Health action with informed and engaged societies
As of March 15 2025, The Communication Initiative (The CI) platform is operating at a reduced level, with no new content being posted to the global website and registration/login functions disabled. (La Iniciativa de Comunicación, or CILA, will keep running.) While many interactive functions are no longer available, The CI platform remains open for public use, with all content accessible and searchable until the end of 2025. 

Please note that some links within our knowledge summaries may be broken due to changes in external websites. The denial of access to the USAID website has, for instance, left many links broken. We can only hope that these valuable resources will be made available again soon. In the meantime, our summaries may help you by gleaning key insights from those resources. 

A heartfelt thank you to our network for your support and the invaluable work you do.
Time to read
less than
1 minute
Read so far

GSK Announces Plan To Reduce Drug Prices in Developing Countries, Suggests Patent Pool To Create Drugs for Neglected Diseases

0 comments
Date
Summary

Andrew Witty, the Head of GlaxoSmithKline (GSK), has announced a plan to reduce the prices of several of GSK's patented medications in 50 of the lowest-income countries worldwide and invest 20% of its profits from low-income countries into health clinics and other infrastructure.

 

According to his plan, GSK will cut its prices for many drugs in the 50 least-developed countries to no more than 25% of the levels in the United Kingdom (UK) and united States (US) – and less if possible – and also make drugs more affordable in middle-income countries such as Brazil and India.

 

Witty also proposed the creation of a voluntary patent pool to fuel development of new treatments for neglected diseases and said that GSK would contribute its patents that could lead to the development of new treatments for malaria, tuberculosis, and other diseases. He called on other pharmaceutical companies to make patents available to third-party researchers working on treatments for neglected diseases.

 

According to a scientist at the not-for-profit drug developer Drugs for Neglected Diseases, a patent pool such as the one Witty suggests would be invaluable. At present, it can take up to one year to negotiate access to intellectual property and there are often limitations on working on the same disease with more than one pharmaceutical company at a time, based on concerns about leaking intellectual property from one company to another.

Source

Medicines Transparency Alliance (MeTA) Newsletter #3, Feb 2009; and Kaiser Daily HIV/AIDS Reports, February 18 2009.