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August 27th 20081 Availability, Pricing and Affordability of Cardiovascular Medicines 2001-2006 Draft report for comments Maaike S.M. van Mourik University Medical Center Utrecht Intern with Department of Medicine Access and Rational Use (MAR) Supervisors: Alexandra Cameron Richard Laing
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August 27th 20082 Outline Introduction & Background Methodology Results Availability Pricing Affordability Discussion & Policy options
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August 27th 20083 Introduction & Bac k ground Cardiovascular diseases: 30% of deaths worldwide, 80% of which in developing countries WHO-PREMISE study Many patients did not get medicines needed for adequate management. Non-WHO studies Problems with availability, pricing and affordability WHO report on chronic disease medicines (30 surveys) Poor availability and affordability Aim: Secondary analysis of price, availability and affordability of CVD medicines in 36 developing countries that have undertaken WHO/HAI surveys
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August 27th 20084 Methodology WHO/HAI data Standardized data collection Prices as Median Price Ratios (MPRs) Medicines: Atenolol 50mg, Captopril 25mg, Hydrochlorothiazide (HCT) 25mg, Losartan 50mg and Nifedipine retard 20mg. Secondary analysis Adjustments for inflation and purchasing power Analysis by World Bank Income Groups and WHO regions.
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August 27th 20085 Surveys included Low income Chad (2004) Ethiopia (2004) Ghana (2004) India-Chennai (2004) India-Haryana (2004) India-Karnataka (2004) India-Maharashtra 12 districts (2004) India-Maharashtra 4 regions (2005) India-Rajasthan (2003) India-West Bengal Kenya (2004) Kyrgyzstan (2005) Mali (2004) Mongolia (2004) Nigeria (2004) Pakistan (2004) Sudan-Gadarif (2006) Sudan-Khartoum (2005) Sudan-Kordofan (2006) Tajikistan (2005) Tanzania (2004) Uganda (2004) Uzbekistan (2004) Yemen (2006) Lower-middle income Armenia (2001) Cameroon (2002) China-Shandong Province (2004) China-Shanghai (2006) El-Salvador (2006) Fiji (2004) Indonesia (2004) Jordan (2004) Morocco (2004) Peru (2005) Philippines (2005) Sri Lanka (2001) Syria (2003) Tunisia (2004) Upper-middle income Brazil-Rio de Janeiro (2001) Kazakhstan (2004) Lebanon (2004) Malaysia (2004) South Africa - Kwazulu Natal (2001) High Income Kuwait (2004) United Arab Emirates (2006) p.21 of the report
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August 27th 20086 Results: Availability (%)
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August 27th 20087 Results: Availability by WBIG
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August 27th 20088 Results: Procurement pricing Public sector procurement Procurement vs. public sector patient pricing Mark-up Taxes Procurement at a different price Cross-subsidizing MPR = 1
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August 27th 20089 Results: Patient pricing Price ratio's in the public & private sector
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August 27th 200810 Results: Patient pricing by WBIG
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August 27th 200811 Results: Private sector brand premiums
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August 27th 200812 Results: Affordability Number of day's wages the lowest-paid government worker needed to purchase one month of chronic treatment Large variations, on average 1.8 day's wages for single medicine Most affordable: atenolol 50mg (1.1 day's wages) High income areas more affordable than low income Note: Average income often below lowest government wage Need for multiple medicines
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August 27th 200813 Discussion & Policy options Availability Focus on small group of medicines from national STG Increase public sector funding for NCD medicines Procurement Some countries: can improve on procurement prices Differential pricing for public & private sector Patient prices Lower taxes & tariffs Promote the use of generics Reduce mark-ups
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August 27th 200814 Thank you Please send any comments to: M.S.M.vanMourik@students.uu.nl
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