Guest guest Posted August 7, 2006 Report Share Posted August 7, 2006 AHF calls on CIPLA to make AIDS Drug affordable in India Los Angeles, (ANTARA News/PRNewswire--AsiaNet) - CIPLA Prices Generic Version of Tenofovir at $700 Per Year in India, While Making Drug Available for Half That in Africa; High Domestic Price Means Essential AIDS Drug Out of Reach for Most Indians Living With HIV/AIDS. In a letter addressed to Chemical, Industrial & Pharmaceutical Laboratories (CIPLA) President Yusuf Hamied, AIDS Healthcare Foundation, (AHF) operator of free HIV/AIDS treatment clinics in the US, Africa, Latin America/Caribbean and Asia -- including two in India (in Mysore and Kushtagi) criticized the company for its too- high domestic price for its generic version of the HIV/AIDS drug tenofovir in India. While praising CIPLA for its successful efforts to lower the cost of lifesaving HIV/AIDS drugs in other parts of the developing world, such as Africa, the letter decries the company's failure to make these same drugs available at an affordable price to Indians in need. In a March 2006 New York Times article regarding the pricing of tenofovir, Mr Hamied stated that CIPLA's generic version is currently being offered in India at the price of $700 per person per year, but would eventually be made available in Africa at $350 per person per year. " Though it is commendable that CIPLA plans to increase access to tenofovir in Africa with a lower drug price, the need for affordable HIV/AIDS drugs in India is equally great, " said Weinstein, AHF's President. " India is now the country with the most people living with HIV/AIDS in the world -- even surpassing South Africa, once the epicenter of the epidemic. With a Gross National Income per capita of $630, it is virtually impossible for the majority of the 5.7 million people living with HIV/AIDS in India to afford $700 per year for one AIDS drug, much less an entire regimen. We challenge CIPLA to reflect on its own position as one of the leading producers of high-quality generic versions of lifesaving AIDS medications and consider its responsibility to make those medications easily available to its own people. " The letter, dated August 4, 2006 and signed by Mr Weinstein, refers to an advertisement placed by CIPLA to commemorate World AIDS Day in the December 10th, 2005 issue of The Economist that asked: 'What's the use of developing life-saving medicines if you can't make them affordable to the patient?' Mr Weinstein states, " AHF agrees wholeheartedly with this sentiment and takes it one step further by asking you, as an Indian company, what's the use of developing these life-saving medicines when 93% of Indians who are in such desperate need for them, cannot afford them? " According to a 2005 UNAIDS report, India now has the most people living with HIV/AIDS with 5.7 million cases, surpassing South Africa with 5.5 million cases. India now accounts for two-thirds of all HIV/AIDS cases found in Asia. At the same time, India has become a major producer of high quality generic copies of lifesaving drugs, enabling low-income countries and countries hardest hit by the AIDS epidemic, especially in Sub- Saharan Africa and parts of the Caribbean, to provide affordable drugs to people in need. Despite the contribution that generic manufacturing companies, such as CIPLA, have made in increasing access to usually high-priced antiretroviral therapies globally, these drugs are affordable only to a tiny fraction of people in need of them in India. About five in six people (84%) in need of antiretroviral treatment in Asia are not receiving it. In India, which has more than 70% of the region's total treatment needs, coverage is estimated to be 7%; only 1.6% of pregnant women and 3% of children who required it are accessing treatment. SOURCE AIDS Healthcare Foundation CONTACT: Lori Yeghiayan, AHF Associate Director of Communications, +1-323-860-5227 August 7, 2006 http://www.antara.co.id/en/seenws/?id=17764 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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