Title: WHO Essential Drugs Strategy
1Ensuring access to essential medicines in
developing and least developed countries framework
for action
Jonathan D. Quick, MD, MPH Essential Drugs and
Medicines Policy (EDM) World Health Organization
(WHO) March 2002
2People are needlessly suffering and dying -
medicines unavailable, unaffordable, unsafe, or
wrongly used
The challenge
- In Africa and S.E.Asia
- 1/2 of deaths among children, young adults due to
6 diseases - prompt diagnosis and treatment could save over3
million lives per year
3In poorer countries drugs are largest household
and second largest public expenditure for health
The challenge
Pharmaceutical spending, as of total health
spending
Greece
Germany
Italy
France
Spain
Denmark
UK
United States
Netherlands
Norway
Bulgaria
Czech Rep.
Hungary
Croatia
Poland
Estonia
Slovenia
Lithuania
Mali
Egypt
China
Indonesia
Thailand
Tunisia
Jordan
Argentina
South Africa
0
10
20
30
40
50
60
70
4Access to essential drugs has increased from 2
to4 billion people in 20 years - but a huge gap
remains
The challenge
Percentage of population with regular access to
essential drugs (1997)
Source WHO/DAP (1998)
5 Ensuring access to essential drugs -
framework for collective action
Access framework
6Modernizing the essential drugs concept
-Creating a WHO Essential Drugs Library
1. Rational selection
- WHO Model List of Essential Drugs
- 11th model list
- 306 drugs
7Many factors contribute to the final price of a
drug
2. Affordable prices
Margins may be 20 to 80 of final price
8Affordable prices - promote competition reduce
costs
2. Affordable prices
- price information
- price competition - generic drugs of assured
quality - price control - producer, distributor, retailer
- reduce duties, taxes, markups
- differential pricing of newer essential drugs
- apply WTO/TRIPS safeguards as appropriate
9WHO indicative price information
2. Affordable prices
- MSH-WHO essential drugs price indicator
- 499 products
10Competition is highly effective in reducing
prices - the example of antiretrovirals
2. Affordable prices
Source UNAIDS, B. Samb, 2000
11Building a large generic market takes time- and
requires a combination of strategies
2. Affordable prices
National strategies for generics 1. Supportive
legislation regulation 2. Reliable quality
assurance 3. Professional, public acceptance 4.
Economic incentives
Percent of new prescriptions, U.S.
12Declaration on the trips agreement and public
health -WTO Ministerial Conference, Doha,
November 2001
2. Affordable prices
- Gravity of public health problems in developing
countries - HIV/AIDS, tuberculosis, malaria, other epidemics
- Intellectual property protection important for
new medicines - Recognize concerns about effect on prices
- TRIPS to be implemented in a manner, to protect
public health and to promote access to medicines
for all. - WTO Members have rights to use flexibilities
- Provisions to be read in the light of TRIPS
objectives and principles - Compulsory licences and right to determine the
grounds - (solution to be found for non-producing
countries) - Regime of exhaustion without challenge
(parallel imports)
WT/MIN(01)/DEC/W/2 , 14 November 2001, World
Trade Organization, MINISTERIAL CONFERENCE, Doha,
9 - 14 November 2001
13Checklist for policy-makers Globalization,TRIPS
and access to pharmaceuticals
- Government process and resources
- Identify focal point within Ministry of Health
- Establish contacts, working group, with trade and
other ministries - Develop mechanism to monitor the health impact of
agreements - National patent and related legislation should
- Promote standards of patentability that take
health into account - Permit compulsory licensing, parallel importation
and other measures to promote availability and
ensure fair competition - Permit requests for extension of transitional
period for TRIPS implementation, if needed and if
eligible - Consider national public health interests before
TRIPS-plus
14WHO policy and technical support on TRIPS to over
60 countries - health, trade and patent officials
15WHO policy and technical guidance for
countries- collaborative work with international
organizations
- Perspectives on the WTO/TRIPS agreement
- TRIPS and pharmaceuticals
- Traditional medicines and intellectual property
- Public health and patent legislation
- Network for monitoring impact
- Annotated bibliography
Globalization, TRIPS and access to
pharmaceuticals. WHO Policy Perspectives on
Medicines No. 3 March 2001
16Advocacy, corporate responsiveness, competition
have reduced antiretroviral prices 95 in 3 years
2. Affordable prices
??
17Differential pricing - adaptation of prices to
purchasing power of governments and households
2. Affordable prices
- Already practiced with reductions over 90 - Key
factors - bulk purchasing - competition - skillful
negotiation - Feasibility has been demonstrated
- economically feasible
- compatible with WTO TRIPS agreement
- Key factors for wider use include
- preventing leakage of products to unintended
markets - preventing leakage of prices into developed
market decisions - Sustainable mechanisms for single-source products
- bilateral agreements ? voluntary licensing
- compulsory licensing ? patent waivers
Prices do matter -- especially for low-income
countries poor households
Source Report of WHO-WTO Workshop on
Differential Pricing and Financing of Essential
Drugs, April 2001
18Public financing - in 38 countries public drug
expenditure is lt US 2.00 / capita
3. Sustainable financing
Public drug expenditure per capita(US) (n
193)
US 51-gt100
(7)
US 11-50
(26)
US 3-10
(22)
US lt1-2
(38)
No data
(100)
19Drug benefits in public health insurance -
insurance coverage rising in most regions
3. Sustainable financing
20The new Global Fund to Fight AIDS, TB, Malaria
-international solidarity for prevention and
treatment
3. Sustainable financing
Pledges May-August 2001 US millions By March
2002 1,900 million
21Drug financing - develop all viable funding
sources within overall health care financing
policy
3. Sustainable financing
- Expand external funding - grants, donations
- interim measure which should not undermine
national policy - Appropriate government funding
- public sector user charges are a transitional
measure - Expand health insurance coverage drug benefits
- Extend employer role in health and drug financing
- Support NGOs, other community and local financing
- Better use out-of-pocket spending
22Reliable health and supply systems - successful
examples exist in all regions
4. Reliable supply systems
23Substandard drugs often have no active ingredient
- antibiotics, anti-malarials, anti-tuberculars
included
4. Reliable supply systems
Percentage breakdown of data on 325 cases of
substandard drugs
Source reported from around the world to WHO
database
24Key actions - ensure availability and quality
4. Reliable supply systems
- integrate drug management in health systems
development - create an efficient mix of public, private,
not-for-profit services - assure drug quality through production
distribution chain - promote rational prescribing, dispensing, use by
patients
25Ensuring access to essential medicines in
developingand least developed countries -
framework for action
Conclusion
Medicines for all?s for all? - inequities -
opportunities - unanswered questions
Essential medicines have a huge impact - too
often unavailable, unaffordable, unsafe, wrongly
used
Access depends on - rational selection,
affordable prices, sustainable financing,
reliable systems
Globalization has a significant influence -
international agreements, funding, innovation
26Questions for consideration
- What percent of the population in this region -
in your country - has regular access to the
medicines they need? - What are the biggest barriers to access?
Availability? Price? Financing? Quality?
Supply systems? - Which of these barriers are related to
globalization? Which barriers are local?
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