| Literature DB >> 31251737 |
S Katrina Perehudoff1, Nikita V Alexandrov1, Hans V Hogerzeil1.
Abstract
Persistent barriers to universal access to medicines are limited social protection in the event of illness, inadequate financing for essential medicines, frequent stock-outs in the public sector, and high prices in the private sector. We argue that greater coherence between human rights law, national medicines policies, and universal health coverage schemes can address these barriers. We present a cross-national content analysis of national medicines policies from 71 countries published between 1990-2016. The World Health Organization's (WHO) 2001 guidelines for developing and implementing a national medicines policy and all 71 national medicines policies were assessed on 12 principles, linking a health systems approach to essential medicines with international human rights law for medicines affordability and financing for vulnerable groups. National medicines policies most frequently contain measures for medicines selection and efficient spending/cost-effectiveness. Four principles (legal right to health; government financing; efficient spending; and financial protection of vulnerable populations) are significantly stronger in national medicines policies published after 2004 than before. Six principles have remained weak or absent: pooling user contributions, international cooperation, and four principles for good governance. Overall, South Africa (1996), Indonesia and South Sudan (2006), Philippines (2011-2016), Malaysia (2012), Somalia (2013), Afghanistan (2014), and Uganda (2015) include the most relevant texts and can be used as models for other settings. We conclude that WHO's 2001 guidelines have guided the content and language of many subsequent national medicines policies. WHO and national policy makers can use these principles and the practical examples identified in our study to further align national medicines policies with human rights law and with Target 3.8 for universal access to essential medicines in the Sustainable Development Goals.Entities:
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Year: 2019 PMID: 31251737 PMCID: PMC6599146 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0215577
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Policy checklist for access to medicines in NMPs.
| Checklist | Human rights principle | WHO essential medicines policy |
|---|---|---|
| 1. Right to health | Right to the highest attainable standard of health | Human rights are a ‘value’. [ |
| 2. State obligation to provide essential medicines | Core obligation to provide essential medicines defined by WHO | |
| 3. Transparency | Transparency | Includes information to assess service access and coverage, and publicly available price information for medicines. [ |
| 4. Participation & consultation | Participation | Collaboration and accountability of all health systems actors, and stakeholder consultation. [ |
| 5. Monitoring & evaluation | Monitoring | Achieved through explicit government commitment, indicator-based surveys, and independent impact evaluation. [ |
| 6. Accountability & redress | Accountability | Accountability of all health systems actors. [ |
| 7. Selection of essential medicines | (Assured) quality of health services (of the AAAQ) | Includes the essential drugs concept, procedures to define and update the national list(s) of essential drugs, explicit, evidence-based criteria that includes cost-effectiveness, and selection mechanisms. [ |
| Duty to adopt appropriate legislative, administrative, budgetary and other measures to a maximum of its available resources | ||
| 8. Government financing | Requires adequate funding and mobilising all available public resources and increase funding for priority diseases, and the vulnerable. [ | |
| 9. Pool user contributions | Medicines reimbursement with user charges is a (temporary) financing option. [ | |
| 10. International assistance and technical cooperation | Duty to seek international assistance and technical cooperation | Includes the possibility of using development loans for medicines financing. [ |
| 11. Efficient and cost-effective spending | Duty for the efficient use of available resources | Includes the efficient use of resources and affordable pricing through: price control; a pricing policy for all medicines; competition through generic policies and substitution; good procurement practices; price negotiation and information; and TRIPs-compliant measures such as compulsory licensing and parallel imports. [ |
| 12. Financial protection of vulnerable groups | Duty towards non-discrimination and attention to the vulnerable | Increase government funding for poor and vulnerable groups and reduce the risk of catastrophic health spending. [ |
Abbreviations used in this table: WHO = World Health Organization; TRIPs = Trade Related Aspects of Intellectual Property; AAAQ = Availability, Accessibility, Acceptability, and Quality as elements of health services under the right to health.
Through multiple, iterative rounds, we (SKP, NVA) independently piloted the short list on three NMPs and devised a 3-point coding matrix (see online S1 Appendix). After each round we revised the principles and coding matrix through consensus. The resulting framework was reviewed by three experts on the right to health and pharmaceutical policy (BT, HVH, EtH) for applicability to NMPs and accuracy of the definitions.
Overview of the 12 principles for access to medicines in NMPs from 71 countries.
| NMP publisher | Date of publication | 1. Right to health | 2. State obligation | 3. Transparency | 4. Participation & consultation | 5. Monitoring & evaluation | 6. Accountability & redress | 7. Selection of essential medicines | 8. Government financing | 9. Pool user contributions | 10. International assistance & cooperation | 11. Efficient & cost-effective spending | 12. Financial protection of vulnerable groups |
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| 1988 | |||||||||||||
| 2001 | |||||||||||||
| 2014 | |||||||||||||
| 1991 | |||||||||||||
| 1999 | |||||||||||||
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| 1996 | |||||||||||||
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| 2009 | |||||||||||||
| 2002 | |||||||||||||
| 2007 | |||||||||||||
| 2011–2014 | |||||||||||||
| 2010 | |||||||||||||
| 1993 | |||||||||||||
| 2013 | |||||||||||||
| 2011 | |||||||||||||
| 1999 | |||||||||||||
| 1994 | |||||||||||||
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| 2005 | |||||||||||||
| 2014 | |||||||||||||
| 2008 | |||||||||||||
| 2014 | |||||||||||||
| 2001 | |||||||||||||
| 1990–1995 | |||||||||||||
| 2012 | |||||||||||||
| 2007 | |||||||||||||
| 2000 | |||||||||||||
| 2002 | |||||||||||||
| 1998 | |||||||||||||
| 1995 | |||||||||||||
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| 1995 | |||||||||||||
| 2005 | |||||||||||||
| 2000 | |||||||||||||
| 1997 | |||||||||||||
| 2004 | |||||||||||||
| 2011–2016 | |||||||||||||
| 2016 | |||||||||||||
| 2006 | |||||||||||||
| 2009 | |||||||||||||
| 2013 | |||||||||||||
| 1996 | |||||||||||||
| 2006 | |||||||||||||
| 2006 | |||||||||||||
| 2005–2009 | |||||||||||||
| 2005–2008 | |||||||||||||
| 2011 | |||||||||||||
| 1992 | |||||||||||||
| 2003 | |||||||||||||
| 1991 | |||||||||||||
| 2010 | |||||||||||||
| 1997 | |||||||||||||
| 1998 | |||||||||||||
| 2015 | |||||||||||||
| 1996 | |||||||||||||
| 2011 |
Legend: Black = Strong text, Grey = Weak text, White = No text.
Innovative NMP text for access to medicines.
| El Salvador (2011)—Southern Sudan (2006) |
| Indonesia (2006)—Iran (2004)—Philippines (2011–2016)—Uganda (2015) |
| Iran (2004)—Philippines (2011–2016) |
| New Zealand (2007) |
| Colombia (2012)—Philippines (2011–2016)—Tajikistan (2003) |
| Afghanistan (2014)—Kenya (2008)—Malaysia (2012) |
| Philippines (2011)—South Africa (1996) |
| Afghanistan (2014)—Nigeria (2005) |
| Eritrea (2010) |
| Ecuador (2007)—Ghana (2004) |
| Ecuador (2007) |
| Jordan (2014)—Philippines (2011–2016)—Timor Leste (2010) |