Audio By Carbonatix
African countries with small to medium-sized economies pay far more money for less effective drugs, a leading health expert has told BBC Newsday.
In countries such as Zambia, Senegal and Tunisia, everyday drugs like paracetamol can cost up to 30 times more than in the UK and USA.
Drug markets in poorer countries "just don't work", said Kalipso Chalkidou from the Centre for Global Development.
She said "competition is broken" due to a "concentrated supply chain".
Ms Chalkidou, director of global health policy at the organisation, co-authored a report on drug procurement that concluded that small to middling economy countries buy a smaller range of medicines, leading to weaker competition, regulation and quality.
It says richer countries, thanks to public money and strong processes for buying drugs, are able to procure cheaper medicines.
Poorer countries, however, tend to buy the most expensive medicines, rather than cheaper unbranded pharmaceuticals which make up 85% of the market in the UK and US.
The very poorest countries are not affected when foreign donors purchase medicine on their behalf, meaning their over-the-counter medicines remain at low cost.
"In the middle it's very problematic," Ms Chalkidou said.
Low- to middle-income countries "have little ability to negotiate prices down and quality assure products" and there are lots of mark-ups, often due to taxes and corruption.
She said less stringent regulation meant the quality of the drugs was also not as high.
"Without regulation, people perceive the products don't work, so pay extra money for things they think will work and won't work either," Ms Chalkidou explained.
The report recommends greater global co-operation and reforming World Health Organisation policy as well as policy in targeted countries to improve procurement practices.
DISCLAIMER: The Views, Comments, Opinions, Contributions and Statements made by Readers and Contributors on this platform do not necessarily represent the views or policy of Multimedia Group Limited.
Tags:
DISCLAIMER: The Views, Comments, Opinions, Contributions and Statements made by Readers and Contributors on this platform do not necessarily represent the views or policy of Multimedia Group Limited.
Latest Stories
-
Botswana government fulfil house promise to 200m Paris Olympics gold medallist Tebogo
6 minutes -
Wode Maya: Africa’s cultural diplomat championing tourism through digital storytelling
7 minutes -
UESD @5: Seth Terkper hails rapid growth but warns infrastructure gaps are slowing progress
8 minutes -
Ghana retains 6th position in RMBs “Where to Invest in Africa” 2025/26 rankings
13 minutes -
Roads Minister warns board against misuse of Road Maintenance Trust Fund
15 minutes -
Ghana’s Black Stars to face South Africa on December 16 in friendly
18 minutes -
Gov’t undertakes independent audit as Road Fund faces GH¢8bn debt burden
18 minutes -
Bagbin calls for unity and integrity in Ghana’s Parliament
21 minutes -
BoG pumps $10bn into forex market to aid cedi’s stability
25 minutes -
Graduate nurses and midwives gear up for protest over 5-year unemployment stall
33 minutes -
Illicit flows bleed Ghana dry: How billions lost are crippling science education and local research
34 minutes -
DVLA launches rollout of new number plates in Oti region
38 minutes -
Ghana Water takes defaulters in Eastern region to court over GHC32 million debt
38 minutes -
Advancing Ghana’s Public Health Act: Multi-Sector Wins Through Harm Reduction
43 minutes -
Economist Godfred Bokpin slams Ghana’s ‘talk show country’ mentality
46 minutes
