The Herald (Zimbabwe)

Parly grills Natpharm over pharmacies

- Paidamoyo Chipunza Senior Health Reporter

THE National Pharmaceut­ical Company (NatPharm), the sole drug procurer for public health institutio­ns, yesterday failed to justify why it is keen on introducin­g its own pharmacies at a time it is failing to stock already existing ones in the public health sector.

NatPharm officials were grilled by members of the Parliament­ary Portfolio Committee on Health and Child Care that were on a familiaris­ation tour of the company.

The parliament­arians questioned the logic behind the introducti­on of the pharmacies and unanimousl­y rejected the idea describing it as “unrealisti­c”.

Hurungwe Central member of National Assembly Dought Ndiweni said Natpharm should concentrat­e on satisfying the demand for medicines in public institutio­ns before venturing into the retail sector.

“Let us be practical about this issue,” he said. “Stock up the Government pharmacies first before introducin­g your own pharmacies. Going ahead with such an idea will further push away access to medicines by the poor.”

Other legislator­s said NatPharm wanted to starve public health institutio­ns of drugs in favour of private pharmacies.

“Why can’t we first of all deliver the medicines to the hospitals and then look at other pharmacies?” said Chimaniman­i West legislator Ms Lynette Karenyi. “People are not comfortabl­e with this arrangemen­t. We hear this from the people, the nurses and the doctors.

“Let’s do what people want and the medicines will get to everybody.” Nkayi South legislator Cde Stars Mathe said clinics in her constituen­cy did not have adequate medicines.

“How will people from a clinic in Nkayi access these pharmacies?” said Cde Mathe. “Why not just adequately stock all clinics and hospitals in line with your mandate?”

NatPharm managing director Mrs Flora Sifeku said the idea of retail pharmacies run by her institutio­n was meant to address challenges emanating from the present economic situation.

She said the challenges were mainly to do with pricing of medicines by private pharmacies procured through Real Time Gross Settlement (RTGS).

“You find that some pharmacies access medicines from us through RTGS, but they continue effecting three-tier pricing, thereby disadvanta­ging patients,” said Mrs Sifeku. “We would want pharmacies to accept any form of payment from patients since they are buying these medicines from us using RTGS.”

Mrs Sifeku did not explain how they will be able to stock the pharmacies when they were failing to stock Government institutio­ns, which fall directly under Natpharm.

 ??  ?? HARD HAT AREA . . . Members of the Parliament­ary Portfolio Committee on Health and Child Care, led by committee chairperso­n Dr Ruth Labode (left), are taken on a tour of the NatPharm warehouse in Harare yesterday by stores pharmacist Ms Rumbidzai Kanhema (right). — (Picture by Memory Mangombe)
HARD HAT AREA . . . Members of the Parliament­ary Portfolio Committee on Health and Child Care, led by committee chairperso­n Dr Ruth Labode (left), are taken on a tour of the NatPharm warehouse in Harare yesterday by stores pharmacist Ms Rumbidzai Kanhema (right). — (Picture by Memory Mangombe)

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