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realtahiramin's profile
Tahir Amin
Tahir Amin
Tahir Amin
Verified account
@realtahiramin

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Tahir AminVerified account

@realtahiramin

Co-ED @IMAKGlobal. IP lawyer. Working to build an equitable health system and economy without IP monopolies.Thinking about whether "innovation" equals progress.

Brooklyn, NY
i-mak.org
Joined October 2017

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    Tahir Amin‏Verified account @realtahiramin 23 Nov 2020

    This @WSJ Editorial Board piece, which has the jingoism of Rudyard Kipling's writings, deserves a fuller response. But in this thread I'm going to focus on one particular sentence in the opinion to help enlighten the thinking of our 'friends' at the @WSJ.https://on.wsj.com/2IZPlFC 

    3:04 PM - 23 Nov 2020
    • 509 Retweets
    • 910 Likes
    • BostonMermaids Krishna Visweswaran Muna adwoa gyimah-brempong BlockYourTweet Avanindra kumar Shijith Kunhitty Centrist🇮🇳🇱🇷 Tapas Nair
    23 replies 509 retweets 910 likes
      1. New conversation
      2. Tahir Amin‏Verified account @realtahiramin 23 Nov 2020

        That sentence is: "It’s not clear developing countries even have the ability to manufacture large-scale, complex technologies like Moderna’s mRNA vaccine or Eli Lilly’s monoclonal antibody cocktail—let alone distribute them."

        4 replies 60 retweets 211 likes
        Show this thread
      3. Tahir Amin‏Verified account @realtahiramin 23 Nov 2020

        Putting aside the @WSJ's superiority complex, it's worth looking at some examples in the past where similar statements made by those in the western hemisphere about the scientific/technological abilities of countries in the global south have been proven wrong.

        1 reply 48 retweets 255 likes
        Show this thread
      4. Tahir Amin‏Verified account @realtahiramin 23 Nov 2020

        Case 1: In the 80s Merck and GSK had developed recombinant vaccines and held a monopoly with over 90 patents covering manufacturing processes. @WHO recommended every child be vaccinated but at $US23 a dose most Indian families could not afford.

        1 reply 40 retweets 183 likes
        Show this thread
      5. Tahir Amin‏Verified account @realtahiramin 23 Nov 2020

        Step in Shantha Biotechnics (later acquired by Sanofi). When the founder of Shantha approached a western firm for tech transfer, he was told: "even if you can afford to buy the technology your scientists cannot understand recombinant technology in the least".pic.twitter.com/rMycTTfQyO

        4 replies 75 retweets 252 likes
        Show this thread
      6. Tahir Amin‏Verified account @realtahiramin 23 Nov 2020

        Shantha went on to produce India's first home-grown recombinant product at $1 a dose. The vaccine was produced in a yeast system, the first of its kind for a commercial product, and different from that used in Merck and GSK's vaccines.https://bit.ly/3l6VFZD 

        2 replies 95 retweets 344 likes
        Show this thread
      7. Tahir Amin‏Verified account @realtahiramin 23 Nov 2020

        Because of the $1 dose price, it enabled the low-cost mass vaccination through organisations such as UNICEF.

        1 reply 36 retweets 232 likes
        Show this thread
      8. Tahir Amin‏Verified account @realtahiramin 23 Nov 2020

        Case 2: When the avian flu crisis hit, Gilead/Roche drug Tamiflu was pushed as the first line treatment (later revealed to not be effective). Roche said it would be difficult for generic companies in India and the global south to synthesise the drug because of all the steps.

        1 reply 36 retweets 174 likes
        Show this thread
      9. Tahir Amin‏Verified account @realtahiramin 23 Nov 2020

        The @WSJ ran this back story in 2005 using language which questioned the claims of generic companies in the global south (nothing changes). I lived in India at the time and saw a Indian companies develop generic stockpiles of Tamiflu within months.https://on.wsj.com/39boKAK 

        1 reply 47 retweets 224 likes
        Show this thread
      10. Tahir Amin‏Verified account @realtahiramin 23 Nov 2020

        Case 3: more recently with remdesivir, @GileadSciences said the the production is both resource and time intensive with some manufacturing steps taking weeks to complete. By July Hetero and Cipla were ready to dispatch generic versionshttps://bit.ly/3395Oi2 

        2 replies 32 retweets 184 likes
        Show this thread
      11. Tahir Amin‏Verified account @realtahiramin 23 Nov 2020

        Having studied vaccine manufacturing capabilities in the global south on behalf of @GAVI, contrary to earlier research and beliefs, what we found was IP issues, including patents, can be a barrier to preventing cheaper vaccines in the market place. https://bit.ly/3fpKdab pic.twitter.com/KBKGHapEAo

        4 replies 82 retweets 268 likes
        Show this thread
      12. Tahir Amin‏Verified account @realtahiramin 23 Nov 2020

        But the @WSJ is not concerned about the lives of people in these "poorer" countries, but more about maintaining a proprietary knowledge system that creates comparative advantage for a few countries.

        5 replies 76 retweets 337 likes
        Show this thread
      13. Tahir Amin‏Verified account @realtahiramin 23 Nov 2020

        And while recognising that mRNA technology hasn't been used before,@WSJ's statement about how "developing" countries may not have the ability to manufacture large scale complex technologies is the kind of scientific racism we saw in the days of imperialism. Time the @WSJ woke up.

        13 replies 107 retweets 498 likes
        Show this thread
      14. End of conversation

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