Title: Neelam Dhingra MD
1Increasing the world-wide supply of
safe, affordable factor replacement
therapy Differential Pricing
Neelam Dhingra MD Coordinator Blood Transfusion
Safety World Health Organization Geneva
2Global Blood Supply Human Development Index (HDI)
Low HDI (n36) 2.3 millions (3)
Medium HDI (n88) 29.4 millions (36)
High HDI (n54) 49.4 millions (61)
Total Annual Blood Collection 81 millions (178
Countries)
3WHO Global Database on Blood Safety (GDBS)
- Accurately assess the global situation on blood
safety - Obtain best available information on situation of
BTSs - Identify areas of need
- Monitor progress/trends
4WHO Blood Safety ProgrammeMission
Strengthening of national blood programmes to
ensure the provision and appropriate use of safe,
quality and adequate blood and blood products
that meet the needs of all patients
5Access to Drugs
- Access to medicines depends on many factors,
notably - rational selection and use of drugs
- adequate and sustainable financing
- affordable prices
- reliable supply systems
- Prices are only one factor. Yet prices are an
important factor especially in developing
countries - In developed countries, pharmaceuticals are
largely publicly funded, through reimbursement
and insurance schemes, in developing countries,
typically, 50 to 95 of drugs are paid by the
patients themselves - Thus, in developing countries, prices of
medicines have direct implications for access
6Multiple approaches to reduce the price of
medicines
- Differential (Tiered) pricing
- The adaptation of prices charged by the seller to
the purchasing power of governments and
households in different countries. - Competition
- Between suppliers (both research-based and
generic manufacturers) to reduce prices - Regional sub-regional procurement
- Groups of countries or regions collaborate to
purchase larger volumes of drugs, and thereby
benefit from further discounts
7Multiple approaches to reduce the price of
medicines
- Licensing agreements/Voluntary licensing
- Companies with patent medicines offer licenses to
other manufacturers based in developing countries
if they are able to produce the same quality
medicines at lower cost - Licensing arrangements between international
pharmaceutical companies and manufacturers in
developing countries
8Multiple approaches to reduce the price of
medicines
- Parallel importation
- If a manufacturer has patented a product in
several countries, it may sell it at a different
price in different countries. If the price in
country A is substantially lower than that in
country B, an importer in country B may buy the
product at the cheaper price in country A, and
sell it in country B at a price which is lower
than the price set by the patent holder - New funding mechanisms
- Public and private sector funding may need to be
increased dramatically to help pay for treatment,
which, even at the lowest prices, may still be
out of reach of many of the poorest people living
with HIV/AIDS
9Multiple approaches to reduce the price of
medicines
- Compulsory licensing
- This means that the law allows the granting of a
license without permission from the patent
holder. In practical terms, a country may allow
the national authority to grant a third party the
permission to manufacture or commercialize a drug
which is still under patent. - Using the emergency health safeguards built into
trade arrangements, international agreements and
national intellectual property legislation allow
for countries to issue compulsory licences to
manufacture patented medications, in situations
of national emergency
10 The TRIPS Agreement
- Ministerial conference in Doha 'The Agreement on
Trade-related Aspects of Intellectual Property
Rights' is an integral part of the World Trade
Organization (WTO) Agreements, which create
binding international obligations among WTO
Member States - To minimize the adverse effects of patent
protection on public health - Improve access by differential pricing- price
vary according to national ability to pay - International manufactures make selective offers
to substantial discounts to government and NGOs
11Accelerating Access to HIV/AIDS Care Treatment
in Developing Countries
- The objectives of this initiative are
- To make HIV/AIDS drugs more affordable and
accessible in developing countries - To improve technical collaboration in the
development of national programme capacities to
deliver care, treatment and support
12A Country Driven Process
- Ongoing political commitment by national
governments is essential for the successful
implementation of any strategy to improve ARV
access - The process is initiated by the national
government, which is responsible for the
implementation of its decisions - At the request of a member country, UN agencies
and their partners in this initiative provide
technical support.
13Drug Procurement
- Following a request by a country and an analysis
of the current situation, an action plan is
developed to cover all aspects of HIV care
delivery relevant to the countrys needs - With reference to ARV, the country action plan
includes the following - the mechanism by which the government will
purchase drugs - how the purchase of drugs will be financed
- how the rational use of drugs will be supported
(e.g., training of health care workers, improved
laboratory services).
14Drug Procurement
- Expressions of interest requested from
research-based and generic pharmaceutical
manufacturers interested in becoming potential
suppliers of ARVs as part of this initiative. - A drug procurement system can operate at three
levels, involving individual countries, groups of
countries in a particular region or sub-region or
globally, using existing schemes operated by
UNICEF, UNFPA or WHO
15Drug Procurement
- By 2002, 80 countries had indicated their
interest in the Initiative - 41 from Africa, 24 from Latin America and the
Caribbean, 5 from Europe, 5 from Asia, and 5 from
the Middle East. 39 of these countries have
completed or are in the advanced stages of
developing national care and treatment plans - With support from UNAIDS/WHO, 19 of these
countries have reached agreement with
manufacturers on significantly reduced drug
prices in the context of national plans
16Price of ARVs as given by manufactures
17End User Prices
- Prices to patients
- National distribution
- Handling charges
- Mark up rates
- National imports/exports
- Sales tax
18Case study Vaccine Pricing
- Low-Income countries charged a reduced price
compared to open market through bulk procurement
established by WHO and UNICEF - Price of 6 basic vaccine for the developing
country are less than 10 of the price of those
vaccines in the richer countries - Factors influencing- vaccine costs and prices
- Volume of production production cost fixed,
larger batches cost less per dose - Stage of the product cycle- new vs old
- Little danger of export of vaccines procured by
WHO/UNICEF from a developing country to rich
country