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Patients need quality medicines
Tuesday, 22 March 2011 00:00
By Thompson Ayodele Opinion - Columnists

EARLY this month, the World Health Organization (WHO) working group on substandard and counterfeit medical products concluded its meeting in Geneva. The deliberations which would form core of discussion during the 64th World Health Assembly next May centered on WHO’s role in the prevention and control of medical products of compromised quality and measures to ensure the availability of good-quality, safe and affordable medical products. The relationship between the WHO and the International
Medical Products Anti-Counterfeiting Taskforce (IMPACT) also featured during discussion.

It is generally recognized that counterfeit and substandard medicine
undermines effective healthcare delivery in Africa. It aggravates the
health conditions of patients and threatens the survival of manufacturers of lawful drugs, both patented and generics. Above all it has led to untimely death of many, with an estimated 700,000 killed a year.


In the face of this challenge, the concern is ensuring genuine drugs are available to patients, orientate them on the harm posed by counterfeit medication and consequently encourage them to desist from patronizing outlets known for peddling counterfeit medicines.

Of late, there has been a call on the WHO to review its relationship with International Medical Products Anti-Counterfeiting Taskforce (IMPACT). One international aid agency has called on the WHO to disband the organization. This is borne out of believe that the task-force activities’ hinder the supply of generic medicines while promoting a strong intellectual property rights protection at the detriment of generic manufacturers. This is misleading. The distribution of counterfeit and substandard medicines undercut the market share of both branded and generic medicines as counterfeiters often sneak in their products into the legitimate supply chain for maximum profits.

Despite the recent aver sion towards activities of the organization and thesupportive roles played by the WHO, the taskforce was set up in response to the global recognition of the need to tackle the menace through inter-sectoral and cross-border enforcement. This follows the realization that fake drug peddling is often a cross-border crime. Normal regulatory and enforcement effort is not seen appropriate tool to stamp out the trade completely.

The birth of IMPACT spearheaded by WHO in 2006 is to give a strong fillip to information sharing regarding counterfeit and sub-standard medicines among the regulators and enforcement agencies, pharmacists, distributors, the public and hospital staff regarding the authenticity or otherwise of a medicine or vaccine. It further aims to inject the needed steam through which governments can crack down on corruption which has become the hallmark of police and customs with respect to enforcing laws against drug counterfeiting. In addition, drug manufacturers are goaled to make their products more difficult to fake.

There are hordes of problems plaguing the fight against counterfeiting.


Firstly, the penal system in many African countries is weak. Secondly, there is insufficient regulation of drug manufacturing. Thirdly, there is poor enforcement of existing legislation, and lastly lack of co-operation between countries with respect to information sharing to track shipment ofcoun terfeit and substandard medicines pose a significant challenge.

Without this framework, patients in Africans will remain more vulnerable to counterfeit and substandard medicines. Ultimately, the impact on the healthcare system will be very devastating. With the increased sophistication employed by counterfeiters coupled with their ability to maneuver, phasing out the task force could trigger the rate of counterfeit drugs in circulation.

The taskforce fills this vacuum by coordinating and ensuring that custom services, law enforcement and drug regulatory agencies cooperate to thwart and frustrate counterfeiters’ activities before getting their medicines to patients. According to the WHO, many African countries do not have functioning drug regulatory authorities and technical competence also differs across countries. Its abolition will make the fight to stamp out counterfeit haphazard.

The fears that this framework could hamper the sale of generic medicines is precipitated by misrepresentation of the role played by task force in strengthening healthcare industry and ensuring patients’ safety. More so  that counterfeit medicine affect both generic and branded. It is in the best interest of drug manufacturers to allow the taskforce play its roles under the auspices of the WHO.

Medicine quality is an issue that requires a broad effort cutting across a range of stakeholders. That means stakeholders in the health sector should be genuinely concerned about quality of medicines that patients take. In this regard, whatever strategies put in place to address the scourge should be consistent without letting up. Should it wane, it has the potential of reversing previous gains and consequently emboldens counterfeiters.

The calls that the WHO should disengage from coordinating anti-counterfeit efforts are largely misplaced. Combating counterfeiting requires building consensus around priorities and key stakeholders should be more flexible.


The WHO should be allowed to continue to spearhead global leadership in addressing a broad range of medicine quality issues.
The implications of WHO disengagement will be a setback for the fight against poor-quality medicines globally. Firstly, it will further
incentivise counterfeiters. Secondly, in view of poor countries’
shoe-string budgets arising from aftermath of global financial crisis,
there might be reduced activities on the part of regulatory and
enforcement agencies which will be explored by counterfeiters. And
thirdly, the global effort at stopping the trade won’t be properly
coordinated. That means the present framework that addresses the
international dimension of the trade should be allowed to sail along.

It is very important that the WHO should continue to play leadership role in order to build a long-term strategies to fight the menace. The
involvement of WHO provides institutional support to fight counterfeit and sub-standard medicines. This is because the WHO has a broad mandate which is recognized globally. The quality of medicine is a critical part of this mandate and it has been fighting drug counterfeiting since it became a major global threat in the 1980s. The WHO through the task force stands in a better position to coordinate and provide the needed leadership towards
providing access to essential and quality medicines.

Ayodele is the Director of Initiative for Public Policy Analysis, a
public policy think-tank in Lagos.         
Thompson Ayodele
Director
Initiative for Public Policy Analysis
P.O.Box 6434
Shomolu,Lagos
Nigeria
Email:thompson@ippanigeria.org
Backup: thompson.ayodele@gmail.com
Website: www.ippanigeria.org

 

     

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