Generating%20reliable%20evidence:%20measuring%20medicine%20prices%20and%20availability - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

About This Presentation
Title:

Generating%20reliable%20evidence:%20measuring%20medicine%20prices%20and%20availability

Description:

Price comparisons: innovator brand and lowest priced generics; public, private ... Government procurement prices for lowest priced generics. 0.78. 5.37. 2.94 ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:49
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 27
Provided by: Tim847
Learn more at: https://www2.ohchr.org
Category:

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: Generating%20reliable%20evidence:%20measuring%20medicine%20prices%20and%20availability


1
  • Generating reliable evidence measuring medicine
    prices and availability
  • Dr Richard Laing
  • Department of Essential Medicines and
    Pharmaceutical Policy
  • World Health Organization
  • (laingr_at_who.int)


2
WHO/HAI Project on Medicine Prices Availability
  • improve the availability and
  • affordability essential medicines
  • Outcome of the WHO/public interest NGOs
    Roundtable on Pharmaceuticals
  • Develop a reliable methodology for collecting and
    analysing price and availability data across
    healthcare sectors and regions in a country
  • Price transparency survey data on a freely
    accessible website allowing international
    comparisons
  • Provide guidance on pricing policy options and
    monitoring their impact

3
WHO/HAI standard methodology
  • Survey tool to measure
  • medicine prices
  • medicine availability
  • affordability of treatments
  • components in the supply chain
  • Launched at the World Health Assembly 2003
  • Survey data publicly available on HAI web site
  • Over 50 surveys conducted to date
  • Second edition includes
  • adjustments to methodology
  • practical advice based on prior surveys
  • and additional tools and resources
  • new guidance on international comparisons,
  • policy options, advocacy and regular monitoring

4
How are data collected?
  • Data on the price and availability of medicines
    are obtained by data collectors during visits to
    "medicine outlets"
  • Medicine outlets are places where medicines are
    dispensed to patients (e.g. pharmacies, health
    centres)
  • Data on government procurement prices are also
    collected
  • During medicine outlet visits, data are recorded
    on hard copy Medicine Prices Data Collection
    forms
  • Medicine price components are also identified by
    tracking medicines through the supply chain and
    identifying add-on costs
  • At the end of fieldwork, all completed forms are
    entered into the electronic survey Workbook by
    data entry personnel
  • Data are entered twice and checked for errors
  • The Workbook automatically generates analyses of
    the survey data

5
What medicines are surveyed?
  • 50 medicines
  • 30 pre-determined by WHO/HAI to enable
    international comparisons (14 global medicines
    and 16 regional medicines)
  • 20 selected nationally for local importance
  • Predetermined dose forms strengths,
    recommended pack sizes
  • For each medicine, two products are surveyed
  • Originator brand (OB)
  • Lowest-priced generic (LPG)

6
How are data analyzed?
  • Availability of outlets where medicine was
    found on the day of data collection
  • Price median local prices expressed as ratios to
    international reference prices
  • Medicine Price Ratio (MPR)
    median local unit price

  • International reference
    unit price
  • Price comparisons innovator brand and lowest
    priced generics public, private and other (e.g.
    mission) sectors districts/states/provinces,
    countries
  • Affordability how many days wages would the
    lowest paid government worker need to spend to
    pay for treatment?

7
Price Components
  • The add-on costs that are applied to medicines as
    they move through the supply chain, from
    manufacturer to patient
  • Examples insurance freight costs, port
    inspection charges, handling charges, import
    duties, import, wholesale retail mark-ups,
    VAT/GST, dispensing fees
  • The amount of charge is often variable depending
    on whether the medicine is
  • Imported or locally manufactured
  • Innovator brand or generic
  • Sold in the public or private sector
  • Crucial to understanding why prices are high and
    what policy options can be considered
  • An integral part of the Medicine Prices survey

8
Median availability by World Bank income group
9
Government procurement prices for lowest priced
generics
MPR 1
10
Public sector patient prices
  • In many countries medicines are free but
    availability is often very poor
  • Where patients pay, even cheapest generics can be
    expensive e.g. in the Western Pacific Region the
    median price was about 12x international
    reference prices
  • Good procurement prices are not always passed on
    to patients
  • In some countries, public sector prices are
    similar to private sector prices, e.g. China,
    Shanghai

11
Patient prices vs. procurement price (LPG)
public sector
12
Patient prices in the private sectormedian of
Median Price Ratios, by WHO region
n6
n5
n8
n9
n5
n5
n11
n11
n1
n2
n9
n9
13
in 9 of the 10 countries, it would take 5 or more
days salary to pay for the medicines every month
Affordability of medicines - for lowest priced
generic
Senegal 7 days
Cameroon 40 days
an asthmatic child with a respiratory
infection, an adult with diabetes and
hypertension and another adult with a peptic ulcer
14
Price components
  • Largest contribution to the final patient price
    varies across countries, sectors and medicines
    (imported or locally produced, originator brand
    or generic)
  • Price components - cumulative effect from
    manufacturers selling price
  • Large mark-up on a low priced generic can result
    in a lower final patient price than a small
    mark-up on a high priced product

15
Price components private sector
  • Multiple taxes are applied
  • Peru VAT 12 IGV 19 Municipal promotion tax 2
    (eliminate taxes - cumulative mark-up is reduced
    238 ? 149)
  • Indonesia VAT 10 - charged twice
  • Philippines Import tariff 4 national taxes 3-6
    VAT 12
  • Yemen Customs duty 5, Taxes 5
  • Wholesaler mark-ups 2 (Pakistan) - 380 (El
    Salvador)
  • Pharmacy mark-ups 10 552 (El Salvador)
  • In some cases the manufacturer's selling price
    (MSP) is the largest contributor to the final
    price
  • E.G. Pakistan - MSP for locally-produced generic
    amoxicillin represented 78 of the final medicine
    price in the private sector

16
Cumulative percentage mark-ups between
manufacturer's selling price and final patient
price, private sector
Country Total cumulative mark-up
China (Shandong) 11-33
El Salvador 165-6894
Ethiopia 76-148
India 29-694
Malaysia 65-149
Mali 87-118
Mongolia 68-98
Morocco 53-93
Uganda 100-358
Tanzania 56
Pakistan 28-35
17
Policy options to improve access to affordable
essential medicines

Margaret EwenHealth Action InternationalGlobal
Office, Amsterdam
18
Examples of policy changes following medicine
price and availability surveys
  • Tajikistan
  • Abolished 20 VAT on medicines in 2006 - supply
    chain add-on costs should decrease from 122 to
    85 for imported medicines
  • Lebanon
  • 2004 - procurement price of 1100 imported
    medicines reduced by 20-30
  • 2005 - regressive margins for importers,
    wholesalers, retailers estimated price
    reductions of 3-15
  • Currently reviewing all prices gt1000 medicines
    reduced by ave. 14
  • Retail prices and pharmacy margins published on a
    public website prices published in Lebanon
    National Drug Index
  • Indonesia
  • Reduced public sector prices of 458 products by
    5-70 and required procurement prices to be
    standardized for all public purchasing in the
    country

19
Examples of work in progress
  • Kuwait
  • Govt. announced that Kuwaiti-only list of 70
    medicines would be free to non-nationals in the
    public sector
  • Indonesia
  • Ministry of Health advocated for abolishing of
    VAT
  • Pharmaceutical industry association announced in
    mid-2006 it would reduce the price of 100 branded
    generic medicines (34 active substances) to max 3
    times the price of true generics has not
    happened for all products
  • Jordan
  • Ministry of Health advocated for abolishing 4
    sales tax
  • Amending the pricing criteria, permit generic
    substitution, include an outpatient
    pharmaceutical benefit in new insurance scheme
  • Tanzania
  • New 10 tax on most imported medicines

20
High prices, low availability and poor
affordability can have many causes
  • Low public sector availability
  • lack of resources or under-budgeting
  • inaccurate forecasting
  • inefficient procurement / distribution
  • low demand/slow-moving products
  • High public sector prices
  • govts applying excessive mark-ups on procurement
    price eg Chad 300, Khartoum 600
  • inefficient procurement so facilities buying from
    private wholesalers
  • High private sector prices
  • high manufacturers selling price
  • high import costs
  • Taxes and tariffs eg Peru VAT 12, IGV 19,
    municipal promotion tax 2 Sudan 1 Ministry of
    Defence duty, 1 pharmacy career fee other govt
    charges totalling 20
  • high mark-ups eg importer 10-61, wholesaler
    2-65, pharmacy 8-300

21
Multiple policy options exist
  • Improve procurement efficiency e.g. national
    pooled purchasing, procurement by generic name
  • Ensure adequate, equitable, and sustainable
    financing, e.g.
  • Health insurance systems that cover essential
    medicines
  • Schemes to make expensive chronic disease
    medicines available in the private sector at
    public sector prices
  • Prioritize drug budget i.e. target widespread
    access to a reduced number of essential generic
    medicines, rather than attempting to supply a
    larger number of both originator brand and
    generic medicines.
  • Promote generic use
  • preferential registration procedures, e.g.
    fast-tracking, lower fees
  • ensure the quality of generic products
  • Permit and encourgae generic substitution
    provide incentives for the dispensing of low
    priced generics
  • educate doctors/consumers on availability and
    acceptability of generics

22
I DONT TAKE CHANCES I ONLY USE ORIGINALS
23
Policy options (cont'd)
  • Separate prescribing and dispensing
  • Control import, wholesale and/or retail mark-ups
    through regressive mark-up schemes for pharmacy
    consider dispensing fee
  • Tax exemptions for medicines pass on govt.
    procurement prices to patients
  • Where there is little competition, consider
    regulating prices
  • Patented medicines
  • use the flexibilities of trade agreements to
    introduce generics while a patent is in force
  • differential pricing schemes whereby prices are
    adapted to the purchasing power of governments
    and households in poorer countries.

24
Must watch for unintended negative effects
  • Price controls may lead to excessive prices when
    the price is not adjusted to consider changes in
    the market
  • Printing maximum retail price on the packet can
    result in all prices at maximum level
  • Regulating mark-ups with percentages can provide
    incentive to sell higher-priced products
  • Eliminating taxes can provide an opportunity for
    retailers to increase their margin (i.e. savings
    not passed on to patient)
  • Dont want to discourage production/stocking of a
    product

25
Our current challenge what are the most
effective policy actions in different contexts?
  • WHO/HAI and international pricing policy experts
    are developing guidelines on options for policies
    affecting medicine prices and their impact in
    various settings
  • mapping current policies interventions
  • commissioning policy review papers
  • drafting policy briefs
  • identifying research needs

26
Interested?
  • HAI website www.haiweb.org/medicineprices

Database of survey results Survey
reports Analyses Bulletins and more
Contact Marg Ewen, HAI Global
marg_at_haiweb.org
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com