The New York Times
January 28, 2001, Sunday, Late Edition - Final
SECTION: Section 6; Page 26; Column 1; Magazine Desk
HEADLINE: Look at Brazil

BYLINE:  By Tina Rosenberg...

...Until a year ago, the triple therapy that has made AIDS a 
manageable disease in wealthy nations was considered realistic only 
for those who could afford to pay $10,000 to $15,000 a year or lived 
in societies that could.  The most that poor countries could hope to 
do was prevent new cases of AIDS through educational programs and 
condom promotion or to cut mother-to-child transmission and, if they 
were very lucky, treat some of AIDS's opportunistic infections.  But 
the 32.5 million people with H.I.V. in the developing world had 
little hope of survival.

This was the conventional wisdom.  Today, all of these statements are false....

...Since 1997, virtually every AIDS patient in Brazil for whom it is 
medically indicated gets, free, the same triple cocktails that keep 
rich Americans healthy.  (In Western Europe, no one who needs AIDS 
treatment is denied it because of cost.  This is true in some 
American states, but not all.)  Brazil has shredded all the excuses 
about why poor countries cannot treat AIDS.  Health system too 
fragile?  On the shaky foundation of its public health service, 
Brazil built a well-run network of AIDS clinics.  Uneducated people 
can't stick to the complicated regime of pills?  Brazilian AIDS 
patients have proved just as able to take their medicine on time as 
patients in the United States.

Ah, but treating AIDS is too expensive!  In fact, Brazil's program 
almost certainly pays for itself.  It has halved the death rate from 
AIDS, prevented hundreds of thousands of new hospitalizations, cut 
the transmission rate, helped to stabilize the epidemic and improved 
the overall state of public health in Brazil.

Brazil can afford to treat AIDS because it does not pay market prices 
for antiretroviral drugs -- the most controversial aspect of the 
country's plan.  In 1998, the government began making copies of 
brand-name drugs, and the price of those medicines has fallen by an 
average of 79 percent.  Brazil now produces some triple therapy for 
$3,000 a year and expects to do much better, and the price could 
potentially drop to $700 a year or even less.

Brazil is showing that no one who dies of AIDS dies of natural 
causes.  Those who die have been failed -- by feckless leaders who 
see weapons as more alluring purchases than medicines, by wealthy 
countries (notably the United States) that have threatened the 
livelihood of poor nations who seek to manufacture cheap medicine and 
by the multinational drug companies who have kept the price of 
antiretroviral drugs needlessly out of reach of the vast majority of 
the world's population....

In other words, the debate about whether poor countries can treat 
AIDS is over. The question is how....

The drug companies are wrong...on how to make AIDS drugs affordable. 
Their solution -- limited, negotiated price cuts -- is slow, grudging 
and piecemeal.  Brazil, by defying the pharmaceutical companies and 
threatening to break patents, among other actions, has made drugs 
available to everyone who needs them.  Its experience shows that 
doing this requires something radical: an alteration of the basic 
social contract the pharmaceutical companies have enjoyed until now.

By the terms of that contract, manufacturers, in return for the risks 
of developing new drugs, receive a 20-year monopoly to sell them in 
some nations at whatever prices they choose.  The industry has 
thrived under this contract....Poor countries, it is now clear, must 
violate this contract if they are to save their people from AIDS.

Brazil has been able to treat AIDS because it had what everyone 
agrees is the single most important requirement for doing so: 
political commitment.  At the beginning of 1999, Brazil's economy was 
skidding into crisis.  President Fernando Henrique Cardoso was under 
great pressure to cut the budget by abandoning the AIDS program.  He 
rejected that advice, deciding that treating AIDS was a priority.

Such commitment has its roots in the gay community.  Although AIDS is 
now a disease of the poor in Brazil, the first Brazilians infected 
were gay men.  In a country famously open about matters sexual, gays 
were much more activist and better organized than in most other 
nations, and AIDS carried less of the stigma that has elsewhere led 
people simply to deny its existence.

Then the movement found an unlikely ally in Jose Sarney, Brazil's 
first civilian president after the country emerged from military rule 
in 1985 and a conservative who led a pro-military party during the 
dictatorship.  In 1996, scientists at the world AIDS conference in 
Vancouver announced that triple therapy with a protease inhibitor 
could reduce viral load to undetectable levels.  Finally, there was a 
treatment for AIDS.  "A doctor friend informed me about what was 
going on in Vancouver," Sarney told me.  "I saw that most of the 
medicine in the cocktail would not be available to the poor, and I 
felt that we were talking about the survival of the species."

Sarney proposed a law that guaranteed every AIDS patient 
state-of-the-art treatment.  It passed.  At the same time, Brazil was 
carrying out an aggressive AIDS prevention program, financed by the 
World Bank.  Activist groups were the keystone, distributing millions 
of free condoms.

Surveys show that there are about 530,000 H.I.V.-positive people in 
Brazil.  Four-fifths do not know they are infected.  Of those who 
have been identified as needing antiretroviral therapy, however (some 
90,000 at the moment), virtually all can get it, even homeless 
people, even people in the middle of the Amazon, says Paulo Teixeira, 
who runs Brazil's AIDS program.  A slim, elegant man of 52, Teixeira 
has been an AIDS doctor since 1983 and director of the country's AIDS 
efforts for a year.

The treatment and prevention programs complement each other -- 
another powerful reason to begin treating AIDS in poor countries. 
Treating AIDS helps to limit its spread, as people with a lower viral 
load are less contagious.  The availability of lifesaving treatment 
is also a powerful lure for people to get an AIDS test.

"Treatment brings people into the hospital, where you can talk to 
them," says Serafim Armesto, a psychologist who works with AIDS 
patients at the General Hospital of Nova Iguau, a major hospital in a 
working-class town a short drive from Rio.  "You can work with them 
to prevent the spread of AIDS and further disease."

The programs have paid off.  In 1994, the World Bank estimated that 
by 2000 Brazil would have 1.2 million H.I.V.-positive people.  In 
fact it had half that many.  The epidemic has stabilized, with some 
20,000 new cases each year for the last three years.  The treatment 
program has cut the AIDS death rate nationally by about 50 percent so 
far, and each AIDS patient is only a quarter as likely to be 
hospitalized as before.

Treating AIDS also fights other diseases.  The incidence of 
tuberculosis in H.I.V.-positive patients has dropped by half.  AIDS 
has also helped to mobilize people to fight for better health care. 
"In 1999, the Health Ministry had problems getting its budget passed 
for AIDS, TB and other diseases," says Pedro Chequer, Teixeira's 
predecessor as head of the AIDS program and now the Unaids director 
for the southern part of South America.  "There are now 600 
nongovernmental groups that work on AIDS.  They demonstrated in the 
street for a higher budget for all diseases, not just for AIDS, and 
these protests were covered in the press."  The money was restored.

The Health Ministry spent $444 million on AIDS drugs in 2000 -- 4 
percent of its budget.  The only study of the program's benefits so 
far shows that the decline in hospitalizations from opportunistic 
infections from 1997 to 1999 saved the Health Ministry $422 million. 
But the tally of benefits should also take into account the savings 
from treatment's contribution to a halving of the expected infection 
rates and the productivity of those who no longer need to stay home 
or care for the sick.

"When we started with triple therapy," Teixeira says, "the main 
criticism from developed countries was that we didn't have the 
conditions for antiretroviral treatment.  They said it would be 
dangerous for other countries, that we would create resistance."

Antiretrovirals, if taken incorrectly, can indeed create a more 
resistant strain of virus in the patient -- and in anyone to whom it 
is transmitted.  Patients must stick to a rigorous and complicated 
schedule of pills, some taken with food, some without, and they must 
keep to this program (at least this is the current thinking) every 
day for the rest of their lives.

Yet the worries of rich countries that the poor and uneducated will 
mess things up for the rest of us have proved unfounded.  Any nation 
that provides its AIDS patients with antiretrovirals must also 
provide them with help and training to take the medicine correctly. 
Brazil is doing just this, although it has meant turning nurses into 
organizers of nature hikes and clinics into baby-formula 
warehouses....

...In 1999, the AIDS program conducted a survey of more than 1,000 
patients in Sao Paulo.  It found that 69 percent achieved 80 percent 
adherence, which means they took their medicine properly 80 percent 
of the time.  According to Margaret Chesney, a professor of medicine 
at the University of California at San Francisco who studies 
behavioral factors in AIDS treatment, this rate is not sufficient to 
control the virus -- which can kill even people who take their 
medicine faithfully -- but it is no different from adherence rates in 
the United States.  A study in San Diego showed that 72 percent of 
patients took their medicine 80 percent of the time.

The Sao Paulo study found that the most important factor in patient 
falloff was missing a doctor's appointment.  Next came the level of 
instruction and support available at the clinic, followed by a 
patient's income and education.  "Patient adherence depends directly 
on the quality of the services provided," Teixeira says.  "People in 
bad economic situations have more difficulties, but we can overcome 
them if we provide good service."

The study reinforced Brazil's attempt to offer patients more 
sustained and varied help.  AIDS officials expanded their training 
programs for people who work with patients. AIDS sufferers get free 
bus passes. Clinics ask local churches and Lions Clubs for food and 
baby formula.  They recruit patients to sit in the waiting room and 
talk with other patients about their problems and to run Alcoholics 
Anonymous-style groups.  The nurse at Nova Iguau recently took one 
group on a nature hike to a waterfall, because the patients seemed to 
be getting depressed.

"When we realize the patient is no longer coming to appointments, we 
send a telegram to ask them to come in and tell us why they stopped," 
says Rosa Maria Rezende, the social worker in Nova Iguau's clinic. 
"Then we try to overcome that.  We want them to be more interested in 
the struggle to live.  It is not their attitude toward medicine that 
matters; it is their attitude toward life."...

...Brazil shows how a nation can create an AIDS infrastructure atop 
an unstable foundation.  Fairly good in Brazil's rich regions, health 
care is bad to nonexistent in poor ones.  The country has one of the 
lowest rates of life expectancy and highest rates of infant mortality 
in Latin America.  "When we passed the bill, we had to rely on a 
distribution network that didn't exist," former President Sarney says.

It seems absurd to suggest that countries that will not spend 10 
cents to cure an infant with diarrhea should spend thousands of 
dollars on her mother's AIDS drugs.  But in Brazil, there has been no 
trade-off.  The program has very likely saved the Health Ministry 
money, improved the treatment of other diseases and -- very important 
-- fostered a vocal lobby for better health care.  For countries with 
a poor health infrastructure, an internationally financed AIDS 
program could be a way to develop a network of clinics and trained 
workers who might also be able to cure diarrhea.

So why have other countries not done it?  One reason is indifferent, 
or even hostile, leadership. Kenya's president, Daniel Arap Moi, only 
very recently reversed his opposition to condom use.  AIDS carries 
such a stigma that the response of some African leaders has been to 
deny there is a problem.  Other governments are too corrupt or 
incompetent to organize prevention programs, much less treatment. 
But for most countries, even middle-income poor countries, the 
biggest hurdle is cost.  Whether AIDS treatment eventually pays for 
itself is irrelevant; they cannot afford to get started.

Nowhere are the lost opportunities more tragic than in South Africa. 
According to Unaids, South Africa has more than four million 
infected, and the epidemic is growing geometrically.  It is a wealthy 
country by African standards, with a relatively good health 
infrastructure and laboratories that could manufacture generic drugs.

But South Africa has done nothing to treat AIDS.  The biggest 
obstacle is President Thabo Mbeki, in other ways a sane and 
responsible leader, who has inexplicably decided that he is not 
convinced H.I.V. causes AIDS.  Absurdly, it has become politically 
incorrect to talk about treating AIDS in South Africa -- because it 
would acknowledge that H.I.V. is the cause.  Mbeki's musings, as well 
as an intense political battle in South Africa about the country's 
AIDS priorities, delayed the institution of even a program to cut 
mother-to-child transmission.

India, the country that probably has the largest epidemic, is another 
dismaying example.  India does not recognize patents on medicine, and 
world trade rules do not require it do so until 2005.  Indian firms 
lead the world in the manufacture of generic AIDS drugs.  The 
managing director of Cipla Ltd., an Indian generic manufacturer that 
meets international quality standards, told me in December that he 
could make a triple therapy for $500 per year, plus another $200 in 
packaging costs, "and prices are likely to come down as we improve 
our techniques."  Does India provide its sick with free AIDS 
treatment? It does not.

But treating AIDS is gradually creeping into the realm of the 
possible for many countries.  AIDS is now bad for business in Africa, 
and African leaders are hearing a clamor for treatment from the 
middle class.  Several African countries have good prevention 
programs, which was all they believed possible to do.  Now they are 
starting to think about treatment as well.

While Brazil's ability to reach patients encourages other nations, 
far more important is its success in lowering the cost of medicine. 
This is the news that can now allow other countries to dream about 
treating AIDS.

Eloan Pinheiro is a soft-spoken, ever-smiling 55-year-old chemist who 
spent the first part of her career as chief of formulation for the 
Brazilian subsidiaries of two multinational drug companies.  Now 
Pinheiro is tormenting her former colleagues.  She is the director of 
Far-Manguinhos, a government pharmaceutical research lab and factory 
named for the industrial neighborhood of Rio where it is located.  In 
1998, with the costs of importing brand-name drugs mounting, Brazil's 
health minister asked Pinheiro to analyze and copy the world's major 
AIDS drugs.  Far-Manguinhos and Brazil's six other state 
pharmaceutical factories now make seven of the 12 antiretrovirals 
taken by Brazilians with AIDS.  Pinheiro buys raw materials from 
India and Korea.

 From the drug companies' point of view, the assembly lines below 
Pinheiro's second-floor office are humming with the violation of 
intellectual property rights, 40,000 times an hour.  Brazil's 1996 
law recognizing patents on medicine, passed to comply with the rules 
of the World Trade Organization, specifies that anything 
commercialized anywhere in the world by May 14, 1997, would forever 
remain unpatented in Brazil.  That covers a lot -- all the 
first-generation antiretrovirals like AZT, ddI, d4T, 3TC.  It covers 
nevirapine, one of the nonnucleoside reverse transcriptase 
inhibitors, which, like protease inhibitors, make up the third drug 
in the triple cocktail.  And by a few weeks, it covers the protease 
inhibitor indinavir.  And at the end of last year, Brazil was causing 
tremors in the pharmaceutical industry by preparing to produce copies 
of Stocrin, a Merck antiretroviral that came out after 1996, which is 
patented in Brazil.

Since Brazil started making generics of AIDS drugs, their cost has 
plummeted.  The price of AIDS drugs with no Brazilian generic 
equivalent dropped 9 percent from 1996 to 2000.  The price of those 
that compete with generics from Brazilian labs dropped 79 percent. 
But just the credible threat of generic competition is enough to get 
manufacturers to lower their prices.

There is no legal reason that other countries cannot do the same. 
Most drugs, including antiretrovirals, have never been patented in 
most sub-Saharan African countries, so those countries are free to 
make or import generics.  Even countries that do respect patents on 
medicines have this possibility.  This is important, because every 
country joining the World Trade Organization must pass laws 
respecting medical patents -- the reason Brazil did.  But there is a 
W.T.O. loophole that allows countries to make copies of patented 
items in certain situations, including that of a national emergency. 
According to a W.T.O. official, governments could also choose to 
import generic drugs instead of making them.  They can get what is 
called a compulsory license -- in effect, they seize a patent -- and 
manufacture or import a generic copy of a drug, paying the 
patentholder a reasonable royalty.  Of all the tools available to 
poor countries, compulsory licensing is what the drug companies fear 
the most, since it represents the most direct assault on control of 
their patents.

The United States has issued compulsory licenses in situations far 
less dire than those of AIDS-ravaged poor nations.  Recent ones have 
been for tow trucks, stainless-steel wheels and corn seeds. Such 
licenses are common remedies in antitrust cases.

But although trade rules provide legal ways for poor nations to get 
cheap medicine, there are other obstacles.  Many do not even know it 
is legal.  Countries that have tried to manufacture generic medicine 
have fallen under debilitating pressure from pharmaceutical companies 
and from Washington.

In Thailand, such pressure kept the government from making cheap 
antiretrovirals until last year.  Thailand has long made zidovudine, 
the knockoff of Glaxo Wellcome's AZT.  But two drugs are needed to 
slow AIDS, and Thailand was blocked from making the other components 
of dual therapy -- ddI, d4T and 3TC.

Bristol-Myers Squibb sells ddI and d4T under the brand names Videx 
and Zerit.  Glaxo sells 3TC under the name Epivir.  None of the three 
were patented in Thailand because they came out before 1992, when the 
nation passed patent protections for medicine.  Thailand's state drug 
factory was preparing to produce generic ddI when Bristol obtained a 
patent on the antacid buffer used to pack Videx into pill form. 
Krisana Kraisintu, the head of the factory, told me that Bristol also 
prevented the producers of the raw materials for ddI from selling to 
her.  She was only able to make a generic ddI -- in powder form -- 
recently. (Bristol failed to respond to questions despite repeated 
requests over the course of a month.)

With Zerit and Epivir, Bristol and Glaxo took advantage of a 
controversial safety monitoring period passed in 1993 at American 
urging.  It gives drugs up to five or six years of market exclusivity 
while generics undergo special safety tests -- a law the World Health 
Organization and Unaids says "unnecessarily delays generic 
competition."  Thailand was able to make generic d4T only when Zerit 
exited the program last year and is only now beginning to make 
generic 3TC.

The drug companies' actions are particularly distasteful because 
neither Bristol nor Glaxo invented these drugs or discovered their 
use in AIDS therapy.  Glaxo's 3TC was discovered and patented for 
AIDS use by BioChem Pharma, a Canadian company, which licensed the 
drug to Glaxo. d4T was synthesized by the Michigan Cancer Foundation 
in 1966, using public funds.  Its application for AIDS was discovered 
at Yale University, which holds the patent, using grants from the 
federal government and Bristol.  In the United States, Bristol's 
Zerit sells for $4.50 for 40 milligrams. Pharmaceutical manufacturers 
never disclose their costs, but one indication of Bristol's markup is 
that Pinheiro can sell her version for 30 cents -- and it is possible 
her costs are higher than Bristol's, since the multinationals have 
access to cheaper raw materials.

The National Institutes of Health discovered ddI's use as an AIDS 
therapy.  The N.I.H. then licensed the drug to Bristol for a 5 
percent royalty, with the stipulation that Bristol's pricing take 
into account the health and safety needs of the public.  But Bristol 
sells Videx for $1.80 in the United States for a 100-milligram 
tablet, while Far-Manguinhos in Brazil can sell the generic 
equivalent for 50 cents.  The contract has a fair-pricing clause, but 
it has never been enforced.

The drug companies' influence has been greatly magnified because the 
United States trade officials have put the full weight of American 
trade pressures to work on their behalf.  And one official told me 
that until very recently, "it was pretty rare" that his agency ever 
considered the health consequences.

The statements in the trade representative's annual reports and trade 
watch lists document a shameful history of successful American 
efforts to get Thailand to pass patents on medicine, to abolish the 
pharmaceutical review board that monitored drug prices, to pass the 
safety monitoring period of market exclusivity and to refrain from 
issuing compulsory licenses.  Here is one example from the trade 
representative's 1997 national trade estimate for Thailand: "The Thai 
legislature is expected in 1997 to consider a bill abolishing the 
pharmaceutical review board.  This measure would advance objectives 
of American manufacturers."

Numerous countries have been placed on the trade representative's 
Special 301 Watch List because of pharmaceutical patent 
disagreements.  The list is a precursor to trade sanctions, but 
simply appearing on it is a form of sanction because it discourages 
investment.  It turns a country's business sector and commerce 
ministry against generic production -- and with such powerful 
opposition, local health officials lose.  "When I wanted to produce 
generics, I was told, 'Don't move, because we're afraid of trade 
retaliation,"' Kraisintu says.  "All of us know that the reason for 
all these things is pressure from the United States and multinational 
companies."  Thailand sells a fifth of its exports to the United 
States.

The drug industry's dominance over American trade policy on 
pharmaceuticals finally crashed over South Africa.  In 1997, South 
Africa, which does respect pharmaceutical patents, amended its laws 
to allow compulsory licensing of essential medicines, including AIDS 
drugs.  Pharmaceutical companies sued. The suit is still going on.

Although Clinton administration officials acknowledged that what 
South Africa proposed was legal under the World Trade Organization, 
it declared war.  President Clinton and Vice President Gore lobbied 
their counterparts, Nelson Mandela and Thabo Mbeki, then the deputy 
president.  Friends of the drug companies in Congress passed a 
requirement that the State Department report on Washington's efforts 
to stop South Africa before the country could receive American aid. 
It reported in February 1999, that "all relevant agencies of the U.S. 
government . . . have been engaged in an assiduous, concerted 
campaign to persuade the government of South Africa to withdraw or 
modify" the relevant parts of the law.

This was a bizarre policy for an administration that claimed a 
special relationship with South Africa.  But there was no role in the 
process of decisions about trade pressures for voices that countered 
those of industry. This resulted in egregious blind spots.  In August 
1998, I talked with an American trade official who worked on South 
Africa's medicines act.  He told me that until a few months before I 
spoke to him, he was unaware of the dimensions of South Africa's AIDS 
problem.  "Nobody brought it to my attention that it was a major 
health crisis," he said.

Today, this official is better informed.  The administration changed 
its policy after activist groups began heckling Vice President Gore 
at his campaign appearances.  When reporters, and later Gore aides, 
began to take notice, the administration told South Africa it could 
issue compulsory licenses for essential medicines as long as it 
stayed within world trade rules.  Over the next year, the 
administration announced that health officials would participate in 
decisions about pharmaceutical disputes and pledged not to block 
compulsory licenses in the rest of sub-Saharan Africa and Thailand 
and in other countries on a case-by-case basis.

But pressure from other parts of the administration continued.  In 
February 2000, William Daley, then the commerce secretary, traveled 
to Brazil and Argentina with Raymond Gilmartin, the C.E.O. of Merck, 
and a vice president of Pfizer in tow.  Before he went, Daley told 
students that one purpose of his trip to Brazil was to talk about 
"serious concerns our companies have" with medical patent laws.  In 
Argentina, he threatened trade sanctions over the issue.

Overall, however, the Clinton administration went through a real 
conversion.  Countries that displease American pharmaceutical 
manufacturers no longer land on a trade watch list if the trade 
representative believes they have a health emergency. But this could 
be reversed in five minutes by President Bush -- and probably will 
be, since the industry is likely to be even more influential in the 
Bush administration than it has been under President Clinton. 
Pharmaceutical manufacturers give money to both political parties -- 
$23 million in the last election cycle, according to the Center for 
Responsive Politics -- but 69 percent of it went to Republicans.  The 
drug industry also spends $75 million or so on lobbying every year.

 From the beginning of the AIDS epidemic, the major drug makers clung 
to the idea of one planet, one price.  Or worse -- some drugs cost 
more in Kenya than in Norway....

In May 2000, Glaxo Wellcome, Merck, Boehringer-Ingelheim, F. 
Hoffmann-La Roche and Bristol announced a program called Accelerating 
Access, promising to sell drugs at deep discounts to poor countries 
that met certain standards.  The price cuts the drug companies fought 
until last year have now become their solution to the world's AIDS 
crisis.

The companies have restricted their discounts, demanding that 
recipient countries properly administer the medicine.  But the 
restrictions also keep the program small, controlled and largely 
secret.  Each price cut for each drug in each country is negotiated 
separately. Glaxo was the only company to specify a price reduction 
publicly, announcing it would cut Combivir from $16 to $2 a day. And 
while about 20 countries are talking to the drug companies, only 
Senegal and Uganda have so far signed agreements to receive cut-price 
antiretrovirals.  The discounts are impressive -- Senegal will be 
able to buy triple therapy for as low as $1,000 per year per person. 
But just a few hundred people will benefit, most of them rich enough 
to pay themselves.  In Uganda, about a thousand people will get the 
drugs, but they will all pay for them....

The industry's control over the program serves another purpose: the 
companies can use it to head off the practices they fear most, 
chiefly compulsory licensing.  The document announcing the plan calls 
on the recipients of their largess to "respect intellectual property" 
-- code for "stay away from compulsory licensing."  And countries are 
complying, many of them out of ignorance....

The drug companies' argument is in essence a defense of high profits. 
Even in the United States, the cost of drugs is provoking questions 
about whether continued research and development really depends on 
giving companies a 20-year monopoly to charge whatever price they 
choose, especially since they are often marketing other people's 
discoveries.  The manufacturers generally spend twice as much on 
marketing and administration as they do on research and development.

The real threat that third-world generics pose to pharmaceutical 
companies is that of blowback in rich nations.  They worry that 
publicity about generic prices will fuel the American demand for 
cheap imports or price controls.  They fear that patent seizures in 
the third world could loosen intellectual property rights in the 
first world....

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