![]() |
||||||
|
UC
Berkeley School of Law In 2006, the Commission on Intellectual Property Rights, Innovation, and Public Health, recommended the World Health Organization (WHO) and World Intellectual Property Organization (WIPO) play a “bigger role in promoting”
patent pools for upstream technologies relevant to developing countries. Patent pools have facilitated the creation of
aircraft, DVDs, innovations arising from the SARS virus genome, and digital music files. Forming a patent pool for
neglected disease or HIV/AIDS medicines could facilitate powerful innovation with immediate benefit to the health of
millions. Next, in 2007, Knowledge Ecology International (KEI) and Medécins sans Frontières (MSF, Doctors Without Borders)
proposed that UNITAID host an HIV/AIDS medicines patent pool. The concept attracted great interest from actors
in the pharmaceutical, biotech, NGO, and academic sectors. Supported by the WHO’s Global Strategy and Plan of
Action, UNITAID has worked toward developing this patent pool, consulting with patent-owners and generic
medicines producers, MSF, KEI, and Universities Allied for Essential Medicines (UAEM). Early in 2009, GlaxoSmithKline CEO Andrew Witty announced his company’s interest in participating in a different
patent pool, one for neglected diseases:
Panelists from UNITAID, Gilead, GlaxoSmithKline, the FTC, Doctors Without Borders, the Drugs for Neglected Disease Initiative, Emory University, Duke University, UC Berkeley, VIA Licensing, Wilson Sonsini Goodrich & Rosati, Fenwick & West, Fish & Richardson, and others will describe current and planned endeavors to increase innovation and access to therapies. Designed to facilitate collaboration across sectors, the workshop aims to combine the best science and the best practices of university, industry, and not-for-profit actors to address this preeminent challenge of our generation. Participants include several representatives from Pfizer, Sanofi Pasteur, Merck, Merck Frosst Canada, the Gates Foundation, Soros Foundation, Medicines for Malaria Venture, Institute for One World Health, Project Inform, and tech transfer managers from Stanford, Berkeley, UCLA, UC Davis, Columbia, Boston University, Johns Hopkins, Wisconsin, UNC, and the University of British Columbia. The University of California and UAEM-Berkeley are uniquely positioned to host this workshop. The UC’s ten
campuses comprise America's most prolific academic biotech innovator, and its technology transfer offices are among
most active in the country. Berkeley Law has been the center of IP and Law and Technology studies for over a decade.
Universities Allied for Essential Medicines advocates licensing and research strategies that facilitate access to life-saving
medicines in developing countries. Since 2003, UAEM’s UC chapters have engaged these issues across eight UC
campuses and at the UC Office of the President. | |||||