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Challenges to Implementation

Moderator: Jonathan D. Quick
Gareth O. Williams
Gary S. Cooper
Yuri Dikhanov
August 12, 2004
Running Time: 37:09
About the Lecture

About the Lecture

In this concluding panel about international drug pricing, speakers discuss the legal pitfalls and complexities involved in global pharmaceutical trade. Gareth Williams notes that the implementation of the key TRIPS agreement (an international law that helps defend intellectual property) has been slow. The law “cannot prevent nations from taking steps to protect public health,” and its implementation regarding drug patents has been delayed until 2016 for developing nations. The European Union has created a “fortress Europe,” where you can’t import products from outside the community. Gary Goodwin cautions conference attendees against chatting even informally about drug prices, lest they be viewed by authorities as colluding. Competition watchdogs are increasingly sensitive to the possibility that pharmaceutical industry representatives engage in price-fixing schemes whenever they meet—including public forums such as this. “Any suggestion that pharmaceutical companies today should reach consensus on a pricing formula they might use or advocate, would be problematic and should not be entertained.” Yuri Dikhanov describes efforts within the World Bank to create sophisticated formulas by which to calculate the wealth, income and purchasing power not only of different nations but of their citizens. One part of this enterprise is the International Comparison Project, which attempts to gauge 1000-plus prices for products and services across 150 countries. This “very complex aggregate” would form the basis for an index that might ultimately enable more equitable and realistic price-setting for medicines internationally.

    Lecture Details

  • Location: Wong Auditorium

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About the Speakers

About the Speakers

Moderator: Jonathan D. Quick

President & CEO
Management Sciences for Health, Inc.

Dr. Jonathan Quick leads Management Sciences for Health, which aims to improve health care around the world through better public policy and management. Previously, he was Director of Essential Drugs and Medicines Policy for the World Health Organization (WHO) in Geneva. Quick graduated with an A.B. degree magna cum laude from Harvard University, and an M.D. with distinction in research and a Masters in Public Health from the University of Rochester; USA. Quick is a family physician and public health management specialist. He spent nearly 20 years of work in international health. He served as a long-term advisor for health systems development in Pakistan and Kenya and carried out assignments in over 20 countries in Africa, Asia, and Latin America. He practiced family medicine in the U.S. Indian Health Service, Oklahoma and Boston Quick has written or edited 11 books and more than 40 articles and chapters on essential medicines, public health, stress management, and executive health. He is Adjunct Associate Professor of Public Health, Boston University School of Public Health; a Diplomat of the American Board of Family Practice; a Fellow of the Royal Society of Medicine (UK); and a fellow of the American College of Preventive Medicine.

Gareth O. Williams

Chartered Patent Attorney, Marks & Clerk Patent and Trade Mark Attorneys

Gary S. Cooper

Associate Attorney, Goodwin Procter LLP

Yuri Dikhanov

Economist, World Bank

About the Host

About the Host

MIT Sloan School of Management