relevant to COVID-19 vaccines, right? This isn't a zombie apocalypse.

          • Have you been outside in the last couple months? It's damned near a fucking zombie apocalypse, the way people are acting.
            • Have you been outside in the last couple months? It's damned near a fucking zombie apocalypse, the way people are acting.

              I guess it depends on where you live.

              Aside from seeing some masks when you got to stores, etc.....things don't look really all that different around here.

              More people at home, but when you pass them when out on a walk or bike ride or see them out working in the yards (every day activities) you'd likely never know much serious was going on....people still wave and talk to each other, jus

            • A large part of peculiar behavior in the last 2 months has been due to government fear-mongering and tyrannical practices.
              • It's not 'government fear mongering' if you were really paying attention, the 'fear mongering' is coming from the idiots who are in a constant state of panic, running around trying to get everyone else to panic along with them.
                So far as 'tyrannical practices' go, the precautions mandated aren't fun but they're not particularly draconian, especially if you remember that they could have just jumped straight to Martial Law and had orders to detain and/or shoot anyone wandering around outside 'without authoriz
        • Half the world dead? Is that a general philosophical comment or do you actually believe that cv19 has the potential to kill 4 billion people?
          • If there's no vaccine or insufficient vaccine and everyone starts fucking up, yes, billions could die, theoretically. This clearly ain't amateur night anymore.
            • by Q-Hack! ( 37846 )

              If there's no vaccine or insufficient vaccine and everyone starts fucking up, yes, billions could die, theoretically. This clearly ain't amateur night anymore.

              I see math isn't your strong point.

              7 billion people in the world.
              ~7% above the age of 65 or about 490 million (wiki world population)
              At age 80 have a 14.8% chance of dying.
              At age 65 have a 3.6% chance of dying.
              At age 50 or younger less than 1% chance of dying.

              Even if you consider that there could be a +/-2% statistical error in the above numbers. Where exactly to you come up with billions could die from this virus?

              • by jiriw ( 444695 )

                Be very careful what you 'wish' for. Those numbers only hold true with medicals system in good condition. As soon as triage is needed outside, on the hospital parking lot, those numbers fly out of the window. That's what GP mentioned about 'everyone starts fucking up'.

      • The only way to keep the business viable is to award them patents so they can recoup those costs and actually make a profit on all that research.

        There is another way. Let them race to the finish line and patent whatever they want, then the government can buy the patents at market value and release it for free.

        The company makes an immediate profit and the whole world gets the vaccine at cost.

      • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 )

        The entire world wide medicine research budget is only $35bn. Given the much money we are losing to this nations should be finding this research.

        Longer term we should set up an international fund to keep on top of this kind of thing.

      • this argument has nothing to do with morality, it is entirely a matter of practicality.

        If a morality isn't practical, it has no worth whatsoever.

    • by physicsphairy ( 720718 ) on Sunday May 17, 2020 @01:46PM (#60070774)

      Step #2: massive exit from present vaccine development, next pandemic occurs and, for some mysterious reason, not a single company is interested in developing a vaccine, Slashdot User 462797 declares triumphant victory over capitalists

      Look, we do need to ramp up production as much as possible. And make sure the potential vaccine(s) gets to everyone, regardless of economic status. But we should also be literally heaping gold on whatever and whoever can save us, maybe even those who try and don't succeed. On no account should we turn it into a penalty where every dollar you sink into development becomes a loss to your bottom line. That would be like trying to offer the public 'free healthcare' by announcing doctors must not receive a salary. *Probably* not going to work out for your healthcare system in the long term.

      By all means let governments pay the bills and it's great if there are subsidies for poor countries. Negotiate rights for global production. But certainly make this worth the investment for those who have jumped in to meet our need when our need was great.

      • You're suggesting that commercial entities would stop working on vaccines if they lost the race to develop this one? That seems unlikely, they have lost many such races. That's part of commercial drug development, and that redundancy and wasted effort is part of the reason why it's so expensive.
        • Oh, ye of little understanding.

          His point was that commercial entities would stop working on new vaccines if government stole the new vaccine from its developer, made sure the developer wouldn't profit from it, and made it quite clear that this would be government policy in the future.

    • Comment removed based on user account deletion
    • by rastos1 ( 601318 )

      Eh, now you have discovered that public domain is a thing? After years of trying to eradicate it? Now when "intellectual property" suddenly threatens your survival?

      Let's make a deal: the vaccine is shared for free with anyone who agrees to roll back the copyright and patent crap rules created during last 100 years.

      (Nothing personal against you, Rick.)

    • So don't pay the people who put their time and money into making it?

      Maybe the work you do belonged to the public all along and so you should give it away also.
  • What is likely to be acceptable to those developing vaccines is that a license is granted to use the patent for anyone producing a Covid-19 vaccine that is being produced on a non-profit basis. That way the original patent owner gets to protect their research investment by keeping the technology for use in other products while at the same time making a contribution to the humanitarian effort.
  • Hmm. We have countries where vaccines and therapeutic drugs won't be developed. They've spent the last few decades leveling their societies, making sure that achievement has limited rewards versus just going through the motions. Especially in health fields where profits are limited.

    On the other hand, you have counties with income inequality. Income inequality provides a very strong incentive to achieve, to invent, to push the bounds of technology and discovery forward. Profits for advancement are high.

  • LOL, where are the communism folks now! Sure when the whole world needs it, communism asks socialism for help!
  • Stop Rich Countries Profiting? WTF, Well, WHO does that leave left? The country that developed the Virus China the country that is testing their shit Right Fucking now on Canadians.... one where I eventually may be forced to take...
  • "The leaders of Italy, France, Germany and Norway, together with the European commission and council, called earlier this month for any innovative tools, therapeutics or vaccines to be shared equally and fairly."

    The text linked to the citation https://www.theguardian.com/wo... [theguardian.com] was "equally and fairly" but the word "equal" does not appear in the article. Nor does the word "fair". What the fuck are you trying to pull?

  • Instead article says some countries will be contributing money for research and vaccine... not the same thing. The big pharmy companies will make and sell and license as per usual.

    That parasite Bill Gates just wants a piece of that action, that's why he blathers about vaccinating 7 billion people.

  • If countries are subsidising wages for people to stay home, safe, bust basically do nothing... why cant countries all donate to a global fund for pharmasuticals to cover up front costs?
    Wouldnt that make this less of a concern?

    • Do you know how many vaccines are in development? Over 80 last I heard Which ones are you going to direct the countries to fund? Most if not all will be useless. In 60 years of making coronavirus vaccines zero are approved for use, we may have zero two years from now.

      • Good point, and clearly a topic i know very little about.

        I guess the nature of my question had more to do with it becoming a global effort, not a handout. Even if the above weren't the vehicle behind it.

        Also that it feels like backing peoples wages and not having them work, might not he as smart if we dont have an endgame. One would think that there are different ways every country could contribute in some was, onviously some more than others too. There has to be a way to make it make sense... even thoug

  • I thought that sharing needles was bad

  • Of course any vaccine will be available to the entire world like all medicine. And like all medicine, the Americans will pay top dollar to subsidize the low cost for socialist nations where the government controls the price (directly or indirectly, they do control it).
  • one little bit.
    Then there are the Covid deniers.

    Even if we have a working vaccine by the end of the year, there are a number of groups who will go out of their way to stop people from getting protection. That could well reduce the effectiveness of any Vaccine.

    Getting a Vaccine is only the first of many problems to get around before this is over.

  • $DrugCorp$ won't go for OSD [Open Source Drug]...
    ...nor will the governments that they fund...

  • These NGOs are huge and corrupt. Look at FIFA.
    • by Corbets ( 169101 )

      The fact that you put the head of a football association in the same league as a UN organization is quite telling of your knowledge on the subject.

  • I want to see an elected politician kill his own people because he sent some of it elsewhere while it was still needed.

    Good luck with that.

    • Look in the rearview mirror at all the money wasted in places like Vietnam until the even the avereage American in the street realized what a waste of time, money, and lives that was.

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