Availability of children’s medicines in Africa, 2007 Jane Robertson, Gilles Forte, Suzanne Hill.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
THE CHALLENGES & OPORTUNITIES OF ACCESS TO MEDICINES IN AFRICA Dr Pascoal MOCUMBI, orig Mozambique,High Representative EDCTP ABRASCO/WFPHA.
Advertisements

1 Policy options to address access to chronic disease medicines Dr. Richard Laing Ms. Alexandra Cameron Department of Essential Medicines and Pharmaceutical.
Medicines Prices and Methods of Financing in South-East Asia Indian Pharmacological Society 38 th Annual Conference, Chennai 29th December 2005 Dr K Weerasuriya,
Overview of the medicine prices and availability survey methodology Presentation template for adaptation and use in medicine prices and availability survey.
Mohamed Izham Mohamed Ibrahim
Understanding the Antimalarials Market in Uganda Rosette Mutambi, HEPS Uganda Martin Auton, Health Action International, The Netherlands ASTMH, December.
Strengthening the Pharmaceutical Sector: Mechanisms to Monitor Performance Douglas L. Keene June 15, 2010.
Differences in the availability of medicines used for chronic and acute conditions in developing countries Alexandra Cameron International Conference on.
MEDICINES SELECTION & FORMULARY MANAGEMENT
1 Medicine prices and availability, evidence for policy Technical Briefing Seminar, November 3 rd 2010 Alexandra Cameron, Department of Essential Medicines.
1. Health Policy Research Group Department of Pharmacology & Therapeutics, College of Medicine, University of Nigeria Enugu Campus 2. Department of Clinical.
ILLEGAL DRUG STORES IN ZAMBIA PRESENTED BY A. PHIRI ARTHUR DAVISON CHILDREN’S HOSPITAL Presented to CSO workshop in Ndola on 29 August 2013.
Supply Chains Management for Pharmacy
Birgit Kerstens 1, Samia Saad 2, Wilbert Bannenberg 1,2 1 Health Research for Action (HERA), Belgium; 2 Medicines Transparency Alliance (MeTA) Pilot, United.
Drug and Therapeutics Committee Session 7A. Identifying Problems with Medicine Use: Indicator Studies.
Abstract 213 ICIUM: Antalya, Turkey. November 14-18, 2011.
TBS November 4, |1 | AMR and appropriate use of antimicrobials Nicola Magrini and Jane Robertson Policy, Access and Use Team, EMP TBS 4 November.
National Medicine Policy
Whilst the pharmaceutical industry plays a key role in developing and producing medicines, there is a tension between industry’s need to expand product.
Monitoring Drug and Commodity Supply Chains for ARV Programmes Yasmin Chandani John Snow Inc/DELIVER.
TBS November 4, |1 | Responsible and appropriate (rational) use of medicines Dr Jane Robertson Policy, Access and Use Team, EMP 4 November 2014.
Repositioning Family Planning in West Africa Repositionnement de la Planification Familiale en Afrique de l’Ouest Sponsored by: U.S. Agency for International.
National Health Insurance - UHC 29 SEPTEMBER 2014 Anban Pillay Deputy Director General National Department of Health South Africa
How to determine medicines benefits policy and program needs?
046:127 Pharmaceutical Management for Underserved Populations  Paper on Current Controversy  Team Assignment: Observational Visits  National Drug Policy/Assessment.
District Health in South Africa Appropriate response to current health issues: How do we measure? Dr Kebogile Mokwena Department of Social and Behavioural.
WHO Level II Facility Surveys Douglas Ball Independent consultant, UK.
Medicines Transparency Alliance01/10/2015 Availability of Medicines Anita Wagner Harvard Medical School & WHO Collaborating Center in Pharmaceutical Policy.
1 Medicine prices and availability, evidence for policy Technical Briefing Seminar, November 18 th 2009 Alexandra Cameron, Department of Essential Medicines.
TBS Seminar on Essential Medicines and Health Products Geneva, 29 October 2013 Matthew Jowett, PhD Senior Health Financing Specialist Dept. Health Systems.
Cambodia1. 2 Cambodia Assessment Ung Phirun Chroeng Sokhan.
EXPERIENCES IN SOUTH AFRICA WITH THE INTRODUCTION OF PHARMACEUTICAL PRICING LEGISLATION Zokufa HZ, Pillay T Pharmaceutical Policy and Planning, Department.
Summary from the Economics Track With thanks to all track participants, presenters, rapporteurs, moderators and organizers.
Country Assessment to Determine Factors Influencing the Cost, Availability and Distribution of Acyclovir in Eight Sub-Saharan African Countries Catherine.
ASSESSMENT OF AVAILABILITY, PRICE AND AFFORDABILITY OF MEDICINES FOR CHILDREN IN GHANA Authors: Gyansa-Lutterodt M. 1,Andrews Annan E. 2, Koduah A. 1,
The Pharmaceutical Situational Analysis in Mongolia 1 Chimedtseren Munkhdelger 1 Sanjjav Tsetsegmaa 2, 1 Ministry of Health, 2 Pharmacy School, Health.
OVERVIEW OF THE ZIMBABWE NATIONAL MEDICINES POLICY Dr C E Ndhlovu, M Med Sci, FRCP Chairperson, NMTPAC Deputy Dean, UZCHS National workshop, Jan 22-23,
Problem Statement: In Kenya, despite the development of national standard treatment guidelines (STGs) for the management of acute respiratory infections.
Medicines Transparency Alliance18/10/ Towards Improving Availability of Essential Medicines in Jordan’s Public Health Sector Presenter Name Job Title.
Medicine Prices, Availability, Affordability and Price Components in Kazakhstan, Kyrgystan, Tajikistan & Uzbekistan Margaret Ewen Health Action International.
Efficiency of Public Procurement of Medicines in the Philippines Klara Tisocki, Douglas Ball Health Action International.
Impact of a NGO-supported supervisory programme on the quality of care in private shops in rural E.Nepal Kathleen Holloway Bharat Raj Gautam Britain Nepal.
Medicines Transparency Alliance31/10/ MeTA Zambia – Pricing Goodwell Lungu MeTA Secretary General.
Abstract Impact of the Essential Drugs Programme at the Primary Health Care Level in South Africa Hela M, Zeeman H, Department of Health South Africa;
Pharmacists Perceptions of the Development of Herbal Medicines in Iran
COMPARATIVE ANALYSIS OF SELECTED ESSENTIAL DRUG LISTS AZIZ JAFAROV/RICHARD LAING.
Quantification of Antimalarials PSM Workshop Nairobi, Kenya February 21, 2006.
Zokufa HZ, Pillay T Pharmaceutical Policy and Planning National Department of Health- South Africa.
TBS 2008-H. Tata & M. Babaley Mapping and In-depth Assessment of Medicines Procurement and Supply Systems WHO Technical Briefing Seminar 17 th -21 st November.
Stop the Stock-outs! Access to Essential Medicines for All Christa Cepuch BSc Phm Health Action International Africa RHS Coalition Meeting 27 May 2010,
Medicines Transparency Alliance16/12/2015 Pricing: Observations Nazeem Mohamed Chairman, Uganda Pharmaceutical Manufacturers Association (UPMA) C.E.O.
Out-of-pocket and Out-of-reach Margaret Ewen, Coordinator, Global Projects (Pricing) Health Action International Amsterdam.
MONITORING MEDICINE AVAILABILITY AND PRICES IN UGANDA By Denis Kibira HEPS Uganda.
Revised AQTF Standards for Registered Training Organisations Strengthening our commitment to quality - COAG February August 2006.
Selection of essential medicines Richard Laing and Deidre Dimancesco TBS 2011 Department of Essential Medicines & Pharmaceutical Policies TBS 2008.
Medicines use in primary care in developing and transitional countries Results from studies reported between Kathleen Holloway, Verica Ivanovska,
1 Medicine prices and availability, evidence for policy Technical Briefing Seminar, 2012 Richard Laing with materials provided by Alexandra Cameron, Department.
MONITORING THE PHARMACEUTICAL SECTOR IN A DEVELOPING COUNTRY - THE GHANA EXAMPLE Gyansa-Lutterodt M. 1,7, Andrews E 2, Arhinful D 3,7, Addo-Atuah J 4,7,
RECENT ADVANCES IN PROVISION OF PRIMARY HEALTH CARE BY MISSION ORGANIZATIONS THE EFFECT OF AN EDUCATIONAL INTERVENTION ON USE OF ANTIBIOTICS IN THE TREATMENT.
ADDRESSING PHARMACEUTICAL SUPPLY CHAIN NEEDS PRESENTATION TO HEALTH DONOR GROUP MEETING 8 July 2009.
Cost Recovery As Water Quality Management Tool. Objectives To highlight the need for cost recovery by some mechanisms in the water sector to ensure sustainability.
Medicine prices and availability, evidence for policy
Operations of Class c shops
WHO Medicines Work in Countries: The Kenya Example
East African Drug Seller Initiative Uganda Sensitization Meeting
Richard Laing EMP/WHO TBS 2012
National Medicines Policies
Access to Essential Medicines
Rural Partnerships between Small Farmers and Private Sector
National Medicines Policies
Presentation transcript:

Availability of children’s medicines in Africa, 2007 Jane Robertson, Gilles Forte, Suzanne Hill

Background Resolution WHA60.20: to promote access to essential medicines for children through inclusion, as appropriate, of those medicines in national medicine lists, procurement and reimbursement schemes, and to devise measures to monitor prices. Few data on availability and affordability of children’s medicines Medicines advisors in 14 African countries made the study possible

Methods Survey of 17 medicines (20 dosage forms) Noted whether included in national EML, STGs Availability and cost in 12 facilities each country Restricted to capital city, facility selection based on WHO/HAI pricing survey methodology CMS, NGO store, teaching hospital, district hospital, 3 primary health care clinics, 5 private pharmacies Was the product on the shelf on that day? What was the price of the cheapest product available (branded or generic)?

Proportions of the 20 survey medicines included in EML, STGs, or in CMS

Proportions of the 20 survey medicines available by facility type

Observations - availability While medicines often in EML and STGs, only 3/14 countries had >50% available in CMS when surveyed Variability across facilities; availability was generally better in the private sector Variability across countries Reflect problems with supply? Reflect demand for products? Prescriber choices? EML relevant to all facilities?

Observations - prices Weakness of this initial study Medicine prices varied considerably between countries Generally prices higher in private sector, although not consistently so – highlights need to understand local supply and pricing mechanisms Comparisons were often limited by provision of free medicines in the public sector

Strengths of the study Simple survey methodology; minimise need for training of data collectors Adaptable for use as ongoing monitoring tools to chart improvements as issues affecting availability and affordability are addressed Including local medicine priorities will increase the relevance and usefulness of the surveys

Identifies other areas of investigation - why? Supply – poor ordering practices – purchasing options available, adequate financing – ‘diversion’ Demand – perverse incentives (salary and financing structures reward particular behaviours) – industry promotion changes prescribing patterns – perceptions about the “quality” of medicines available (confidence in generics, perceptions of EML medicines) May require qualitative investigation

Since 2007 study Better Medicines for Children Project Overview of Methods for Medicines Availability and Pricing Surveys Inclusion of more country-specific medicines More settings (urban, peri-urban, rural vs WHO/HAI methods) Extension to include other medicines outlets such as licensed drug shops, dispensing doctors, informal outlets More formal processes for pricing survey component Other issues – Development of medicine lists specific to medicines outlets? – Move towards regular on-going monitoring rather than single survey? – Ensuring complexity does not make the task too difficult or too expensive – Recognise the risk of ‘survey fatigue’

Thank you