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Thailand Can Produce Favipiravir for COVID Patients


webfact

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3 hours ago, ukrules said:

This will come back to haunt them in the future, it's an almost completely useless drug which is about as effective as a placebo based on things I've read.

 

Regardless of how useless it is I suspect the Japanese won't like this move and there will be serious legal issues in the future.

 

Verdict is still out

 

https://www.nihr.ac.uk/news/favipiravir-to-be-investigated-as-a-possible-covid-19-treatment-for-at-home-recovery-in-the-principle-trial/27426

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3 hours ago, webfact said:

finding out that the company that developed it did not present any further innovation of the drug. As a result, no one had a patent on it.

 

As Tommy Cooper used to say "Just like that"........If the company perfected the drug

what further development was it expected to do, I think Thailand will be looking at

a lawsuit over this,  that must be why car ,phone companies are always developing

their products, there afraid ,Thailand will take them over and make them here ????

 

regards Worgeordie

 

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I can't find any information that suggests Favipiravir is patented by Fujifilm Toyama - they words developed and manufactured are used instead.

 

So, was the recent Patent application in Thailand an attempt to appropriate the worldwide patent from under Japan? I am confused on that one.

 

Regardless, if it not patented, then I don't see the issue with Thailand (or anyone else) approving it for use in Thailand and manufacturing it domestically.

 

Incidentally, it was developed by the US Dept of Defense, and is currently not approved in UK and USA (according to Wiki).

 

If anyone finds any further data, please post. This is interesting.

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great news, but might take some 3 months before it would be available. For that long thailand has already importing ready pills.

It's antiviral medicine, approved for covid in some few countries, including thailand. 

It has less side effects than tamiflu, another antiviral used also in thailand for covid (that one one is made by the GPO for many years as generic, but not cheap and not available at pharmacies).

In face of pandemic, and potential of thousand times more deadly (look at indian mutation and India), that what thailand has experienced so far, I would not worry about lawsuits, diplomatic back clash. It's a fight for survival.

Even if a placebo for covid, it treats flu, and possible the other viruses, which is not deadly, but widespread and in case of co-infection will save lives.

 

India has just started to make this medicine in 4x of the original potency 200mg. Daily recommendation for covid is 2g.

 

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I have no knowledge of the drug industry. 

Perhaps someone who does could enlighten me; is this like a vaccine that takes months to make even if you know exactly how (like AstraZeneca in Thailand) or, can they just mix a few pre-existing chemicals in a vat and bottle it?

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the GPO is importing API, active ingredients, matter of mixing them with fillers, than running multiple complicated chemical processes.

Still they need medicine registration number and later licence number.

Also to get into mass production and economy of scale, they need to get large stock of API. So later they can compete with the other countries for the world market

Edited by internationalism
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4 hours ago, DLock said:

Incidentally, it was developed by the US Dept of Defense, and is currently not approved in UK and USA (according to Wiki).

 

So it appears then that the Japanese stole it first.

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20 minutes ago, John Drake said:

 

So it appears then that the Japanese stole it first.

 

A lot of details are lacking JD, so it's hard to understand the situation and legal implications.

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Come on guys, this is an emergency & generics are used all over the world.

I take 2 every day, 1 from Thailand, 1 from Canada.

India is a huge producer of them 

How many different types of "Viagra " on the shelf, some legally sold at your local pharmacy

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13 hours ago, natway09 said:

Come on guys, this is an emergency & generics are used all over the world.

I take 2 every day, 1 from Thailand, 1 from Canada.

India is a huge producer of them 

How many different types of "Viagra " on the shelf, some legally sold at your local pharmacy

will it be produced as a generic? or will it be produced under it's true name as an original medication? if they opposed the patent then in effect they are stealing the patented medication and making it under the GPO label without changing the name to indicate it is a generic.  Generics are great, they cost less to make and sell because the patent coverages do not keep them from kicking back any monetary compensation to the company that developed them.

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