| Literature DB >> 35589156 |
Augustina Koduah1, Leonard Baatiema2, Irene A Kretchy3, Irene Akua Agyepong4,5, Anthony Danso-Appiah6, Anna Cronin de Chavez7, Timothy Ensor8, Tolib Mirzoev7.
Abstract
INTRODUCTION: Universal availability and affordability of essential medicines are determined by effective design and implementation of relevant policies, typically involving multiple stakeholders. This paper examined stakeholder engagements, powers and resultant influences over design and implementation of four medicines pricing policies in Ghana: Health Commodity Supply Chain Master Plan, framework contracting for high demand medicines, Value Added Tax (VAT) exemptions for selected essential medicines, and ring-fencing medicines for local manufacturing.Entities:
Keywords: Health policy; Health systems
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35589156 PMCID: PMC9121428 DOI: 10.1136/bmjgh-2021-008225
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMJ Glob Health ISSN: 2059-7908
Summary of medicines pricing policies introduced between 2012 and 2017
| Policy/year | Aim | Type of medicines | Pharmaceutical sector affected/beneficiary |
| HCSCMP (2012) | To address numerous challenges in the supply chain, for example, overlapping tasks, high costs and payment delays in procurement. | Essential medicines | Supply chain/public sector |
| Framework Contracting (2012) | To outline a centralised procurement process for bulk purchase and negotiation of medicine prices. | High demand essential medicines | Supply chain/public sector |
| VAT exemption for medicines importers (2017) | To remove build up costs due to taxes | 392 selected essential medicines (imported finished products) | Importation/cost build-up due to taxes. |
| VAT exemption for active pharmaceutical inputs (API), manufacturing inputs and packaging materials (reviewed in 2012 and 2017) | To remove the build-up of costs due to taxes, and ring-fenced some selected essential medicines for local manufacturing | 552 (active ingredients, and selected inputs) for essential medicines | Local manufacturing/cost build-up due to taxes |
HCSCMP, Health Commodity Supply Chain Master Plan; VAT, Value Added Tax.
Figure 1Theoretical framework (drawing upon).23–26
List of respondents
| Sector | Agency/institution | Number of respondents |
| Government agencies | Ghana Revenue Authority | 1 |
| Ministry of Health | 5 | |
| Ministry of Finance | 1 | |
| National Health Insurance Authority (NHIA) | 1 | |
| Ghana Health Service Regional Health Directorate (GHS-RHD) | 1 | |
| Ghana Health Service Regional Medical Store (GHS-RMS) | 1 | |
| Ghana Health Service Headquarters (GHS-HQ) | 2 | |
| Service providers | Teaching Hospital | 1 |
| Regional Health Facility | 1 | |
| Public Hospital | 3 | |
| Public Polyclinic | 1 | |
| Private Hospital | 1 | |
| Christian Health Association of Ghana | 1 | |
| Development partner | WHO | 1 |
| Professional association | Pharmaceutical Society of Ghana (PSGH) | 1 |
| Society of Private Medical and Dental Practitioners | 2 | |
| Pharmaceutical industry | Pharmaceutical Manufacturers Association of Ghana | 2 |
| Community Pharmacy Practice Association (CPPA) | 1 | |
| Pharmaceutical Wholesaler/Importer/Retailer | 1 | |
| NGO | Coalition of Non-Governmental Organisations in Health | 1 |
NGO, Non-Governmental Organisations.
Stakeholder organisation
| Sector | Stakeholder organisation | Abbreviation |
| Government agencies |
| MOH |
| Minister for Health | Minister-MOH | |
| MOH-Procurement and Supplies Directorate | MOH-PS | |
| MOH-Pharmacy Department | MOH-PD | |
| MOH-Office of Chief Pharmacist | MOH-OCP | |
| MOH Ghana National Drugs P/rogramme | MOH-GNDP | |
| MOH-National Drug Information Resources Centre | MOH-NDIRC | |
| MOH-Central Medical Stores | MOH-CMS | |
|
| GHS | |
| GHS-Regional Health Administrations | GHS-RHA | |
| GHS-Stores, Supplies and Drug Management | GHS-SSDM | |
| GHS-Regional Chief Pharmacist | GHS-RCP | |
| GHS-Regional Medical Stores | GHS-RMS | |
| GHS-Institutional Care Division | GHS-ICD | |
| GHS-Expanded Programme on Immunisation | GHS-EPI | |
| GHS-National Malaria Control Programme | GHS-NMCP | |
| GHS-National TB Control Programme | GHS-NTCP | |
| GHS-National AIDS Control Programme | GHS-NACP | |
|
| NHIA | |
| NHIA-Provider Payment Directorate | NHIA-PPD | |
| Nurses and Midwives Council | NMC | |
| Pharmacy Council | PC | |
| Food and Drugs Authority | FDA | |
| Ministry of Finance | MOF | |
| Ghana Revenue Authority | GRA | |
| Ministry of Trade and Industry | MOTI | |
| Attorney General Department | AGD | |
| Public Procurement Authority | PPA | |
| Service providers |
| |
| GHS Health Facilities | GHS-HF | |
| Teaching Hospital Pharmacy Department | TH-PD | |
|
| ||
| Society of Private Medical and Dental Practitioners | SPMDP | |
| Christian Health Association of Ghana | CHAG | |
| Community Pharmacy Practice Association | CPPA | |
| Development Partners | WHO | WHO |
| USAID|DELIVER project | DELIVER | |
| USAID|Global Health Supply Chain-Procurement and Supply Management | GHSC-PSM | |
| United Nations Industrial Development Organisation | UNIDO | |
| Professional Associations | Pharmaceutical Society of Ghana | PSGH |
| Ghana Medical Association | GMA | |
| Pharmaceutical industry | Pharmaceutical Importers and Wholesalers Association | PIWA |
| Association of Representatives of Ethical Pharmaceutical Institutions | AREPI | |
| Ghana National Chamber of Pharmacy | GNCOP | |
| Pharmaceutical Manufacturers Association of Ghana | PMAG | |
| Pharmaceutical Suppliers | PS | |
| NGOs | Private Health Sector Alliance | PHSA |
| Politicians | Parliament Select Committee on Health | PSCoH |
| Parliamentarians | Parliament | |
| Patient groups | Cancer Connect Ghana | CCG |
| National Diabetes Association | NDA |
NGO, Non-Governmental Organisations.
Figure 2Engagements and influence by key stakeholders across the four medicines pricing policies.
Stakeholder roles and degrees of engagement in the design and implementation of medicine pricing policies in Ghana
| Policy stage | Policy design | ||
|
| Low | Medium | High |
| Health commodity supply chain master plan (HCSCMP) | GHS-HF, CHAG—informed, supportive but not actively involved in the design process | MOH-GNDP, MOH-CMS, GHS-RMS, GHS-NMCP, GHS-NTCP, GHS-NACP, TH-PD—reviewed plans, participated in consultative meetings | MOH-PS—led and chaired Technical Working Group (TWG); drafted and reviewed plans and milestone |
| Framework contracting for high demand medicines | GHS-HF, CHAG, SPMDP—informed but not involved in the design process | PPA—aware and supportive | MOH-PS—led in identifying and developing the list of pharmaceuticals to be procured through a competitive tendering process |
| Value Added Tax (VAT) exemptions for essential medicines | SPMDP—informed but not involved in the design process | GHS -NMCP, FDA, GHSC-PSM, AREPI, GMA, PC, NMC, CCG, NDA, PSCOH—reviewed the list of medicines for exemption and participated in stakeholder forum. | MINISTER-MOH and MOH-PS—led the process and chaired the TWG |
| VAT exemption for active pharmaceutical inputs (API), manufacturing inputs and packaging materials | SPMDP—informed but not involved in the design process | UNIDO, PSGH, PIWA, GNCOP, PSCOH—participated stakeholder meetings to build consensus | MINISTER-MOH, MOH-PS, MOH-OCP and MOH-PD—led the process and chaired the TWG to review and update the list of restricted medicines and APIs for local manufacturing. |
|
| Policy implementation | ||
|
| Low | Medium | High |
| Health commodity supply chain master plan (HCSCMP) | GHS-HF—implementing some aspect of the plans | GHS-RHA (non-ISC members), implementing aspects of the plan | MINISTER-MOH and MOH-PS—chaired the implementation steering committee (ISC) to develop and coordinate implementation modalities |
| Framework contracting for high demand medicines | SPMDP—informed but not implementing partner | PPA—evaluated tendering offers based on PPA guidelines, technical advice | MOH-PS, GHS-RHA, TH-PD, NHIA-PPD—chaired tendering evaluation team, participated in the pre-bid conference and tendering process, reviewed and finalised the draft tender document |
| Value Added Tax (VAT) exemptions for essential medicines | SPMDP—informed but not implementing partner | MOH-GNDP, GHS-SSDM, GHS-RHA, AREPI—participated in stakeholder meetings to agree on modalities and methods of implementation | MINISTER-MOH-Deputy Minister of Health—approved implementation modalities and methods |
| VAT exemption for active pharmaceutical inputs (API), manufacturing inputs and packaging materials | SPMDP—informed but not implementing partner | MOH-GNDP, GHS-SSDM, GHS-RHA, PIWA, AREPI—participated in stakeholder meetings to agree on modalities and methods of implementation | MINISTER-MOH-Deputy Minister of Health—approved implementation modalities and methods |
Stakeholders’ power sources and influence over the design and implementation of medicine pricing policies in Ghana
| Policy/stage | HCSCMP | Framework contracting | VAT exemption for essential medicines | VAT exemption for local manufacturing | ||||||||
| Policy design | ||||||||||||
| Power/level of influence | Bureaucratic (approval) | Political | Technical | Bureaucratic (approval) | Political | Technical | Bureaucratic (approval) | Political | Technical | Bureaucratic (approval) | Political | Technical |
| Minister for Health | +++ | +++ | +++ | +++ | ||||||||
| MOH-Procurement and Supplies Directorate | +++ | +++ | +++ | +++ | +++ | +++ | ||||||
| MOH-Office of Chief Pharmacist | ++ | +++ | +++ | |||||||||
| MOH-Pharmacy Department | +++ | +++ | +++ | +++ | ||||||||
| GHS-Stores, supplies and drug management | +++ | +++ | ++ | ++ | ||||||||
| GHS-Expanded Programme on Immunisation | ++ | |||||||||||
| GHS-Institutional Care Division | ++ | ++ | ||||||||||
| NHIA-Provider Payment Directorate | +++ | +++ | +++ | +++ | ||||||||
| Food and Drugs Authority | ++ | +++ | ++ | ++ | ||||||||
| Ministry of Finance | +++ | +++ | +++ | |||||||||
| Ghana Revenue Authority | +++ | +++ | +++ | |||||||||
| Ministry of Trade and Industry | +++ | |||||||||||
| Pharmaceutical Manufacturers Association of Ghana (PMAG) | ++ | +++ | ||||||||||
| WHO | +++ | +++ | ++ | |||||||||
| United Nations Industrial Development Organisation (UNIDO) | +++ | +++ | ||||||||||
| USAID|DELIVER | +++ | |||||||||||
| USAID|Global Health Supply Chain-Procurement and Supply Management | +++ | ++ | ||||||||||
| Private Health Sector Alliance | ++ | |||||||||||
| Christian Health Association of Ghana | + | ++ | ++ | |||||||||
| Pharmaceutical Society of Ghana | +++ | ++ | ||||||||||
| Ghana National Chamber of Pharmacy | +++ | ++ | ||||||||||
| Community Pharmacy Practice Association (CPPA) | ++ | ++ | ||||||||||
| MOH Ghana National Drugs Programme | ++ | ++ | ++ | ++ | ||||||||
| MOH Central Medical Stores | ++ | |||||||||||
| MOH-National Drug Information Resources Centre | +++ | +++ | ||||||||||
| GHS-Regional Health Administrations | ++ | +++ | ++ | + | ||||||||
| GHS Regional Medical Stores | ++ | ++ | ||||||||||
| GHS National TB Control Programme | + | |||||||||||
| GHS National AIDS Control Programme | + | |||||||||||
| Teaching hospital Pharmacy Department | ++ | +++ | ||||||||||
| GHS National Malaria Control Programme | + | |||||||||||
| GHS Health facilities | + | ++ | ||||||||||
| Pharmaceutical Importer and Wholesalers Association (PIWA) | ++ | |||||||||||
| Association of Representatives of Ethical Pharmaceutical Institutions (AREPI) | ++ | + | ||||||||||
| Ghana Medical Association (GMA) | + | + | ||||||||||
| Nurses and Midwives Council (NMC) | + | + | ||||||||||
| Pharmacy Council | ++ | ++ | ||||||||||
| Parliament Select Committee on Health/Parliamentarians | +++ | +++ | ||||||||||
| Attorney General Department | +++ | +++ | ||||||||||
| Society of Private Medical and Dental Practitioners | ||||||||||||
| Public Procurement Authority | +++ | |||||||||||
| Cancer Connect Ghana | + | |||||||||||
| National Diabetes Association | + | |||||||||||
Notes:+++, high influence; ++, medium influence; +, low influence; empty cells—no influence identified.
HCSCMP, Health Commodity Supply Chain Master Plan; VAT, Value Added Tax.