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On Generic Drugs

On Generic Drugs. Presentation at Raipur, CIPH August 5, 2013 -S.Srinivasan Email: chinusrinivasan.x@gmail.com. Definitions. Patented Drug: Exclusive monopoly of drug Generic = Drug out of Patent Generic Generics = Unbranded Generics sold as aspirin, paracetamol , etc.

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On Generic Drugs

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  1. On Generic Drugs Presentation at Raipur, CIPH August 5, 2013 -S.Srinivasan Email: chinusrinivasan.x@gmail.com

  2. Definitions • Patented Drug: Exclusive monopoly of drug • Generic = Drug out of Patent • Generic Generics = Unbranded Generics sold as aspirin, paracetamol, etc. • Branded Generics = Out of patent drugs sold under brand names, eg. Dispirin, Calpol, etc.

  3. India’s Pharma Industry • Total Sale Rs 72,000 cr within India (Mar 2013 IMS) • Exports Rs 65,000 cr • Unbranded generics : Rs 7000 cr • 3rd largest by volume, 13th by value • “Pharmacy of the developing world”

  4. India: Poverty Amidst Plenty? • Medicines are overpriced and unaffordable in India.. • Medicines constitute 50 to 80 percent of health care costs in India • Health care is the second-most leading cause of rural indebtedness, after dowry. • No universal health insurance in India • Crumbling public health system, • the first choice of patients is a private practitioner which means more out of pocket expenditures apart for loss of wages etc

  5. FDCs and Irrational Medicines • Nowhere in the world there are 100,000 brands (of generics) • A study by LOCOST (2012) says 50 % of the top-selling 300 medicines (IMS 2009) are not in the National List of Essential Medicines, 2011. • Many unnecessary drugs including medicines of uncertain efficacy, safety, such as ginseng, liver extract, Vitamin E, and nimesulide; irrational combinations of antibiotics, which lack therapeutic justification; • Many irrational FDCs - only 65 % of the top selling 300 are rational (LOCOST 2012) • Need for clear criteria for weeding out irrational and useless medicines

  6. Some other reasons for poor access to the right medicine at affordable prices • Aggressive Drug Promotion by drug companies • Inducements to doctors • Over/under prescribing by doctors • Cut Practice

  7. Pricing Anomalies of India’s Drugs • Overpricing • Profit margins can be up to 4000 percent • Different brands of same drug sell at vastly different prices • Most drugs out of Govt price regulation

  8. Profitability of Pharmaceutical Industry (Profit Before Tax; as % of Sales)

  9. Government’s Response • Put all 348 drugs in NLEM 2011 under price regulation • But has left loopholes – me toos, combinations and irrational FDCs out of price control • Many rational Drugs outside NLEM outside price control • Market Based Mechanism for price ceiling • Only 14 % of the total sales are under price control

  10. Markets Do not Work in Pharma Sector • Pharma markets do not work generally – in favour of the consumer • Because of asymmetry, no real decision making power of buyer, etc. • Because buyers and sellers have different bargaining strengths (info asymmetry) • Sellers and doctors decide • Buyers (patients) have little or no choice • Buyers have to make decision usually under distress

  11. Market Profile of Anti diabetics

  12. Paracetamol Market

  13. Why market cannot decide medicine prices in India? • Because buyers and sellers have different bargaining strengths (info asymmetry) • Sellers and doctors decide • Buyers (patients) have little or no choice • Buyers have to make decision usually under distress

  14. “Competition” does not reduce prices! • Same drug is sold at different prices by the SAME company too! • Brand Leader often also the Price Leader (costliest drug is most sold). • Therefore competition does not automatically bring down the prices. • In fact more players seems to result in a range of prices.

  15. Brand Leaders are Indeed Price Leaders

  16. Brand Leaders are Indeed Price Leaders

  17. What it costs to a poor person? • Prevention of Hepatitis A: 30 days of wage labor • Iron deficiency anemia (using Dexorange): Rs. 3,744 for 6 months. • Coronary artery disease: Rs.12,541 per year (using the expensive brands). • Diabetes using oral glimepiride 2 mg: Rs. 3660 per year. • Multi-drug resistant TB: > Rs.100,000 for 2 years.

  18. If drugs are made available free in public health services? People seeking tt in public health facilities will increase Decrease in patients going to pvt practitioners and retail drug shops And get less exploited Decrease in related indebtedness, impoverishment

  19. DPCO 2013 • All 348 drugs in NLEM 2011 under price control • Ceiling price: simple avg price of prices of brands with more than 1 % mkt share • Touches 12-15 % of the mkt of Rs 72000 crores. • Leaves most FDCS and other formulations untouched • Escape hatches: combinations, non-standard dosages • Most ceiling prices are still in the range of 200 to 4700 % margin

  20. Generic Drugs: Problems • Quality • Bioequivalence/bioavailability issues • At present Bioequivalence of generics is only a problem of some 40 medicines like warfarin, digoxin, carbamezipine. • In general in vitro BA tests (like dissolution) plus compliance with IP parameters is considered good enough.

  21. Case Studies • Public Health System: • Govts of Tamil Nadu, Kerala, Rajasthan • Jan Aushadhi, Jeevandhara Scheme • Not for profit sector: • LOCOST, Vadodara • CMSI, Chennai

  22. Some features of TNMSCTamil Nadu Medical Services Corporation 260 drugs in its EDL (2011-12) Surgicals 75 items, sutures 113 items 21 fast moving drugs account for 80 % of procurement budget ‘Speciality” drugs 292 (2010-11) - 10 drugs account for 85.6 % One drug – Temozolamide caps - 52 % CAT scan and X Ray centres 21 % of popln utilization in 2001-02 (currently 40 %) Services top to bottom level of care Drugs are free (Source partly: MaulinR.Chokshi. TN Drug Procurement Model, Nov 2008, WHO-SEARO)

  23. TNMSC: Scan Centers • At present 45 nos. of single slice CT scan centers in the Government Hospitals all over the State (min. 1 CT scanner in each dist.) and 4 slice CT scanners one each at Govt. General Hospital, Chennai, ICH & Govt. Hospital for Children, Chennai are in operation. • 45 scan centers Category Plain With Contrast Inpatients Rs. 350/- Rs. 550/- Outpatients Rs. 500/- Rs. 700/-

  24. TNMSC: Other Supportive Services • MRI scan centers in 9 govt hospitals: Rs 2500 (plain); Contrast: Rs 1500 extra • Lithotripsy • Regional diagnostic centers • Sale counter at Chennai for: Cyclosporin Cap. USP 2. Cyclosporin Oral Solution USP 3. Anti Snake Venom Serum IP 4. Human Insulin (Short acting) 5. Human Insulin (Intermediate acting) • Lab Services

  25. 25 warehouses

  26. Inside Warehouse at Sivagangai

  27. A positive side effect! Generics advertised by pvt pharmacists!

  28. Some Comparisons

  29. Necessities For MAKING MEDICINES AFFORDABLE • Generic prescribing • Adoption of essential drugs list • Standard Treatment Guidelines • Centralized drug procurement : open tender system • Distribution of Low cost drugs through Govt. drug counters • Public awareness and demand generation

  30. How much does medicines for all cost? • Rs 200 crores TNMSC medicine budget per year approx • Under assumptions of about 40 percent of those ill using public health services • It costs around Rs 6000 cr • Eventually this figure will go to Rs 12,000 cr per year for full utilization • Assumption is that these are at TNMSC prices which are very low: 3 to 40 times cheaper than market prices

  31. What are the Barriers to Access to Medicines in Public Health Systems • None except in the mind • Failure of imagination • In this case it does not even take much imagination • As the homework has already been done in 2-3 states of India • Resistance from pharma and medical lobbies need to be negotiated

  32. Systemic Changes Required in the Run Up to Medicines for all (say by 2020) • Right to medicine and health needs to be legislated as a fundamental human right. • All essential drugs shld be under price control • All irrational medicines should be removed • Only rational drugs shld be marketed/approved in India • Govt use CL on essential drugs under patent • Easy takeover of Indian Pharma companies should be stopped

  33. What can be done about providing medicines to patients in a public system? • Provide it • Provide it free • It does not cost the government much

  34. What is LOCOST? • LOCOST is an alternative not for profit pharmaceutical venture based on ethical business practices • Located at Baroda, India • LOCOST founded in 1983 • LOCOST is/was a response to the therapeutic anarchy and regulatory chaos in India

  35. LOCOST: Since 1983 • Providing essential medicines for those working with urban and rural poor in India. Since 1983. • At Vadodara, Gujarat, India

  36. WHO Recommendations Studies by WHO (2011) and many others show that a limited, prioritised list of drugs numbering not more than 360 are enough to take care of 99 percent of the disease conditions occurring in our country. Out of these 360 drugs, only 252 are combinations (like ORS, co-trimoxazole, etc.).

  37. LOCOST Experiment: what does it show? • Good quality medicines can be made at viable, • low prices. • There is a market for low priced drugs. • Demystification of Drug Production is necessary and possible

  38. LOCOST: Other Concerns • Public Advocacy for a people-oriented drug policy, patent policy and health policy • Medicines are for people, not people for medicines • Fighting against other irrationalities in health care: sex selection, caesarian sections, unnecessary investigations

  39. LOCOST: Meeting The Needs LOCOST makes more than 100 formulations (liquids, capsules, tablets). Own production unit helps in producing not so easily available drugs (like hydrochlorthiazide, etc.)

  40. LOCOST DRUGS: HOW MUCH LESS COSTLY? Many of LOCOST’s drugs are anything between 200 to 4000 percent cheaper than similar products in the market. (See table below)

  41. Price Difference: Reasons? • No “fancy” marketing • Generics • No irrational combinations • Modest salaries • Price about 30 percent > cost of production

  42. OUR STRENGTHS • Generic, essential drugs • Quality consciousness • No bribes, no underhand dealings • No shortcuts in production • Social accountability • Education and advocacy of rational • therapy and a people-oriented drug policy.

  43. Lessons from the India ‘story’ • Need for favourable patent regime • Preferably no patents for essential medicines • Licence only essential medicines (for mfr and mktng) • No brand names • Public Health System plus rational prescription safeguards • Free medicines for all • Price regulation • Trading – Formulations – APIs • Choice of Appropriate Technology • Set achievable/realistic quality standards and do not move goal post because of international pharma pressure

  44. For more information, contact us at email: locost@sify.com website: www.locostindia.com Ph: 91 265 2830009 91 999 877 1064 (Srinivasan) 91 917 300 0787 (Krishna)

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