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Workshop on IP & Access to Medicines at Cochin University of Science & Technology Sakthivel Selvaraj Public Health Foundation of India New Delhi (shakti@phfi.org). Access to Medicines in India . Key Barriers to Access to Medicines . Unfair health financing mechanisms;
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Workshop on IP & Access to Medicines at Cochin University of Science & Technology SakthivelSelvarajPublic Health Foundation of India New Delhi (shakti@phfi.org) Access to Medicines in India
Key Barriers to Access to Medicines • Unfair health financing mechanisms; • Unreliable supply systems; • Unaffordable pricing; • Irrational use of medicines; • Inadequate funding for research in neglected diseases; • Stringent product patent regime.
Source of Health Spending Source: National Health Accounts, 2004-05, GoI, 2009
Share of Households’ OOP Expenditure by Quintile Groups, 2009-10 Source: Unit Level Records of NSSO.
Percentage of Households Facing Catastrophic Expenditure on Health, 2009-10 (>10% of HH Spend) Source: Unit Level Records of NSSO.
Impoverishment Due to OOP Payments in India (In Millions) Source: Selvaraj and Karan (2009)
State-wise Availability of Free/Partly Free Medicines at Government Facilities during 2004 Source: Morbidity & Health Survey, NSS, 2004
Distribution Network & Mark-Up in Indian Pharma Market Source: IMS-ORG, 2004
National Pharmaceutical Pricing Policy, 2012 Key Features: • All 348 NLEM ; • Market Based Pricing; • Only Formulations; • WPI-linked increase; • Only single ingredient medicines; • Only NLEM dosages & strengths; • Patented Medicines not covered.
Market Share of Drugs Involving Dosages of EML vis-à-vis Non EML dosages
Continuing Trend of Profiteering in India’s Pharmaceutical Sector
Implications of NPPP, 2012 Pharma market is unique because: • Market Leader is the Price Leader - When competition exists, leading market players are expected to reduce prices substantially & yet obtain normal profits. • Indian pharma industry behaves abnormally. • Under a therapeutic category, hundreds of players slug it out in the Indian pharmaceutical sector, but with substantial variation in prices. • The prices of leading players very often tend to be the highest, because of aggressive promotional campaigns. • High margins provided by industry to stockiest & retailers encourage them to promote high priced medicines; • Given information asymmetry that creates supplier-induced demand, pharma makers have an upper hand in pushing through medicines that are high priced.
Implications of NPPP, 2012 • MBP legitimizes trend of high prices; • Likely to induce players in lower priced segment to drive up prices to closer to highest priced medicines; • Exempts essential medicines - weighted average price of less than or equal to Rs. 3 - would increase in prices of essential medicines (including anti-histaminics, anti-asthmatics, some anti-diabetics, anti-hypertensive etc.). • Prices of APIs which are only manufactured by a limited no. of suppliers in India or internationally should be monitored to ensure that a cartel does not emerge that would drive prices up. • WPI-linked price rise; • Price controls & profitability; • Negotiation on patented medicine prices; • Unethical to use proprietary data for public policy;
Irrational Medicine Use in India Source: IMS-ORG, 2006
HLEG Recommendations • Scale Up Public Spending on Drugs (0.4% GDP): • Expected to reduce OOP; • Strengthen Public Procurement System: • Supply quality generic drugs and enforce rational use; • Centralised Procurement & Decentralised Distribution System; • Warehouses at every district level; • Retail outlets can be set up (or contracted-in) atleast one at every block level and 4-5 at district headquarters. • Drug supply to such stores linked to centralized procurement at state level, so that drugs are of equal quality & costs are minimized by removing intermediaries.
Key Characteristics of an Efficient & Reliable Procurement & Distribution System • Atleast 15% of public funds; • Procure EDL medicines (National and state level EDL at three levels; periodic revisions); • Traditional medicines list; • Prescription and Dispensing through STGs; • A two-bid open transparent tendering process; • A 2 passbook system; • Warehouses at every district level; • An Empanelled laboratories for drug quality testing; • Enactment of Transparency in Tender Act; • Prompt Payments; • Prescription audits & social audits;
Drugs and Vaccine Security • Revive Drug PSUs by infusing capital with autonomous status; • PSUs will offer opportunity to produce volume drugs & help in 'benchmarking' drug costs; • Revisit FDI rules to bring down share of foreign players to less than 49%. • Co-opt medium & small scale drug industry to produce quality generic medicines for UHS by helping them to transit to GMP-complaint status. • Revive old vaccine mfg. units with additional infusion of capital and new vaccine park with autonomous status.
Drug Price Caps • A pervasive price control on all essential drugs is called for; • Price decontrolled drugs to be monitored continuously; • State and Central Cell for price control of drugs; • Price of all new patented drugs to be brought under DPCO automatically; • Weed out irrational drugs: hazardous, irrational, non-essential drugs from mkt;
Drug Quality Control • Strengthen Central and State Drug Control Dept., for effective quality control with adequate human resource, technology & institutions; • Regular/periodic monitoring/study of drug production and distribution for quality – blacklisting offenders; • Build a network of drug quality testing laboratories, to be accredited by NABL in each state with periodic renewal;
Product Patents • Restrict patenting of insignificant or minor improvements of known medicines (under section 3[d]); • Make use of CL provision under TRIPS; • Data exclusivity clause proposed by EU as part of Indo-EU trade pact needs to be removed to avoid ‘ever-greening’; • Invest in neglected disease R&D by open-source drug development model.
Expected Outcomes Expected Outcomes: • Reduction in OOP (reverse ratio – OOP:Govt); • Cost Savings; • Rationality of care ensured; • Quality Generics prescribed & dispensed; • Acute shortages & chronic stock-outs eliminated. Time-Frame: • 1 year (Public Procurement & Public Distribution); - 3-5 years (Public Procurement & Private Distribution.