Assessment of Access-to-Medicine Timelines in Selected Countries in Middle East and Africa</a> highlights key reforms to improve regulatory and access-to-medicines timelines. These include: </p> <ul> <li> Holistic and <strong>comprehensive regulatory and reimbursement policies</strong>/guidelines, in line with the best practices followed by developed nations that are required. Active and passive surveillance of drugs in circulation should be enhanced to keep a check on drug quality. </li> <li><strong>Execution of emergency-use approvals and fast-track review</strong> are the need of the hour to improve accessibility. Many countries under scope have shown sustained performance in regulatory and access-to-medicine timelines by issuing fast-track registration procedures for new drugs that are already approved by regulators in developed countries such as the US and/or Europe. </li> <li> Formal assessment of pharmacoeconomic or cost-effectiveness data plays a limited role in current reimbursement decisions in the MEA region. Several countries in the region have realized a need to <strong>strengthen their HTA capabilities</strong> to enable local decision makers make sound decisions. For instance, Ghana has a working group reviewing Health Technology Assessments (HTAs) - a defined framework for presenting health economic evaluations. </li> </ul> <p> Ghana has made great strides in its HTA journey. The country currently has a working group reviewing HTAs that have been used to approve indications, such as childhood cancer, for national reimbursement. This has led pharma companies in the country to seek to showcase the value of their products to stakeholders with evidence-based assessments.</p> <p><img alt="" src=https://www.iqvia.com/locations/middle-east-and-africa/blogs/2023/01/"-/media/efa0d8e201ed430f8ddc74e2717e7f35.ashx" style="height:494px; width:1280px;" /></p> <p> We expect more and more countries in the region will start building their capacity for such technology assessments. In a progressively resource-constrained post-pandemic world, we expect an increase in the requirement for real-world evidence to optimize health spending decisions and ensuring access to the most critical healthcare products. </p> <p> IQVIA has been supporting its clients by furnishing unparalleled data assets, sharing in-depth healthcare knowledge, and undertaking advanced analytics to meet specific customer needs. IQVIA has a dedicated public-health practice actively engaged with governments, national/international donors and Multilateral health care organizations and private sector stakeholders to support evidence- based decision making. For more information, please reach out to Deepak Batra or Mridu Bhutani </p> <br /> <h4 style="font-size:13px;"><strong>Sources</strong>:</h4> <ol style="font-size:13px;"> <li>Establishment of the African Medicines Agency: progress, challenges, and regulatory readiness, Journal of Pharmaceutical Policy, and Practice, 2021</li> <li> Prevalence and Estimated Economic Burden of Substandard and Falsified Medicines in Low- and Middle-Income Countries, National Library of Medicine, 2018 </li> <li> Africa’s health security requires strong African regulators, the Africa Report, 2022 </li> <li> Africa’s Shot at Local Pharma Production, IFC, 2021 </li> <li> How clinical development can tackle Africa's unique health needs, World Economic Forum, 2022 </li> <li> What do we need to know? Data sources to support evidence-based decisions using health technology assessment in Ghana, National Library of Medicine, 2020 </li> </ol>" /> Assessment of Access-to-Medicine Timelines in Selected Countries in Middle East and Africa</a> highlights key reforms to improve regulatory and access-to-medicines timelines. These include: </p> <ul> <li> Holistic and <strong>comprehensive regulatory and reimbursement policies</strong>/guidelines, in line with the best practices followed by developed nations that are required. Active and passive surveillance of drugs in circulation should be enhanced to keep a check on drug quality. </li> <li><strong>Execution of emergency-use approvals and fast-track review</strong> are the need of the hour to improve accessibility. Many countries under scope have shown sustained performance in regulatory and access-to-medicine timelines by issuing fast-track registration procedures for new drugs that are already approved by regulators in developed countries such as the US and/or Europe. </li> <li> Formal assessment of pharmacoeconomic or cost-effectiveness data plays a limited role in current reimbursement decisions in the MEA region. Several countries in the region have realized a need to <strong>strengthen their HTA capabilities</strong> to enable local decision makers make sound decisions. For instance, Ghana has a working group reviewing Health Technology Assessments (HTAs) - a defined framework for presenting health economic evaluations. </li> </ul> <p> Ghana has made great strides in its HTA journey. The country currently has a working group reviewing HTAs that have been used to approve indications, such as childhood cancer, for national reimbursement. This has led pharma companies in the country to seek to showcase the value of their products to stakeholders with evidence-based assessments.</p> <p><img alt="" src=https://www.iqvia.com/locations/middle-east-and-africa/blogs/2023/01/"-/media/efa0d8e201ed430f8ddc74e2717e7f35.ashx" style="height:494px; width:1280px;" /></p> <p> We expect more and more countries in the region will start building their capacity for such technology assessments. In a progressively resource-constrained post-pandemic world, we expect an increase in the requirement for real-world evidence to optimize health spending decisions and ensuring access to the most critical healthcare products. </p> <p> IQVIA has been supporting its clients by furnishing unparalleled data assets, sharing in-depth healthcare knowledge, and undertaking advanced analytics to meet specific customer needs. IQVIA has a dedicated public-health practice actively engaged with governments, national/international donors and Multilateral health care organizations and private sector stakeholders to support evidence- based decision making. For more information, please reach out to Deepak Batra or Mridu Bhutani </p> <br /> <h4 style="font-size:13px;"><strong>Sources</strong>:</h4> <ol style="font-size:13px;"> <li>Establishment of the African Medicines Agency: progress, challenges, and regulatory readiness, Journal of Pharmaceutical Policy, and Practice, 2021</li> <li> Prevalence and Estimated Economic Burden of Substandard and Falsified Medicines in Low- and Middle-Income Countries, National Library of Medicine, 2018 </li> <li> Africa’s health security requires strong African regulators, the Africa Report, 2022 </li> <li> Africa’s Shot at Local Pharma Production, IFC, 2021 </li> <li> How clinical development can tackle Africa's unique health needs, World Economic Forum, 2022 </li> <li> What do we need to know? Data sources to support evidence-based decisions using health technology assessment in Ghana, National Library of Medicine, 2020 </li> </ol>" />
Africa houses 1.2 billion people, about 11% of the global population. Along with this population burden, the continent also bears a disproportionate burden of disease, with 60% of people with HIV/AIDS living in Africa, and more than 90% of the annual global malaria cases being in Africa1. The continent is also afflicted by significant infectious diseases and increasing non-communicable diseases (NCDs). Africa has faced significant public health challenges due to insufficient access to quality, safe, efficacious, and affordable medical products over the years.2 In 2022, some children reportedly lost their lives from acute kidney injury in Gambia after ingesting imported adulterated cough syrups. Events such as these are not just shocking, but also distressing knowing they could have been easily avoided.
Weak regulatory mechanisms and limited availability of financial and technology support across several African countries limits timely access to quality medicines; details can be found below:
Francophone West Africa and South Africa data demonstrate that, although they have achieved access to quality diabetes medicines, the access is significantly delayed when compared to other nations.
As the graph below shows, there has been a decline in the number of new molecules introduced in various countries. Francophone West Africa had a lower number of new products introduced over the last 12 years when compared to South Africa and India.
Taking the US as a reference country, South Africa faces 1-6 years of delay in product introduction, whereas FWA experiences a minimum of 8 years.
Acknowledging the delays, barriers and hindrances to healthcare product accessibility, Africa has initiated developments to change the regulatory system gaps and inefficiencies to improve medicinal access, as evidenced by the following positive developments:
Africa is diverse and comprises of many dissimilar countries with different cultures, market characteristics and economic conditions. While there is no single key to accelerating regulatory and access to medicine timelines, tackling common barriers at country level is a good place to start.
IQVIA’s 2022 whitepaper on Assessment of Access-to-Medicine Timelines in Selected Countries in Middle East and Africa highlights key reforms to improve regulatory and access-to-medicines timelines. These include:
Ghana has made great strides in its HTA journey. The country currently has a working group reviewing HTAs that have been used to approve indications, such as childhood cancer, for national reimbursement. This has led pharma companies in the country to seek to showcase the value of their products to stakeholders with evidence-based assessments.
We expect more and more countries in the region will start building their capacity for such technology assessments. In a progressively resource-constrained post-pandemic world, we expect an increase in the requirement for real-world evidence to optimize health spending decisions and ensuring access to the most critical healthcare products.
IQVIA has been supporting its clients by furnishing unparalleled data assets, sharing in-depth healthcare knowledge, and undertaking advanced analytics to meet specific customer needs. IQVIA has a dedicated public-health practice actively engaged with governments, national/international donors and Multilateral health care organizations and private sector stakeholders to support evidence- based decision making. For more information, please reach out to Deepak Batra or Mridu Bhutani