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| SURVIVAL PLAN | |
July 15, 2003 | |
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Brazil's HIV treatment and education programs have produced impressive results, and may serve as a model for other developing countries dealing with accelerating rates of HIV infection. The NewsHour Health Unit is funded by a grant from The Henry J. Kaiser Family Foundation. |
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Pinheiro's husband, Marco, shown here in one of their wedding pictures, was in the midst of building the house when he died in 2000, one month after being diagnosed with AIDS. He told his wife he had acquired the disease through surgery. She says extramarital sexual relations may have been to blame. Now Gloria Pinheiro, who's 46 and the mother of two grown daughters, is battling AIDS, too. For a poor person in a developing country, Pinheiro is fortunate. She's being kept alive by a combination of anti-AIDS drugs, known as a cocktail, provided free by the Brazilian government. Without that assistance to her and to thousands of Brazilians with AIDS, the drugs could cost the equivalent of several thousand dollars a year. Pinheiro gets her medications at a nearby public health clinic, where she also goes for free medical care. GLORIA PINHEIRO ( Translated ): I depend on the medicines that the Brazilian government gives me, and like most of the people with HIV, we're very poor people. We wouldn't be able to survive without that. If we can't even afford food, there is no way we would be able to afford the medication. Imagine us paying for medication. |
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| Lowering the cost of drugs, raising awareness | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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(COMMERCIAL) SUSAN DENTZER: To what degree is Brazil a model for other nations battling HIV and AIDS? Many Brazilians told us that their country's responses had been uniquely shaped by their economy, their culture, and their social ideals. That means that they can't be replicated everywhere. But Brazil still does hold lessons for other nations seeking to fight AIDS, on both the treatment and prevention fronts. Dr. Humberto Costa is Brazil's health minister.
SUSAN DENTZER: Cristina Pimenta is executive director of ABIA, Brazil's leading non- governmental organization fighting AIDS. She says ABIA teamed up with other groups to fight the disease, amid the advent of democracy and the end of military dictatorships here in the 1980s. CRISTINA PIMENTA, Executive Director, ABIA: Some of the leaders that worked at ABIA then, were people that were coming from the social movement for the re-democratization of the country, and also other leaders of the gay movement and of the women's movement. We started working on the fight for the rights of people even with HIV not to lose their jobs, and then the fight for proper treatment and health services in the country. |
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| Government guarantee of anti- retroviral drugs | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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SUSAN DENTZER: The new Brazilian constitution guaranteed the right to health care, so a newly created national health system took on the role of caring for AIDS patients. That was a time when little could be done but treating these patients' secondary infections, like pneumonias, or caring for them as they died. All that changed with the widespread use of so-called anti-retroviral drugs starting in the late 1980s. One was zidovudine, known as AZT. At that time in the U.S., a course of therapy on the drug, depending on the dose, could cost anywhere from several thousand dollars to $10,000 a year. Dr. Paolo Teixeira heads Brazil's national program on sexually transmitted diseases and AIDS.
SUSAN DENTZER: By the mid-'90s, international scientific trials had shown that giving patients combinations of these new drugs, or "cocktails," suppressed the AIDS virus and drastically extended patients' lives. But if Brazil were to offer patients those multiple drugs, its outlays for medications would soar. DR. PAOLO TEIXEIRA: The conclusion was that it would be absolutely impossible to mount this policy buying drugs from big companies and paying the prices they use to... they use to adopt. SUSAN DENTZER: So the government decided to begin making its own generic versions instead. To do that, it turned to scientists here at the Oswaldo Cruz Foundation, or Fiocruz, a government-sponsored health agency located in Rio. They soon figured out how to produce generic versions of seven anti-retroviral drugs. Today, government labs in Brazil can produce 12. Jorge Lima de Magalhaes is production manager at the pharmaceutical division of Fiocruz. We asked him how he thought pharmaceutical companies had viewed Brazil's entry into AIDS drug production.
SUSAN DENTZER: Patents had expired or were not in effect on the first drugs Brazil produced, so there were no legal constraints against making generic versions. But then other new costly AIDS drugs came on the market; many of them on patent. Quietly, scientists at Fiocruz figured out how to make those drugs, too. Then the Brazilian government issued global pharmaceutical companies an ultimatum: they could continue to sell the patented drugs to Brazil, but only at deeply discounted prices. If not, Brazil would invoke provisions of global trade law that permitted the country to respond to a public health emergency by making the drugs itself. The companies opted to slash prices. DR. PAOLO TEIXEIRA: The more recent drugs offered by big companies in '99, 2000, and 2001 that were very, very... that were very expensive, after negotiations, have had their prices also cut in between 45 percent to 48 percent and 70 percent, depending on the drug.
DR. PAOLO TEIXEIRA: We concluded that we saved a lot of money. We estimate in five years about $2.2 billion saved only in direct consequence of this strategy. Of course, that we spend, on the other hand, almost the same quantity buying drugs and providing treatment. |
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| Lessons for other developing countries | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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DR. HUMBERTO COSTA: We want to negotiate the prices. But if they are selling drugs for a very big... a very big price, at a very high price, so we do not have another way without start to produce.
( Speaking Portuguese ) SUSAN DENTZER: Still, she's determined the keep the disease in check. With her daughter's help, she's now learning to read so that she can stay up to date on ways to keep herself healthy. |
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