Business Day

Africa must insist on good standards

- Lenias Hwenda Dr Hwenda is founder and CEO of Medicines for Africa.

According to the World Health Organisati­on (WHO), almost 2- billion people worldwide, and about half of Africa’s 1.3-billion people, do not have regular access to basic medication. This leads to the deaths of millions of Africans every year. Women and children, especially the poorest, bear the brunt.

The problem of poor access to medicines persists largely because Africa does not have the industrial base to make sufficient medicines to meet its population’s health needs.

According to a 2019 McKinsey report, the continent has only about 375 pharmaceut­ical manufactur­ers, and most of these are concentrat­ed in North Africa, which despite being part of the continent has little cultural or trade connection with subSaharan Africa.

Outside North Africa, most manufactur­ing operations on the continent are concentrat­ed in nine of the 46 countries. To put into perspectiv­e just how small a number this is, India and China have comparable size population­s to Africa, and China has 5,000 manufactur­ers and India 10,500. Africa’s 375 manufactur­ers barely scratch the surface in meeting local medical needs that grow each year, accelerate­d by climate-driven disease outbreaks.

The result is that more than 90% of medicines needed by Africans, and 99% of its vaccines, are imported, mainly from India. Indian manufactur­ers are estimated to produce 90% of the antiretrov­irals (ARVs) that donor government funds procure for people in African countries and other low- and middle-income countries, for instance.

Africa’s excessive dependence on imports has made it extremely vulnerable to medicine shortages. This is a major driver of the high incidence of counterfei­t medical products in African markets. Africa accounts for the biggest share of counterfei­t medical products in the world at 42%. Half a million Africans lose their lives each year due to substandar­d medication­s.

India is a major source of the substandar­d or falsified medical products that are flooding the African market. It is not alone in this, but its position as the biggest single supplier to a continent that is poorly regulated worsens the situation. Media reports, including in India, paint a troubling picture of generally poor regulation of medicines made in India.

India’s Central Drugs Standard Control Organisati­on has been accused of looking the other away when Indian manufactur­ers produce medicines for export to Africa in particular.

No-one knows exactly how much substandar­d medicines is exported to African markets. What we do know is that according to the WHO about halfa-million Africans die yearly from taking substandar­d medicines, and this figure is probably an underestim­ate.

The global counterfei­t medicines market is estimated to be worth $200bn. The incidence of counterfei­t medicines in the African context will have been worsened by efforts to improve access to medicines in African nations focusing primarily on improving the availabili­ty of medicines, relegating quality to a secondary concern. This is particular­ly consequent­ial given that most of those medicines are bought from poorly regulated medicine manufactur­ing environmen­ts such as India.

Demand for made-in-India medicines is high partly because of the price and the poor countries to which the medicines are exported having limited capacity to perform regulatory checks to prevent abuses. These factors combine with devastatin­g consequenc­es for African patients.

CONTAMINAT­ED SYRUPS

The example of children in Gambia who were allegedly killed by contaminat­ed cough syrups made by an Indian company Maiden Pharmaceut­icals is a case in point. The case, which is now in court, shows the potential public health threat posed by the quality of medicines made in India for the African market.

Despite extensive coverage of the case, cough syrups made in India are still on the shelves in Gambia, and continue to make their way onto the wider African market with little to no regulation. This tells us that this problem is not going away soon. If anything, given the scale of the global counterfei­t medicines market, we can expect it to grow.

It is clear that Indian regulators are unable or unwilling to act. India has been feted as the pharmacy of the world, serving the needs of the most vulnerable with treatments they would otherwise not be able to afford. But the world has neglected to insist that the medicines India makes for the African market in particular are regulated and as safe as those sold to its own people.

The sheer volume of substandar­d medicine imports sold in Africa raises serious questions about the overall impact on population health and treatment outcomes.

It is worth noting that despite progress in improving access to antiretrov­iral treatments for HIV, Africans still account for the biggest share of new HIV infections globally.

According to the Global Fund, more than half of new HIV infections globally in 2022 were in Africa. Yet we know that when people with HIV are treated effectivel­y with antiretrov­irals their viral loads are reduced, limiting their ability to transmit HIV to others.

With more than 70% of Africans with HIV on the continent receiving treatment, why is the transmissi­on rate among Africans remaining so stubbornly high? Could it be because the millions on medication are not being treated effectivel­y because the medication­s are substandar­d?

Of course, there are other factors that influence treatment outcomes, but given that Indian manufactur­ers produce about 90% of the antiretrov­irals taken by Africans, and the known poor track record of the Indian medicines regulatory authority, it is fair to ask whether substandar­d medicines are partly responsibl­e for HIV still being so widespread in Africa.

In an ideal world, regulators overseeing manufactur­ing facilities, such as the CDSCO, would check that medicines being manufactur­ed for export are safe and work as expected. Alongside that, regulators in markets to which medicines are exported would perform similar checks to ensure the medicines that land on their shores are what they are supposed to be.

Yet for many African patients both of these mechanism are failing. In Gambia, it seems that both Indian and Gambian regulators failed, with the result that African lives were lost.

SA Health Products Regulatory Authority CEO Dr Boitumelo SemeteMako­kotlela has labelled imports of substandar­d medicines an existentia­l threat that are having a seriously negative effect on the wellbeing of Africans.

The African Medicines Agency, which is on the verge of being launched by the AU, is expected to help mitigate this threat, but it is a case of David versus Goliath. The Indian pharma industry is the third largest globally by volume and was worth $65bn in 2024. It is projected to reach $130bn by 2030.

Neverthele­ss, in the wake of the Gambia tragedy both the AU and African country regulators must take a stand. The act of taking medication as an African should not amount to playing Russian roulette. There should be one universal standard for the quality of medicines taken by all people anywhere in the world. Allowing cheap but poor quality medicines to be sold to Africa is unethical. The people of the continent deserve better.

AFRICA’S EXCESSIVE DEPENDENCE ON IMPORTS HAS MADE IT VULNERABLE TO MEDICINE SHORTAGES

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from South Africa