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Monday, March 3, 2025

WHO calls on Pfizer to make its COVID pill more available

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1027 days ago
20220510
FILE - In this photo provided by Pfizer, a lab technician visually inspects COVID-19 Paxlovid tablet samples in Freiburg, Germany on December 2021. The head of the World Health Organization called on the pharmaceutical Pfizer to make its coronavirus treatment more widely available to people around the world, saying the deal it previously signed to allow generic producers to make the drug for poorer countries was insufficient and that the drug was still too expensive for poor countries. (Pfizer via AP, File)

FILE - In this photo provided by Pfizer, a lab technician visually inspects COVID-19 Paxlovid tablet samples in Freiburg, Germany on December 2021. The head of the World Health Organization called on the pharmaceutical Pfizer to make its coronavirus treatment more widely available to people around the world, saying the deal it previously signed to allow generic producers to make the drug for poorer countries was insufficient and that the drug was still too expensive for poor countries. (Pfizer via AP, File)

SOURCE: The As­so­ci­at­ed Press

GENE­VA (AP) — The head of the World Health Or­ga­ni­za­tion called on Pfiz­er to make its COVID-19 treat­ment more wide­ly avail­able in poor­er coun­tries, say­ing Tues­day that the phar­ma­ceu­ti­cal com­pa­ny’s deal al­low­ing gener­ic pro­duc­ers to make the drug was in­suf­fi­cient.

WHO Di­rec­tor-Gen­er­al Tedros Ad­hanom Ghe­breye­sus said dur­ing a news brief­ing that Pfiz­er’s treat­ment was still too ex­pen­sive. He not­ed that most coun­tries in Latin Amer­i­ca had no ac­cess to Pfiz­er’s drug, Paxlovid, which has been shown to cut the risk of COVID-19 hos­pi­tal­iza­tion or death by up to 90%.

“We re­main con­cerned that low- and mid­dle-in­come coun­tries re­main un­able to ac­cess an­tivi­rals,” Tedros said,

The WHO chief warned that the un­equal dis­tri­b­u­tion of COVID-19 drugs could ul­ti­mate­ly mir­ror the gross­ly dis­pro­por­tion­ate dis­tri­b­u­tion of coro­n­avirus vac­cines.

For ex­am­ple, while coun­tries such as Britain have vac­ci­nat­ed more than 70% of their pop­u­la­tions, few­er than 16% of peo­ple in poor coun­tries have re­ceived a sin­gle dose.

Pfiz­er signed an agree­ment in No­vem­ber with the U.N.-backed Med­i­cines Patent Pool to al­low oth­er drug­mak­ers to make gener­ic copies of its pill, for use in 95 coun­tries. Some large coun­tries that suf­fered dev­as­tat­ing COVID-19 out­breaks, like Brazil, were not in­clud­ed.

Tedros said the deal does not go far enough and called for Pfiz­er to lift its ge­o­graph­ic re­stric­tions on where the gener­ic ver­sion of Paxlovid might be used, as well as to make the pill less cost­ly for de­vel­op­ing coun­tries.

The U.S. paid about $500 for each course of Pfiz­er’s treat­ment, which con­sists of three pills tak­en twice a day for five days. Its price in de­vel­op­ing coun­tries has not yet been con­firmed.

WHO’s chief sci­en­tist, Dr. Soumya Swami­nathan, said most of the world’s sup­ply of Pfiz­er’s drug had al­ready been booked by rich coun­tries, sim­i­lar to how they hoard­ed the vast ma­jor­i­ty of last year’s coro­n­avirus vac­cines.

She ap­plaud­ed Pfiz­er’s agree­ment to let oth­er drug­mak­ers pro­duce its drug but not­ed that man­u­fac­tur­ing would not start un­til next year. Swami­nathan al­so ap­pealed to Pfiz­er to drop its re­quire­ment for some de­vel­op­ing coun­tries to as­sume prod­uct li­a­bil­i­ty in case there are any prob­lems once it’s rolled out.

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