Africa
plans leap into drug R&D
African ministers,
health researchers and pharmaceutical industry representatives
began meeting today to discuss how to boost drug innovation
and production on the continent.
The African Expert Meeting on Pharmaceutical
Innovation in Africa taking place in Pretoria, South
Africa this week (1820 February) aims to encourage
African policymakers to act to boost drug development and
access to essential medicines.
It will submit recommendations, and a
strategy for implementing them, to African health ministers
for approval.
The political will to boost the African
drug industry is cemented in two documents the Global
Strategy on Public Health, Innovation and Intellectual Property
signed by 192 countries in May 2008 and the Pharmaceutical
Manufacturing Plan for Africa adopted by the African Union
in 2007.
Meeting deliberations will be based on
a report, published today (18 February), by the Council on
Health Research for Development (COHRED) in collaboration
with the New Partnership for Africa's Development (NEPAD).
The report presents the current state
of drug research, development, marketing and access on the
continent. It also proposes a 'grid' tool that governments
can use to tailor policies to their own needs.
It says that although there are more than
120 initiatives engaged in researching and delivering medicines
for diseases that affect Africa, there is little coordination
between them, or long-term planning.
Individual nations, and the continent
as a whole, must be guided on how to ensure that engagement
with pharmaceutical innovation fits their needs, it says.
African governments must think hard about
what they are trying to achieve, said Carel Ijsselmuiden,
director of COHRED.
"Is your aim to provide maximum access
of essential medicines to the population? Or create a pharmaceutical
technology sector to drive economic development? Both paths
can benefit the country but the skills and investment needed
for each are quite different," he said.
The Pretoria meeting will address the
gap between the continent's lofty intentions and the reality
on the ground, said Ibrahim Assane Mayaki, chief executive
of NEPAD. "Countries need to better understand their
situations, and what it is possible to achieve."
Many African governments have unrealistic
expectations of what their investments in drug development
will achieve, Gary Maartens, head of the Division of Clinical
Pharmacology at the University of Cape Town, told SciDev.Net.
"People think there is a treasure
trove of potential drugs," he said. But in reality, compounds
rarely make it to market and the cost of taking those that
do is so high that the financial return on investments will
take a long time to materialise.
Big pharmaceutical companies will
have a role to play on the continent for many years to come,
in particular in taking promising African compounds to the
market, said Maartens.
Source: SciDev Net
Date: 18 February 2010

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