from the just-the-start? dept
As Techdirt has reported over the last year, the Indian government is becoming increasingly
keen
on using cheaper, generic versions of important drugs to treat
diseases, rather than paying Western-level prices its people can ill
afford. Intellectual Property Watch reports on another instance of the
Indian authorities
easing the way for low-cost versions by striking down a patent granted to Roche for the treatment of Hepatitis C. As the article explains, it's notable for at least two reasons:
the patent granted to Roche in 2006 was the
first product patent on a medicine in India after the country switched
to a product patent regime for medicines as mandated by the World Trade
Organization Agreement on Trade-Related Aspects of Intellectual Property
Rights (TRIPS). It is also India's first successful post-grant
opposition case.
Getting rid of the
first modern drug patent
in this way neatly symbolizes the country's aggressive new attitude to
Western-held monopolies on medicines. It's interesting that in this
case the opposition came not from the Indian government, but from
Sankalp Rehabilitation Trust, a non-governmental organization, which
hopes to source the drug from a manufacturer of generics cheaply enough
to be able to give it away for free. This may well inspire post-grant
opposition from other organizations seeking to provide cheaper drugs to
the sick in India through the use of generic versions.
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