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Paying the Price: The Affordability of Medicines Across the Commonwealth (and elsewhere). Margaret Ewen Health Action International. Uganda pharmaceutical survey Sept 2002. WHO/HAI Project on Medicine Prices. improve the availability and affordability essential medicines
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Paying the Price: The Affordability of Medicines Across the Commonwealth(and elsewhere) Margaret Ewen Health Action International
WHO/HAI Project on Medicine Prices improve the availability and affordability essential medicines • Develop a reliable methodology for collecting and analysing price and availability data across healthcare sectors in a country • Price transparency; survey data on a freely accessible website allowing international comparisons • Advocate for appropriate pricing policies and monitor their impact
Medicine Prices a new approach to measurement • Launched WHA 2003 • Measures medicine • prices • availability • affordability • component costs • 40+ surveys to date in all regions of the world www.haiweb.org/medicineprices
Methodology - Data collection • Systematic sampling: at least 6 regions, minimum of 5 pharmacies/facilities per sector per region • Public sector facilities, private retail pharmacies and ‘other’ sectors (e.g. dispensing doctors or mission sector) • Prices of 30 pre-selected commonly used medicines – 14 global + 16 regional • Predetermined dose form & strength, & recommended pack size • Supplementary medicines highly encouraged, adapted to local needs • Prices of originator brand and lowest price generic • All components of price from manufacturer to retailer identified
Data analysis • Price calculated as Median Price Ratio (MPR) – local price compared to MSH International reference price, world market generic procurement price • Availabilitycalculated as number of facilities having that product on the day of data collection reported as a percentage • Affordability assessed for ten pre-selected courses of treatment compared to daily wage of lowest paid unskilled government worker Excel workbook accompanies manual, for data entry (double entry, with error checking) and analysis
Surveys to date Middle East: Lebanon, Jordan, Kuwait, Syria, Sudan, UAE, Yemen Francophone Africa: Cameroon,Tunisia, Morocco, Algeria, Mali, Chad, Senegal, Niger Anglophone Africa: Uganda, South Africa, Tanzania, Kenya, Nigeria, Ghana,Ethiopia, Zimbabwe Asia/Pacific: Sri Lanka, Malaysia, Pakistan, Mongolia, China: Shandong & Shanghai, Philippines, Fiji, Indonesia, Vietnam, Cook Islands, India:West Bengal, Haryana, Karnataka, Maharashtra (2), Chennai, Rajasthan Central Asia:Kazakhstan, Tajikistan, Kyrgyzstan, Uzbekistan Europe: Bosnia Herzegovina, Kosovo South America: Peru, Brazil
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salbutamol inhaler 0.1mg/dose: availability vs affordability
Examples of taxes on medicines imported, private sector Tajikistan VAT 20% Customs duty 5% Tax 1-5% + transport charges, wholesale & retail mark-ups Eliminate taxes: cumulative mark-up 123% → 74% Peru VAT 12% IGV 19% Municipal promotion tax 2% + insurance, import, wholesale & retail mark-ups Eliminate taxes: cumulative mark-up 238% → 149% Indonesia VAT 10% - charged twice Philippines Import tariff 4% national taxes 3-6% VAT 12% Yemen Customs duty 5% Taxes 5%
Examples of price components, public sector • Chad (official rates)Cumulative mark-ups for generics 92% • Statistics tax 2% • Central Medical Store mark-up 16% • Regional Medical Store mark-up 25% • Health facility mark-up 30% Uganda (preliminary data) -locally manufactured generics 30-32% -imported 66% MSP, insurance, freight + landed costs + NMS mark-up
Price components – private sector • Importers mark-up: 10% – 61% • Wholesaler mark-up: 2% - 65% • Pharmacy mark-up: 8% – over 300% • Public or private sector add-on costs: • - applied as % mark-up or fixed fee • fixed or variable (originator brand/generic, imported/local, regressive) • cumulative so higher the manufacturer’s price the higher the patient price
Lebanon 2005 - implemented a new pricing structure for all imported medicines estimated to reduce patient prices by 3-15% (was 71.4%)
Malaysia: atenolol 50mg tab private retail pharmacies
Financial Sources Used to Pay for Health Care Preliminary results Anita Wagner et. al. 2002 World Health Survey of households & individuals. Analysis of 8 countries: Senegal, Morocco, Tunisia, Cote d’Ivoire, Ghana, India, Pakistan, Philippines
Many policy options • Off-patent medicines - purchase low priced quality generics, public and private sector • Patented medicines – equitable prices, use the flexibilities of trade agreements to introduce generics while a patent is in force • Aid generic competition eg fast-tracking, waive registration fees • Permit generic substitution and provide incentives for the dispensing of generics
Many policy options • Stop taxing essential medicines • Where there is little competition, consider regulating prices - from manufacturers’ selling price to margins in wholesale and retail. • Educate doctors and consumers on availability and acceptability of generics, and publicise the price of generics • Separate prescribing and dispensing