Title: The Marketing Code
1The Marketing Code
2Note
- All healthcare professionals and their staff (
including front shop assistants) non pharmacists
who own pharmacies retail wholesalers other
wholesalers retailers forecourt owners etc etc
who sell or distribute or market medicines
(including S0s) are bound by The Medicines Act
and the Marketing Code in terms of the sale and
marketing of these medicines - This also applies to all manufactures of ALL
medicines
3Disclaimer
- Whilst this is an extensive summary of the
Marketing Code and parts of The Medicines Act
it remains your and your companies
responsibility to familiarise yourself with the
entire content of The Medicines Act and of The
Marketing Code - And to ensure that all relevant personnel of your
company are up to speed with the Act and Code
( including third parties, agents, etc)
4Note
- Whilst the Marketing Code is yet to be
promulgated - all industry bodies have agreed to
abide by it and to self regulate until
promulgation this year - BUT The Medicines Act is already law
5 The
Marketing Code covers
ethical practices of ALL marketers of ALL
medicines Is aligned with the International
Codes and the Perverse Incentives Policy of the
HPCSA which is endorsed by SAMA SAPC and
supported by the Associations below
6Bonusing 18A. (1) No person shall supply any
product, medical device or IVD according to a
bonus system, rebate system or any other
incentive scheme. (2) Notwithstanding subsection
(1), the Minister may prescribe acceptable and
prohibited acts in relation to subsection (1).
Marketing of products, medical devices or
IVDs 18C. The Minister shall, after consultation
with the relevant industries and other
stakeholders, make regulations relating to the
marketing of products, medical devices or IVDs
and such regulations shall also provide for Codes
of Practice for relevant industries..
7The Code is divided into 3 parts
- To Healthcare Professionals / Other Sellers of
Medicines - To Consumers
- Enforcement of the Code
- ( All based on Section 18C of Act 101)
8Some important points from the Code
- All drugs can be advertised to the healthcare
professional - But only S0 and S1 can be advertised to the
consumer - But you may inform the general public of the name
of the product, the pack size and the price of an
S2 and above product
945 (2) (a) Medicines which do not contain a
scheduled substance and medicines which contain a
substance appearing in Schedule 0 or Schedule 1
may be advertised to the public. (b) Medicines
which contain a substance appearing in Schedule
2, Schedule 3, Schedule 4, Schedule 5 or Schedule
6 may be advertised only for the information of
medical practitioners, dentists, veterinarians,
pharmacists and other persons authorised to
prescribe or in a publication which is normally
or only made available to persons referred to
therein. (c) Paragraph (b) shall not be so
construed as to prohibit informing the public of
the prices, names, pack sizes and strengths of
medicines which contain a substance appearing in
Schedule 2, Schedule 3, Schedule 4, Schedule 5 or
Schedule 6.
10What does inform mean?
- The intention of inform is for the consumer to
make price comparisons - All that is permitted is
- Name of product
- Pack size / strength
- Price
- It does not mean advertise
- If your intention is to advertise then you are
breaking the law irrespective of how you go about
it
11 Some important points from the Code
- All advertising should state for full
prescribing information refer to the package
insert as approved by the MCC - Any loose insert in a journal may NOT be larger
than the journal / magazine - No disparaging advertising is allowed- directly
or by implication - One cannot advertise or promote a medicine prior
to registration - You cannot promote a medicine for anything other
than what is in the package insert
12Some important points from the Code
- Advertisements in journals may not resemble
editorials - All claims or comparisons must be accurate,
balanced, fair, objective and unambiguous - All comparative advertising must be substantiated
and trade names are forbidden - To use a registered trademark or other protected
IP without permission is prohibited
13Some important points from the Code
- The word NEW can only be used on brands that have
been on the market for less than 12 months - Cannot use a dummy box of a S2 product (without
indications/ claims) as part of a window display
in pharmacy or as a gondola end, behind or on the
counter or in any other place or in any
advertisement - this is being currently challenged by SMASA with
MCC
14Continued
- Advertisements may not be exaggerated and
superlatives are not permitted - e.g. powerful, best , fast, etc
- All references must be supported by proven
clinical data - Data on File must be made available on request
- and may be evaluated by a independent third party
15Continued
- You may not use a doctor or any personality of
any nature to endorse any medicine - The use of SMS, e-mail, fax or telephone etc may
not be used to promote a medicine unless written
permission is granted by the recipient - Any promotional activity may not be disguised
- e.g. A promotion for a weight loss product cannot
be disguised as a symposia on weight loss - Post cards, mailings etc may not be disguised in
a way to force the recipient to open the letter
16OTC Medicines S1 and S0Consumer Marketing
- Whilst all parts of Section A B of the Code
apply to OTC Medicines there are certain elements
that should be highlighted - Repeat Can only advertise S0 and S1 directly to
the consumer - Generally aimed at self limiting / self
diagnosable conditions - May encourage responsible self-medication
- But may not encourage consumers to exclusively
self-medicate
17OTC Medicines S1 and S0Consumer Marketing
- Must be in line with the package insert
- Advertisements must take into account the
vulnerability of the consumer - Do not use language to confuse, alert or panic
and do not use scare tactics - Do not exploit the consumer, do not offer to
diagnose, advise, prescribe or treat personally
by correspondence - Do not target advertising at children (under 12)
- Cannot advertise showing children using or within
reach of a medicine without adult supervision -
18OTC Medicines S1 and S0Consumer Marketing
- May not suggest that normal health is improved or
make recovery claims - No prohibited claims i.e. treatment, cure or
prevention - Vitamin supplements - should not imply that
vitamins are a substitute for good nutrition, are
superior to normal dietary nutrients or that
normal health will be affected by not taking
vitamin supplements - Weight management Have to state only effective
when used in conjunction with a kilojoule
controlled balanced diet
19OTC Medicines S1 and S0Consumer Marketing
- No exaggerated or flippant claims
- May not claim enhance life
- You may not use the word safe
- You may not use the word natural
- May not claim guarantees
20OTC Medicines S1 and S0Consumer Marketing
- Cannot use trade names of other competitors
- No superlatives may be used e.g. unique
- Cannot state that the product has been available
on Rx - Cannot use a real doctor to endorse a product
(can use an actor) - BUT you must use a real pharmacist and not a
actor should you have a pharmacist in your
advertisement - Reason Pharmacists and doctors are governed by
different bodies and have different laws /
regulations
21OTC Medicines S1 and S0Consumer Marketing
- Cannot use a personality to endorse a product
- Cannot encourage directly or indirectly for a
consumer to discontinue the use of prescribed
medication - May not state that a product does not contain a
particular ingredient - e.g. codeine free or aspirin free
- May not suggest that a products effects are
equal to or better than another
22OTC Medicines S1 and S0Consumer Marketing
- Consumer promoters / agents etc selling or
promoting S0 medicines remain the responsibility
of the company whose products are being promoted
/sold - These people must be adequately trained and
offer accurate, balanced and fair information
23What about - Schedule 0 ?
- S0 products are medicines and are therefore
governed by both The Medicines Act and the Code - The ONLY deviation is that S0 medicines are
exempt until 2011 from only sections 18A and 22G
of the Act in so far as the matter relates to a
Single Exit Price
24(No Transcript)
25Interpretation of the Exemption
- The exemption relates to issues of price and
practices associated with what price one charges - Price is something which has to do with what you
charge, how that charge is reflected etc - The phrase bonus, rebate or other incentive
scheme has to be interpreted within that
context - It cannot be regarded as a loophole for practices
that are not honestly related to the price and
any bonuses etc that go with it - To prevent charges of corruption and fraud one
must be able to reflect bonuses, rebates and
incentives schemes on lawful invoices and
financial accounting mechanisms - Giving gift vouchers, credit card refunds, entry
into a competition, presents, tickets to sports
games etc in return for a sale constitutes quid
pro quos and not conditions of sale quid pro
quo is not an incentive, it is a kickback!
26Schedule 0
- If we abuse the exemption we face losing it at
any time or not having it renewed - What does this mean?
- S0 medicine e.g. Grand-pa will be subject to
- Single Exit Pricing
- Benchmarking
- A prescribed maximum annual price increase
- No bonusing, rebates, discount or incentives
Therefore the implications are HUGE - NOTE Even if your company is primarily an FMCG
company but you are the MANUFACUTER and SELLER of
medicines (S0 included), you are required to be
registered as a pharmaceutical company and you
are by implication further required to abide by
the law and by the conditions of your license
27Schedule 0
- You may sell S0 products at different prices to
different customers - SEP is not applicable
- You may bonus a S0 medicine (only if reflected on
an invoice in relation to price) - Can offer - buy one get one free ( only if
reflected on an invoice in relation to price) - Cannot give vouchers / gifts / entry into a
competition etc as an incentive to purchase a
particular deal - You may discount a S0 medicine
- Off the price only (only if reflected on an
invoice in relation to price) -
28Schedule 0
- You may rebate a S0 medicine ( only if reflected
on an invoice in relation to price) - S0 products are not subject to a logistic fee
- S0 are not subject to benchmarking
- You may pay for shelf space for a S0 product
(only if reflected on an invoice in relation to
price) - You cannot offer incentives of any description to
anyone to sell, recommend or prescribe a S0
product
29Schedule 0
- S0 medicines may be sold according to an
incentive scheme based on price and is reflected
on an invoice - The incentive cannot be in the form of a
competition, nor in the form of a prize, gift,
give-away etc (violates the Act under Section 18C
) - NOTE ALL SALES AND MARKETING ACTVITIES,
IRRESPECTIVE OF THE CHANNEL, OF A S0 PRODUCT ARE
REQUIRED TO BE SIGNED OFF BY YOUR REGULATORY
DEPARTMENT - GMP /CODE GUIDELINES - You may not sample a S0 product to a healthcare
professional or to a wholesaler, retailer, agent,
spaza shop, forecourt owner or to any other
person
30Schedule 0
- You may not donate S0 medicines to any cause
without the prior consent of the DoH ( violation
of Section 18B) - You may not tamper or change the appearance of a
S0 medicines e.g. placing stickers onto the pack
( refer to Regulations) - The S0 medicine is to be sold in its original
registered format
31Schedule 0
- You may not swap damaged S0 stock with sample /
or boot stock - You may not sweeten a deal by offering
boot/sample stock - Any piece of promotional material ( including
sales promotions) that contains a pack shot (s)
of a product (s) MUST contain the full product
legals
32Schedule 0
- You may band a S0 medicine with a gift that is
modest and has a direct correlation to the
product e.g. a water bottle for a tonic, teaspoon
for a liquid NO free binoculars, golf balls,
calculators, iPods etc - NB You may not deface any of the panels of the
unit carton when banding the pack of the primary
or the secondary packaging - You may put a give-away relating to the product
e.g. a spoon inside the secondary packaging of a
product e.g. a syrup - Once again
- No defacing of the packaging in any way
- The gift must be modest and have a direct
correlation to the product
33Schedule 0
- You may bind 2 packs of the same product (
identical name) but of different strengths e.g. a
50ml and a 100m - BUT without defacing either pack
- You may not bind 2 packs of different products
together e.g. an analgesic with a cold and flu
product or a cold and flu product with a lozenges
or a chest rub etc
34Schedule 0
- You may offer competitions to healthcare
professionals, wholesalers and retailers etc - Please note that retailers ( who are not
healthcare professionals), retail wholesalers,
other wholesalers, forecourt owners etc ARE
subject to the law as they are sellers of
medicines - But The prize for a healthcare professional and
other staff ( this includes an owner of a
pharmacy who is not a healthcare professional)
and for retailers, retail wholesalers, other
wholesalers, spaza store owners, forecourt owners
etc must be no more than R1000 inc VAT in value
- Note this value will be reevaluated and
determined by the code authority from time to
time
35Schedule 0
- The prize must be of value or applicable to the
practice / pharmacy/ wholesaler etc - The competition must have a scientific or product
related question ( some skill involved) - For all stakeholders
- Entry into the competition must not be linked to
purchase of a medicine or be conditional to the
purchase or sale or prescription of a medicine IN
ANY WAY
36Schedule 0
- You may run a consumer competition for a S0
medicine - But
- Entry into the competition must not be linked to
purchase of a medicine or be conditional to the
purchase of a medicine IN ANY WAY - The value of the consumer competition prize may
not exceed R100 000 inc VAT in value in totality
and each individual prize may not exceed R5000
inc VAT in value - A corporate social investment component to the
competition needs to be included in this amount
- any amount above this should be done through
your CSR department and not as part of a
competition
37Schedule 0
- To repeat
- Any medicine that has a Scheduling of S0, and
that is sold in the open market such as spaza
shops, forecourts, through agents, wholesalers,
retailers or anywhere else are subject to the
Code of Marketing Practice plus the Medicines Act
- except for limited circumstances pertaining to
Sections18A and 22G of the Act as so far as it
pertains to the Single Exit Price
38Wholesalers
- No wholesaler shall purchase products from any
other source other than from the original
manufacturer or from the primary importer of the
finished product. A wholesaler shall sell
products only into the retail sector - Notwithstanding the above , provision has been
made by the Portfolio Committee of Health for
SOs - The below has been added ( yet to be promulgated
) to Section 22H(c) of the Bill - A wholesaler may purchase from or sell to, other
wholesalers or the public Schedule 0 substances'
39Link between the ACT and Policy
on Perverse Incentives
- No Professional e.g. doctor or pharmacist may
- Pay commission for recommending patients
- Charge fees for seeing medical representatives
- Request samples, bonuses, gifts and other
incentives - NB The Corruption Act clearly defines that
anyone e.g. pharmacist, retailer, wholesaler MAY
NOT direct customers to purchase a particular
brand
40Samples, Gifts Inducements
- No gift, benefit in kind, rebate, discount,
kickback or any other pecuniary advantage may be
offered or given to healthcare professionals,
administrative staff, government employees,
wholesalers, retailers, spaza store owners,
forecourt owners etc or the general public as an
inducement to prescribe, supply, stock, dispense,
administer or buy any medicine
41Samples, Gifts Inducements
- Gifts in the form of promotional aids and prizes
may be distributed provided that the gift or
prize is inexpensive and of relevance to the
practice of the recipients profession or
employment - Gifts may not be for personal use e.g. DVDs,
binoculars etc - Repeat The maximum acceptable value of a prize
in a promotional competition is R 1000 (incl.
VAT) - Give-aways may not exceed R 200 (incl. VAT)
- Under review, and to be determined by the code
authority from time to time
42Hospitality and Meetings
- No payment for a person accompanying a delegates
is allowed - Costs for travel within S.A. may only be made to
professional bodies organising the meeting - Payment of reasonable honoraria and actual travel
costs for speakers is permitted
43Hospitality and Meetings
- Declaration of sponsorship must be prominent
- Meetings of a mainly social, leisure or sporting
nature are not acceptable! - Any sort of hospitality must be secondary to the
educational aspect of the meeting
44Practical Applications CPDs Dinners
- Must be non-promotional - no product
advertising - May only use generic names and not product names
- Can serve appropriate refreshments (not
extravagant)
45Practical Applications CPDs Dinners
- No spouses allowed to attend ( unless also a
healthcare professional) - No transport or accommodation costs to be paid
for delegates - Must be overseen by organization e.g. APC, SAMA,
PSSA - Invitations - can have product branding ( in
dispute)
46Practical Applications Branding
- No product branding during CPD event itself
- Pads and pens used in the CPD room can have
corporate branding - Product branded items including stand may be
displayed outside CPD room - No product posters or banners inside room
- Any form of hospitality MUST be secondary to the
educational element
47 Some questions asked..
- Can reps still take pizzas etc to pharmacies?
- Yes, but take appropriate precautions in your
company SOP for approval of the reps activities
and expenses claims It is not appropriate for
professionals to demand anything in response for
granting an interview - 2. Can a rep invite OVER a weekend pharmacists /
wholesalers, retailers to a game of golf or to a
rugby match? - A qualified yes, i.e. If they are personal
friends and if he/she does not claim the expense
from the company. Your company SOP should make it
clear that such an expense will not be approved
48Note
- You may not take a pharmacist / wholesaler,
retailer etc to a game of golf or a rugby match
etc under the guise of e.g. an energy drink,
toothpaste or deodorant that you might sell. If
you sell S0s and above medicines you are
registered with the MCC as a healthcare company
and you must act accordingly
49Some questions asked..
- Can we still take customers to rugby IF we have
a 1 hour educational workshop beforehand ? - No because
- The venue is not suitable for a scientific or
educational meeting - 75 of the time spent at the venue must be for
education not entertainment - The entertainment part of the meeting must not be
the main part of the educational meeting - A singer or band etc during dinner following a 6
hour educational meeting is allowed provided it
is not at a separate venue
50Note
- No stand-alone entertainment of any description
by a pharmaceutical company or consumer
healthcare company is permitted for ANY seller of
medicines i.e. for healthcare professionals,
their staff, retail wholesalers, other
wholesalers, retailers, pharmacy owners etc
51Some fraudulent, perverse and prohibited
practicesMany of these violate Section 18A, as
well as the Marketing Code AND The Corruption
Act!
- Swiping of credit cards in pharmacies by reps
- Passing credits for stock, but failing to uplift
the stock - Discounting off invoice for S1 and above
products - Paying money into pharmacists private bank
accounts - Paying for holidays, trips, hunting, fishing,
nights away etc - Paying for licenses of software, for stationery
etc
52Some fraudulent, perverse and prohibited
practices
- Paying for golf lodge and other accommodation,
world cup tickets, invites to Super 14 , cricket
tests, theater, shows, etc - Rewarding front shop assistants or others to
promote your brand ( S0 and above) or bundling a
S0 and above drug with a unscheduled product - Note incentives allowed for a S0 product is off
price ONLY - Offering incentives for support e.g. gifts,
money, vouchers, fridge, for the pharmacy /
practice,air conditioners etc
53Some fraudulent, perverse and prohibited
practices
- Using stickers linked to the sale of the product
placed in a book to earn points or discounts - Use of free or reduced cost of any product for
achieving overall sales targets - Payment for shelf space for S1 and above
(Violation of section 18A) - Payment for use of electronic order systems to
switch one brand for another or using this
mechanism to disguise a promotion /competition (
with elaborate prizes such as overseas trips
World Cup Rugby, Grand Prix etc)
54Some fraudulent, perverse and prohibited
practices
- Using vouchers for pharmacists/ front shop
assistants to reward or encourage the sale of
selected brands - Temporary price reductions to disguise a push for
sales in pretence that there is excess stock when
there is not - Giving any one in the Healthcare chain voyager
miles, e-bucks, extended credit terms etc - Paying excessive co marketing fees, data fees,
special fees etc - Data fees can be paid but they must be a fee
for a legitimate, required and used service, be
transparent and be reasonable
55Some fraudulent, perverse and prohibited
practices
- Misguided promotions through a 3rd party
- Formulary listing payments
- Paying kickbacks
- Excessive logistic fees ( up to 50)
- Contractual agreements with healthcare
professionals to dispense brands in exchange for
data fees
56Some fraudulent, perverse and prohibited
practices
- Taking doctors or other healthcare professionals
to dinner under the guise of getting information
on for e.g. how to market to them
57Sales Representatives - including those calling
on retailers,wholesalers, spaza stores etc
- Must be adequately trained
- On product
- On the Marketing Code
- On The Medicines Act
- Must comply with The Medicines Act and the
Marketing Code - All briefing, promotional material, trade
presenters etc must comply with the Medicine Act
and the Marketing Code - Note This also applies to third parties and
agents
58Mechanism for Complaints
- Until such time as the Code Authority is set up -
should you wish to alert us as to a violation of
the code by a competitor company please email
Allison Vienings on smasa_at_telkomsa.net and
outline the complaint together with proof thereof
and the necessary action will be taken - Please make an effort to clean up our industry
- Should you have a complaint re a pharmacy,
pharmacist doctor or any other healthcare
professional please report this to the HPCA or to
Pharmacy Council and not to SMASA
59For any questions regarding this presentation
please contact the SMASA office on
smasa_at_telkomsa.net or on 27 (0)12 803-4444
/-6223 /-5955 /-1039
60Thank you