Document Type
Article
Publication Date
2020
Keywords
vaccines, patents, health, intellectual property, outbreaks, infectious diseases, pandemics, public-private partnerships, Coalition for Epidemic Preparedness Innovations
Abstract
This Essay examines the ways in which intellectual property regimes influence incentives for the development of new vaccines for infectious diseases. Charting the tension between market forces and public health imperatives, the Essay considers an emerging solution to the long-standing problem of insufficient incentives for vaccine research and development: the rise of public-private partnerships in the health space. The Essay provides a short case study on CEPI, a large-scale public-private partnership dedicated exclusively to funding research on vaccines for infectious diseases. In exploring how the interaction between intellectual property rules and practices affect vaccine innovation, the Essay offers illustrations from recent outbreaks of infectious diseases, including the 2019 novel coronavirus, Zika, and Ebola.
Recommended Citation
Santos Rutschman, Ana, The Intellectual Property of Vaccines: Takeaways from Recent Infectious Disease Outbreaks. Michigan Law Review Online, v. 118:170, April 2020, Saint Louis University School of Law Legal Studies Research series 2020-46.
Included in
Health Law and Policy Commons, Infectious Disease Commons, Intellectual Property Law Commons, Pharmaceutical Preparations Commons