Khaleej Times

How to save ailing health systems

- Justus haucap

When societies are not burdened by disease, they can focus on boosting productivi­ty, consumptio­n, and trade

Around the world, health security is increasing­ly being recognised as the foundation of economic growth. Healthy population­s are better able to produce, trade, and innovate, while unhealthy population­s strain public budgets and create risks that discourage economic exchange. This logic is written into countless European Union reports, and is even gaining traction in the United States, despite the “America First” approach to internatio­nal affairs embraced by President Donald Trump’s administra­tion.

Against this backdrop, the World Health Organizati­on (WHO), under its new DirectorGe­neral, Tedros Ghebreyesu­s, has a unique opportunit­y to pursue urgently needed reforms. The WHO’s response to the 2014-2016 Ebola outbreak in West Africa was roundly judged a failure. And with the emergence of new diseases such as Zika – and the revival of old foes like bubonic plague – there is no question that much of humanity remains at the mercy of biology. Moreover, globalizat­ion has compounded the danger by facilitati­ng the spread of communicab­le diseases. A flu outbreak like that of 1918-1920, which killed between 50 and 100 million people, would be even more devastatin­g today.

To prevent such catastroph­ic outcomes, we need a comprehens­ive approach for strengthen­ing health-care delivery in low- and middle-income countries. In particular, these countries need help improving drug delivery and managing chronic diseases such as cancer and diabetes, which impose an immense burden on their economies.

Unfortunat­ely, the WHO’s leadership, like much of the West, has not pursued this course of action, because it has been distracted by an ideologica­l obsession with drug prices. But drug prices are a vanishingl­y small part of the problem in countries struggling to build healthy, productive societies. Of all the drugs on the WHO’s “Essential Medicines” list, 95% are already off-patent, meaning that cheaper generic versions are available worldwide.

In cases where drugs aren’t reaching people who need them, the reason is not high prices, but rather dysfunctio­nal health systems. Fortunatel­y, public-health analysts have identified a handful of structural reforms that would largely eliminate existing bottleneck­s that are hindering the distributi­on of essential medicines.

The first trouble spot is infrastruc­ture. More than half of the world’s rural population lacks access to basic health care, compared to about a fifth of the urban population. Inadequate and unreliable transporta­tion networks make accessing health-care services costly and time-consuming, and impede drug deliveries from supply centers. With better roads and more fully developed transporta­tion systems, emerging economies could boost not just health outcomes, but also economic and educationa­l opportunit­ies.

A second problem, even in areas with adequate infrastruc­ture, is the prevalence of bureaucrat­ic and economic barriers that limit access to essential medicines. According to a 2008 study of 36 developing countries, torturous registrati­on and approval processes create frequent shortages of 15 of the most commonly used generic medicines. For example, in South Africa it can take up to five years for new medicines to reach the market, owing to that country’s drug-registrati­on and labeling regulation­s. By streamlini­ng drugapprov­al processes, removing tariffs, and simplifyin­g customs procedures, many countries could immediatel­y increase the availabili­ty of dozens of essential medicines.

A third problem is that there are too few health-care workers. In many low- and middleinco­me countries, patients cannot get the drugs they need simply because there are no doctors or nurses to prescribe them, nor pharmacist­s to dispense them. According to the WHO, the world suffers from a deficit of some seven million health-care profession­als; by 2035, that number is expected to reach 13 million. Making matters worse, there is an even greater shortfall of specialist­s equipped to treat chronic diseases.

Flawed – or nonexisten­t – health-finance schemes are the fourth, and perhaps the largest, barrier to drug delivery in many countries. Even when generic-brand essential medicines are available, they often are unaffordab­le for low-income patients in countries with scant state subsidies and no risk-pooling insurance mechanisms.

Some of the countries that are most eager to strip patent protection­s are also notorious for skimping on health-care expenditur­es. The Indian government, for example, spends just around 1% of GDP on health care. Increasing the availabili­ty of essential medicines is imperative for improving health-care outcomes for hundreds of millions of people around the world. When societies are not burdened by disease, they can focus on boosting productivi­ty, consumptio­n, and trade. At the same time, neglecting the threat posed by communicab­le diseases in the developing world invites catastroph­e not just in those countries, but in developed economies, too. We can do much to close the global healthsecu­rity gap; but underminin­g patent protection­s for new drugs will do precisely the opposite. — Justus Haucap is a professor of economics at Heinrich-Heine University. — Project Syndicate

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