Intended for healthcare professionals

Editorials

Medicines supply in Africa

BMJ 2005; 331 doi: https://doi.org/10.1136/bmj.331.7519.709 (Published 29 September 2005) Cite this as: BMJ 2005;331:709
  1. Jonathan D Quick, president and chief executive officer (jquick{at}msh.org),
  2. Nana-Adjoa Boohene, senior programme associate,
  3. James Rankin, director, Center for Pharmaceutical Management,
  4. Romuald J Mbwasi, senior technical adviser
  1. Management Sciences for Health, 784 Memorial Drive, Cambridge, MA 02139, USA
  2. Management Sciences for Health, 784 Memorial Drive, Cambridge, MA 02139, USA
  3. Management Sciences for Health, 4301 N Fairfax Drive, Suite 400, Arlington, VA 22203, USA
  4. Management Sciences for Health, ASG Building Nyerere Road, PO Box 50104, Dar es Salaam, Tanzania

    Should improve through regional collaborations and accredited drug shops

    Lack of access to medicines each year contributes to millions of deaths and untold suffering in Africa. HIV/AIDS, tuberculosis, and malaria—all treatable with existing medicines—kill an estimated 6 million people every year, mostly in sub-Saharan Africa.1 The burden falls mainly on the poor, women, and especially children.2

    Over the past three decades, African governments have worked to provide medicines to populations with growing health needs. During that period the World Health Organization has advocated increasing access to medicines35; the World Bank has pushed for reforms in the health sector; and Unicef has launched the 1987 Bamako Initiative, meant to improve communities' access to pharmaceuticals. Despite these efforts, WHO estimates that roughly 270 million people in Africa—nearly half the population—lack regular access to even the most essential medicines.6

    Poverty, diverse geography, and social upheaval all contribute to the problem of access. The public sector's supply systems are plagued by inadequate financing, weak management systems, lack of accountability, and a devastating reduction in the healthcare workforce.7 The formal private sector is generally limited to urban areas. Faith based and other non-governmental services supplying health care are often well run, but typically handle less than 15% of a country's pharmaceutical market.8

    In this context, tinkering with existing models of supply is unlikely to close the huge gap in access to medicines. Policy makers, health officials, and others concerned with improving health in Africa must find new solutions. These may include overhauls of policy, financing, and frameworks for regulation; a realignment of responsibilities between public and private sectors; and the forging of genuine public-private relationships to help in implementing the supply of medicines.

    The first source of medicines in much of Africa is the corner kiosk or other informal drug seller. Though these sources are easily accessible, customers often receive inappropriate medicines of poor quality. Tanzania—where such shops provide medicines for over 60% of the population—has developed a system of accredited “duka la dawa muhimu” (essential drugs shops). Staff are trained in dispensing and business skills, and shops are now regularly inspected and reliably supplied with registered medicines. Dispensing recommendations and the availability and quality of products have improved more in the accredited shops than in informal shops.9 Innovative public-private franchising and accreditation have also been introduced successfully in Ghana and Kenya and are being developed in Nigeria and elsewhere. Considerable effort is needed if such schemes are to maintain dispensing practices that contribute to health improvements, provide access to the poorest of the poor, and ensure financial and managerial sustainability.

    African countries need to develop integrated systems for the supply chain that fully use the capacity of the public, non-governmental, and commercial sectors. One approach is the primary distributor model,10 whereby the government contracts that private companies will operate the pharmaceutical supply chain, while it provides contractual oversight and controls the procurement process. Another approach allows private or non-governmental systems to supply a particular area or specific health facilities. Such innovative public-private relationships have been implemented on a small scale in several African countries, including Zambia, South Africa, Tanzania, Kenya, and Uganda. However, such efforts fail to improve the supply of medicines if the private sector is weak, lacks independent management, or is insufficiently accountable.

    Africa's regions could use economies of scale to buy medicines and assure their quality. Similar needs for medicines, shared sources of supply, and lack of national expertise in procurement all argue for greater collaboration among neighbouring countries. Regional partnerships might include sharing information on pricing and suppliers, establishing formal group purchasing schemes, and contracting with commercial distributors to supply health programmes throughout the region. The Southern Africa Development Community, the West Africa Health Organization, and the East, Central, and Southern Africa Health Community are actively exploring such collaboration. Experience from the eastern Caribbean and the Gulf States has already shown the potential savings and sustainability of such arrangements.11

    The current systems for pharmaceutical supply in many parts of Africa are overwhelmed. Policy makers and healthcare managers must fundamentally change their thinking. The real challenge is to identify, select, and implement the best solutions for each country's situation. As the conference in June on strategies for enhancing access to medicines concluded, “Africa is learning in its own way how its own forms of private and public enterprise can work together in the particular way that Africa needs.”12

    Acknowledgments

    We are grateful for the assistance of Martha Embrey, David Lee, and Keith Johnson in the preparation of this editorial.

    Footnotes

    • Competing interests None declared.

    References

    View Abstract