“Certain companies have been allowed contract manufacturing — when the drugs they sell are actually manufactured at factories run by other companies. But this only works if the parent company also runs a factory and is forced to outsource business because they don’t have the technology that is required.”
About the one-sided increase of drug prices by many large pharmaceuticals without consulting DRAP, Dr Aslam says the matter is pending with the court as 22 companies have obtained a stay order against any retaliatory action that DRAP could initiate. However, he hopes that court proceedings will conclude shortly. “We are actively taking this matter there.”
An official in the pharmaceutical association, however, directs his ire at DRAP. He says that DRAP has failed miserably in promoting healthy competition and motivating other companies to produce generic drugs. He points to the Oxytocin and Methylergometrine Maleate crisis-in-making as an example.
“The average cost of [child] delivery in Pakistan is estimated to be around 15,000 to 20,000 rupees but the price set for two lifesaving drugs is [only] five and 10 rupees. It is difficult to believe that anyone will be unwilling or constrained to pay adjusted prices to save the lives of the mother and the new-born,” he says.
Dr Zubaida Masood from the Abbasi Shaheed Hospital jumps on the Oxytocin and Methylergometrine Maleate debate and asks if the regulatory authorities are considering corrective actions.
“Often accused of favouring pharmaceutical industry through price increases, DRAP has actually been ignoring its prime objective: across-the-board availability of quality medicine. Neither Oxytocin nor Methylergometrine Maleate is available in the open market,” she says.
“While no one expects that all socio-economic reasons related to maternal deaths will be resolved overnight, the least policymakers can and should do is to ensure that medicines designed to prevent such deaths are readily available throughout the country,” she argues. Medicines for treating epilepsy, thyroid disease, and numerous neurological disorders are also not available in the market.
While the issue of drugs pricing remains heavily contested, what is intriguing is the fact that drug prices are already highly inflated depending on which brand is manufactured by which company.
“For example, Diclofenac Sodium, a pain reliever, is being sold at 35 rupees in its generic form but the price jacks up to 450 rupees when sold as a branded drug. This is a 13-fold increase,” explains pharmacist Arshad Memon. “Tab Tamoxifen [an anti-estrogen drug used in the treatment of breast cancer] in its 10mg dosage is available for between 282 and 660 rupees per pack of 30 tablets. The price of Atenalol [a beta-blocker used for angina and hypertension treatment] ranges between 100 to 200 rupees.
“Similarly, atorvastatin [for lowering cholesterol] can be purchased for anywhere between 150 and 490 rupees, while Ceftriaoxone [an antibacterial drug used to treat conditions such as lower respiratory tract infections and skin infections] varies in price from 137 and 590 rupees.”
“This is a huge racket,” says an insider in the trade. “It starts from the company which makes the brand, and targets the patient through marketers and doctors.”
Pharma collusion with doctors?
Across South Asia, Pakistan and Nepal are the only two countries where generic drugs are prescribed less than their branded alternatives. In Bangladesh, 78 percent of drugs are prescribed by their generic names. Within Pakistan, generic medicines are mostly being prescribed in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa, according to independent experts. Sindh is guilty of resorting to branded medicines the most.
A past study published in the Journal of Pakistan Medical Association (JPMA) says that the irrational use of drugs by prescriber and consumer is a global problem. It says that healthcare costs in general and drug costs in particular are rising everywhere, and most of the increased cost of drugs is due to the use of new medicines.
The report argues that many clinicians continue to prescribe new and expensive drugs as the first line of therapy while scarce financial resources are spent on unnecessary nutritional supplements as nearly half the prescribed medicines are tonics and antacids which just act as placebos.
The JPMA study shows that while about half of the prescribed drugs included in the research were from the National Essential Drugs List of Pakistan, only just over 12 percent were prescribed by their generic names. The report lambasts the mindset of doctors in Karachi in particular, who are labelled “rather liberal and not rational.”
“Overuse of antimicrobials and injections has been observed and there is general tendency of indulging in polypharmacy requiring continued medical education,” reads the report. Polypharmacy is the prescription and use of four or more drugs in combination.
For its part, the government is aware about the alleged nexus between doctors and pharmaceutical companies. On several instances, a blanket ban was slapped on foreign tours undertaken by government doctors sponsored by multinational pharmaceuticals. However, the policy remains largely unimplemented.
“Such practice [doctors touring foreign destinations] comes within the ambit of conflict of interest,” says Dr Sikandar Mandhro, who holds the health portfolio in the Sindh cabinet.
A health ministry document says: “It has been observed with great concern that there is a strong tendency among doctors to attend international medical conferences and go on foreign tours after soliciting sponsorship from various multinational pharmaceutical firms. This comes within conflict of interest and calls for disciplinary proceedings against the public servants soliciting such favours.”
The implication is, of course, that doctors who take such favours from pharmaceuticals firms then find themselves under obligation to prescribe medicines manufactured by those firms.
A spokesman for the Pakistan Pharmaceutical Manufacturers’ Association (PPMA) rebuffs the notion of pharma collusion with health practitioners. “Whatever the doctor prescribes is to the best of their understanding. There are no pressures from the market involved [inside a doctor’s room],” he says.
Instead, the PPMA spokesperson holds the DRAP responsible for “some 70 to 80 medicines virtually vanishing from the market” as their indigenous manufacturing is no longer a viable option for the local pharmaceutical industry. “An irrational pricing policy has led to a situation where local manufacturing of a number of medicines at cheaper rates is no more a lucrative option for the local industry,” he argues.
“Doctors are indeed involved in prescribing expensive medicines,” says Dr Shamim, “but, the onus of blame should also be put on the patient who believes in expensive drugs instead of realising that there is no difference in the active pharmaceutical ingredient.”
She says even those doctors who prefer to prescribe generic medicines are at times pressured by the patients to go for branded products.
Senior physician Dr Noor Khan concurs with Dr Shamim. “Generic drugs were meant to be the ultimate panacea for the country and the path to providing universal healthcare. Today, thousands of patients die because of costly medicines.”
Although no official estimates are available about how much extra money patients are expected to dole out for branded medicines, Dr Khan frames the argument in terms of losses inflicted to the national exchequer due to medicine imports. He believes such losses are not less than five billion rupees a day.
An official in the Ministry of Health Services in Islamabad says there are proposals to formulate patent laws to the benefit of poor people, but going beyond the conception stage has been difficult till now because of “pressures from all sides.”
“It is high time to discourage the practice of patents as is the practice in India. Pakistan too has good potential to earn from medical tourism [if the relevant laws are in place],” says the official.
While the rest of the country relies on expensive drugs and suffers from frequent shortages of essential drugs, people in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa have discovered an easy way out. Cheaper drugs manufactured by Indian companies are being smuggled from Afghanistan and are easily available in the market.
Perhaps, this bitter pill to swallow for the pharma industry in Pakistan can make them rethink their policies.
The writer is a member of staff and tweets @HasanMansoor
Published in Dawn, Sunday Magazine, October 16th, 2016