Increase in Western lifestyles leads to dire need for chronic prescription drugs in Sub-Sahara Africa

Increase in Western lifestyles leads to dire need for chronic prescription drugs in Sub-Sahara Africa

February 20, 2017 Off By Dino Mustafić

There has been a paradigm shift in the burden of illness and non-communicable diseases (NCDs) across sub-Saharan Africa, which in turn is driving the demand for chronic prescription drugs.

The growing incidence of more Western lifestyle diseases such as cardiovascular disease (CVD), cancer, diabetes and respiratory disease, in addition to infectious and parasitic illness, will present the pharmaceutical industry in Africa with a business opportunity of $40.8 billion in 2019, finds Frost & Sullivan.

“An increase in health spending will encourage local manufacture of drugs,” said Transformational Health Research Analyst Saravanan Thangaraj. “We expect this increase in local formulation and filling to be protected by regulatory and tariff barriers, so international players will be looking for local contract manufacturers and other strategic partnerships.”

Heavy dependence on price, coupled with complexities associated with public sector tendering, make it difficult for multinationals to compete in this space. The private market, on the other hand, faces challenges with regards to fragmented payer channels between donors, private insurance payers and employers, even as high out-of-pocket expenses restrict patient access to medicines,  a brief outtake from African Pharmaceuticals Market, Forecast to 2020, part of Frost & Sullivan’s Life Sciences Growth Partnership Service program, reads.

According to Frost & Sullivan, several trends are encouraging investment, including the rapid improvment of regulatory environment for manufacturing in East Africa with increasing regional harmonisation, pharmaceutical spending in Africa that was noted to be growing by 10.6 percent, increasing of out-of-pocket spending on healthcare. The share of OTC drugs is high, indicative of a culture of self-medication in Nigeria and Kenya, as well as the contribution of NCDs to the healthcare burden in Africa will rise by 21 percent through 2030 are things that encourage investment.

“Addressing loopholes in the supply chain and distribution channels is crucial for foreign companies to ensure product availability and prevent circulation of counterfeit drugs,” added Thangaraj. “Investing in technical training of distributors and pharmacists, and product-specific initiatives like barcodes and holograms to track counterfeits, can also help minimize drug trafficking and enhance the brand’s image.”