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The concept of essential drugs and the
WHO Model List of Essential Medicines Hans V. Hogerzeil, MD, PhD, FRCP Edin Department of Essential Drugs and Medicines Policy World Health Organization, March 2004
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Essential medicines The concept of essential medicines
A limited range of carefully selected essential medicines leads to better health care, better drug management, and lower costs Definition of essential medicines Essential medicines are those that satisfy the priority health care needs of the population (Report to WHO Executive Board, January 2002)
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History of the WHO Model List of Essential Drugs
1977 First Model list published, ± 200 active substances List is revised every two years by WHO Expert Committee 2002 Revised procedures approved by WHO Last revision (April 2003) contains 315 active substances The first list was a major breakthrough in the history of medicine, pharmacy and public health Médecins sans Frontières, 2000
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Full description of essential drugs (Expert Committee Report, April 2002)
Definition: Essential medicines are those that satisfy the priority health care needs of the population Selection criteria: Essential medicines are selected with due regard to disease prevalence, evidence on efficacy and safety, and comparative cost-effectiveness Purpose: Essential medicines are intended to be available within the context of functioning health systems at all times, in adequate amounts, in the appropriate dosage forms, with assured quality, and at a price the individual and the community can afford. Implementation: The implementation of the concept of essential medicines is intended to be flexible and adaptable to many different situations; exactly which medicines are regarded as essential remains a national responsibility.
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The Essential Medicines Target
National list of essential medicines Registered medicines All the drugs in the world Levels of use CHW S S dispensary Health center Supplementary specialist medicines Hospital Referral hospital Private sector
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List of common diseases and complaints
Clinical guidelines and a list of essential medicines lead to better prevention and care List of common diseases and complaints Treatment choice Treatment guidelines Essential medicines list / National formulary Training and Supervision Financing and Supply of drugs Prevention and care
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Number of countries with a national list of essential medicines
156 countries with EDLS 1/3 within 2 years 3/4 within 5 years National Essential Drugs List < 5 years (127) > 5 years (29) No NEDL (19) Unknown (16)
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Use of the WHO Model List of Essential Drugs
156 countries have a national list of essential drugs, of which 81% have been updated in the last 5 years Major international agencies (UNICEF, UNHCR, IDA) base their catalogue on the WHO Model List Sub-sets: UN list of recommended essential drugs for emergency relief (85 drugs); interagency New Emergency Health Kit (55 drugs for 10,000 consultations) Normative tools: WHO Model Formulary, International Pharmacopoea, Basic Quality Tests, and development of reference standards follow the WHO Model List
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Example of challenge: New essential drugs are expensive (1)
Antibiotics for gonorrhoea: x price of penicillins Antimalarial drugs: chloroquine $0.10 per treatment coartem® $3/pp developing country (30x) malarone® $40 per dose (400x) Antituberculosis: $10 for DOTS vs $250 for MDR (25x) Antiretrovirals: $ /year; but 38 countries with a drug budget <$2 pp/year
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New essential drugs are expensive (2) also in industrialized countries!
Canada: 55% of prescription cost rise of 93% over was due to introduction of new drugs USA: Pharmaceuticals market grew with 16% in 1999, 18% in 2000 and 17% in 2001; volume rise in 2000 only 5.5% Growth due to * elderly population * new therapies * increased prescriptions by managed care * direct-to- consumer advertising Australia: Annual increase in drug costs for Pharmaceutical Benefit Scheme could pay for two new teaching hospitals
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The WHO Model List of Essential Medicines is a model process, model product and public health tool
Independent Membership of the Committee, careful consideration of conflict of interest Transparent process, standard application, review Link to evidence-based treatment recommendations, in accordance with WHO Recommended Process for Developing Clinical Practice Guidelines Systematic review of comparative efficacy, safety and cost-effectiveness, and review of public health relevance Rapid dissemination, electronic access Regular review
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Model process (1): Seven steps to get a new medicine on the WHO Model List of Essential Drugs
1. Identification of public-health need for a medicine 2. Development of the medicine; phase I - II - III trials 3. Regulatory approval in a number of countries > Effective and safe medicine on the market 4. More experience under different field circumstances; post-marketing surveillance 5. Price indication for public sector use 6. Review by WHO disease programme; define comparative effectiveness and safety in real-life situations, comparative cost-effectiveness and public health relevance > Medicine included in WHO treatment guideline 7. Submission to WHO Expert Committee on Essential Drugs > Medicine included in WHO Model List
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Systematic and transparent process
Model process (2): Link to Guidelines for Guidelines (approved by WHO Cabinet in January 2001) Systematic and transparent process Guideline development group with wide representation Careful consideration of conflict of interest Systematic computer search for evidence Evaluation of strength of evidence Systematic cost-effectiveness analysis for WHO: evaluation of public health considerations Graded recommendations with linked references External review of draft recommendations If there is insufficient evidence: consensus expert opinion
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Model process (3): Steps in review of applications to the Model List
1 Summary of application posted on WHO Medicines web site 2 Specialist assessment of comparative efficacy, safety and cost-effectiveness 3 Review of assessments by Expert Committee member (“presenter”); formulation of draft recommendation 4 Review of draft recommendation by relevant Expert Advisory Panel members; and posted on WHO Medicines web site 5 Review by presenter, prepares final draft recommendation 6 Discussion, recommendation by Expert Committee
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Summary of clinical guideline
The WHO Model List of Essential Medicines is a model process, model product and public health tool The WHO Essential Medicines Library WHO clusters WHO/EDM Clinical guideline Summary of clinical guideline BNF WHO Model Formulary WHO/EC, Cochrane Reasons for inclusion Systematic reviews Key references WHO Model List WHO/QSM MSH UNICEF MSF Cost: - per unit - per treatment - per month - per case prevented Statistics: - ATC - DDD Quality information: - Basic quality tests - Intern. Pharmacopoea - Reference standards WCCs Oslo/Uppsala
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Example of a link: chloramphenicol
Chloramphenicol is recommended for the following indications: Injectable: Severe pneumonia in children*, severe asthma-pneumonia*, brain abscess*, meningitis in children with ARI*, epiglottitis*, granuloma inguinale*, mastoiditis*, meningitis (various kinds), obstetrics, septicaemia* Oral: severe pneumonia in children, asthma pneumonia*, meningitis in children*, cholera*, louse borne typhus*, measles pneumonia, meningitis (empirical and meningococcal), abortion care, plague*, relapsing fever*, Rickettsia, typhoid fever* *recommended as alternative drug
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WHO Model Formulary First edition issued in 2002; (SFr 40, SFr 20)
Web version as PDF file and searchable database CD-ROM (searchable and downloadable) Translations ongoing in Arabic, Chinese, French, Russian, Spanish; electronic versions only (on CD) Edition 2004 follows 2003 Model List 5-year commitment to RPS and BMJ Manual “How to develop a national formulary”
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The New Emergency Health Kit 1984, 1990, 1998
Essential medicines and supplies for 10,000 people for three months Consensus between WHO, UNICEF, UNHCR, UNFPA, Red Cross, MSF, OXFAM, missions, IDA
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Selection of emergency relief items
325 WHO Model List 2002 UN List of Emergency Relief Items 88 UNDP WHO ICRC FRC MSF UNICEF UNHCR UNFPA IDA EPN OXFAM New Emergency Health Kit 1998 55 Adaptation needed: ORS, antimalarials, syringes, emergency contraception
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Essential medicines for Reproductive Health: Discrepancies in international RH lists
75 on UNFPA List 6 325 on WHO Model List 6 194 63 150 on Interagency RH medical commodities 65 22
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First comparison between lists (1): Alternative medicine preferred on WHO EML
U R E clotrimazole x x miconazole zalcitabine, delavirdine, amprenavir x see ARV guide dephenylhydramine x promethazine itraconazole, ketoconazole x fluconazole labetalol x atenolol magnesium trisilicate, sodium citrate x alum.hydroxide tinidazole x metronidazole ritodrine, terbutaline x salbutamol methylergometrine x ergometrine
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First comparison between lists (2): (Recently) deleted from the Model List
U R E spermicides x contraceptive foams/gels x pethidine x iron dextran x misoprostol (recently refused) x
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To include or not to include
To include or not to include? Suggested for systematic review and submission to WHO Expert Committee U R E levonorgestrel-IUDs x norethisterone enantate + valerate x oestradiol cyprionate +med.prog.acetate x indometacin (tocolytic) x cefazolin (geneal surgical prophylaxis) x cefixime (gonorhoea) x prostaglandins x subdermal contraceptive inplants x hydralazine* x x * Recently discussed but needs more review
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The WHO Model List of Essential Medicines is a model process, model product and public health tool
Main public health advocacy messages: Essential drugs are the most cost-effective drugs for a given condition A limited range of carefully selected medicines can cater for most health care needs There is much waste through irrational selection and use Access to health care is a Human Right to be progressively realized. This includes access to essential medicines The essential medicines concept is globally applicable
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Conclusion The concept of essential medicines is a global concept
WHO clinical guidelines are the foundation for the Model List of Essential Drugs; the Model List remains a strong public health tool The WHO Essential Medicines Library is a valuable information base for all Member States, international organisations, drugs and therapeutic committees and health insurance organisations
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Essential Drugs and Medicines Policy
WHO Department of Essential Drugs and Medicines Policy / medicines Thank you
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