pharmaceutical research

Changing the Way They Do Business

This pharmacy at the Evangel Hospital in Jos, Nigeria could be one of the beneficiaries of cheaper drugs and better facilities from GSK. Photo:<a href="http://www.flickr.com/photos/blyth/1439256349/"> MikeBlyth (flickr)</a>
This pharmacy at the Evangel Hospital in Jos, Nigeria could be one of the beneficiaries of cheaper drugs and better facilities from GSK. Photo: MikeBlyth (flickr)

Pharmaceutical companies are often seen as villains for making life-saving drugs so expensive the poor can't afford them. But what if a new CEO was making drugs more affordable and sharing secrets that would lower profits but result in more cures?

Andrew Witty is the new chief executive of GlaxoSmithKline (GSK) — the second largest drug company in the world. Witty recently outlined his plan to radically shift GSK policy to make four major changes that will help the developing world:

1. Slash drug prices to 25 percent (or lower) of their current U.S. and UK levels in the world's 50 poorest nations, and make drugs more affordable in middle-income countries like Brazil.

2. Reinvest 20 percent of drug profits made in developing countries to support health clinics and pay medical workers in those same countries.

3. Place their research on neglected diseases (with the exception of HIV) into a patent pool to share with other scientists to dramatically speed up medical breakthroughs.

4. Invite researchers from other governments, companies, and NGOs to participate in their research on tropical diseases at their institute at Tres Cantos in Spain.

So why would GSK do this? Witty told the Guardian he was so tired of hearing speeches about how terrible it is that there has been no progress in tuberculosis research or treatments for other diseases that he decided to do something about it.

We work like crazy to come up with the next great medicine, knowing that it's likely to get used an awful lot in developed countries, but we could do something for developing countries. Are we working as hard on that? I want to be able to say yes we are, and that's what this is all about – trying to make sure we are even-handed in terms of our efforts to find solutions not just for developed but for developing countries.

Lowering drug prices will help — but without adequate health care infrastructure, even cheaper drugs might not be accessible. That's what makes reinvesting profits to support clinics and pay medical workers' salaries so important, because it will increase access to these drugs.

But the most important change Witty has proposed is sharing GSK's research. By placing their research into patent pools, GSK will dramatically increase the speed of early-stage R&D activities and the likelihood of finding cures to neglected diseases.

"This is a gutsy move in a commercial world" said Mike French, World Vision's director of advocacy. "Witty has demonstrated a willingness to make saving lives a business goal along with making money."

From the Archives

Finding Cures for Tropical Diseases

Previously filed under: North America, Technology
Can open source technology bring new pharmaceutical solutions to disease in developing countries?

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