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Cheaper,
more accessible ARVs might be on the cards
PLUS
News
January 18, 2008 http://www.plusnews.org/Report.aspx?ReportId=76310
Life-prolonging antiretroviral
(ARV) medication is in perilously short supply in Zimbabwe, and
exorbitant prices have kept the scarce drugs out of reach for most
HIV-positive Zimbabweans. Could local manufacture make them cheaper
and easier to obtain?
Varichem Pharmaceuticals,
a local pharmaceutical company, can manufacture ARVs but crippling
foreign currency shortages have made it difficult to import the
raw materials for the ARVs and the company was forced to stop production.
Galloping inflation and
a drought of foreign currency have crippled the health sector, creating
shortages of drugs, medical equipment, and personnel, who have migrated
in search of better salaries and living conditions.
The Herald, an official
daily Zimbabwean newspaper, reported last week that a one-month
prescription of Stalenev 30, a common first-line ARV drug, now cost
Z$85 million (about US$42.50 at the parallel exchange rate). Most
Zimbabweans earn less than Z$3 million a month (US$1.5) or are unemployed.
At private pharmacies the drugs can cost up to four times the price
as at subsidised public dispensaries.
However, a recent announcement
that Varichem Pharmaceuticals had upgraded its drug-manufacturing
factory to meet international standards could offer a solution to
Zimbabwe's cash-strapped government, which is battling to scale
up its national treatment programme.
The United Nations Development
Programme (UNDP) provided US$2.1 million for the upgrading process
and trained Varichem staff to use the latest ARV manufacturing technology.
Managing director Tobias Zangare said the ARV manufacturing plant
now had to be tested and certified by the World Health Organisation
(WHO).
But there was no consensus
on whether manufacturing the drugs locally would make much difference.
With construction of the ARV manufacturing plant complete and only
awaiting WHO certification, the approval would allow them to apply
for foreign funding to capitalise their operations.
"The most important
thing is that we will be able to apply for funding from international
donors such as the Global Fund to fight HIV and AIDS, Tuberculosis
and Malaria," Zangare told journalists.
In the absence of local
regulatory authorities, WHO has stepped in to provide a stringent
quality assessment of its own, and passing WHO's prequalification
scheme is a requirement for countries seeking funding for local
manufacturing from the Global Fund.
Health and child welfare
minister David Parirenyatwa welcomed the move, saying, "Once
certified, Varichem Pharmaceuticals would be able to secure foreign
currency orders and improve on production, thereby producing enough
drugs for our people and for export to other countries."
AIDS activists remain
unconvinced. Reverend Maxwell Kapachawo, head of the Zimbabwe Network
of Religious leaders Living with or Personally Affected by HIV and
AIDS (ZINERELA+), a rights group, told IRIN/PlusNews that Varichem
Pharmaceuticals might not necessarily make ARVs more affordable.
"As a private company,
their motive could be pursing profits and so I think government
agencies could come in and play a role to ensure the life-prolonging
treatment is available to ordinary people.
Kudzi Matombo (not her
real name) told IRIN/PlusNews that she had been forced to use her
personal savings to buy the expensive drugs, as she was still on
the waiting list for free government ARV drugs.
"I am now depending
on relatives and friends working overseas to send me money for ARV
drugs because my earnings as a junior manager at a fast-foods outlet
is not even enough to sustain me for basic needs like food, shelter
and clothing."
Joseph Moyo, who tested
HIV positive two years ago, said he welcomed the initiative to manufactures
the drugs locally. "My assumption is that if the drugs are
manufactured in Zimbabwe, then there is hope that they might be
affordable."
According to government
statistics, only 90,000 people are on ARV therapy, while close to
400,000 are in urgent need of ARV drugs.
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