Exploitation in the name of clinical trials
As the death toll
from the African Ebola crisis peaked, World Health Organization (WHO)
Director-General Margaret Chan delivered a scathing attack on the “profit-driven” pharmaceutical industry and its unwillingness to
develop a vaccine “for markets that cannot pay”. Chan’s criticism challenged the notion that
medical research is guided by a beneficent hand – an honourable impulse for the
betterment of humanity. In reality, research and development of drugs is driven by
markets rather than moral concern.
Our current
medicalised (Western) society is underpinned by an obsession with taking drugs
for any ailment and the expectation that life can be augmented through numerous
surgical procedures. As the demand grows for newer and better drugs for an
expanding range of conditions, so too does the need for clinical testing.
Health as a commodity repositions ethics within an economic framework, and human
experimentation is no exception. Profits, rather than people, become the prime
consideration.
Just as many
global companies have moved their manufacturing and call centres offshore, the
cheapest way to conduct clinical trials is to outsource them to the developing
world. It’s no coincidence that human experiments have rapidly migrated to the
global south as regulations become more stringent in the developed world. A major justification for moving clinical trials
abroad has been the greater availability of “naive” participants – drug-free
bodies that allow for unadulterated test conditions.
But it’s the
vulnerability of subjects that can make them more attractive. Fewer regulatory
safeguards, high levels of poverty and illiteracy, combined with an almost
blind faith in Western medicine, provide an almost endless supply of “willing”
volunteers in countries such as Africa, China, India and parts of Eurasia.
Injury or death as
a result of misconduct is hard to prove and even harder to prosecute. However,
between 2005 and 2012 the deaths of 2,644 Indian subjects were linked to
unethical clinical trials. A number of Indian school girls were alleged to have
died after taking part in trials of the Human Papillomaviruses (HPV) vaccine.
In response to
campaigns from groups such as Swasthya Adhikar Manch (Health Right Forum) and media exposure of the
exploitation of Indian subjects, in 2013 the Indian government tightened its
regulatory regime. This included the mandatory registration and accreditation
of ethics boards, and better compensation schemes for the injured and families
of deceased victims.
With India
tightening regulations for clinical trials and meeting with criticism in the
industry, the PR Vice-President of the US-based Association of Clinical
Research Organizations (ACRO), has threatened to transfer business “to more
hospitable countries to mitigate the economic damage”.
ACRO is the
representative body of the powerful and rapidly growing industry in
subcontracted medical research, which allows the pharma industry to turn out
cheaper drugs more quickly. Contract research organisations (CROs) are now
regarded as a major feature of privatised science. In 2010 they generated
$21.69 billion in revenue, and are expected to generate $32.73 billion in 2015.
One of the
advantages of using CROs is their knowledge of local conditions and networks
which facilitates access to clinics, researchers, doctors and the most
“willing” cohort of participants. However, local knowledge also involves an
understanding of conditions best suited to business rather than the well-being
of the subjects.
It is in some ways
illogical – though morally justifiable – to demand that businesses such as CROs
and the pharma industry prioritise the welfare of human subjects. Answerable to
their shareholders, the task of these businesses is to maximise profits.
Unfortunately
regulatory bodies, designed to protect the vulnerable, often fall short of
their remit. In 2004, the US clinical trials regulator, the Food and Drug
Administration (FDA), abandoned its adherence to the principles of the Helsinki
Declaration (the professional code for research ethics) in favour of the less
stringent Good Clinical Practice guidelines.
Critics accused
the FDA of effectively siding with corporate interests. Their concern was that
the guidelines had been drawn up by regulators located only in developed
countries as well as by the pharma industry itself.
The recent
acknowledgement of and international moves against the exploitation of textile
workers in the global south has shown that local activism and human rights
agendas can effectively challenge, to some degree, the harmful outcomes of the
market. We need the same type of engagement against the exploitation of
vulnerable people in clinical trials.
Courtesy: http://www.downtoearth.org.in; The
article was originally published on The Conversation
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