Objectives: To present direct manufacturing costs and price calculations of individual antiretroviral drugs, enabling those responsible for their procurement to have a better understanding of the cost structure of their production, and to indicate the prices at which these antiretroviral drugs could be offered in developing country markets.
Methods: Direct manufacturing costs and factory prices for selected first and second-line antiretroviral drugs were calculated based on cost structure data from a state-owned company in Brazil. Prices for the active pharmaceutical ingredients (API) were taken from a recent survey by the World Health Organization (WHO).
This article presents the results of a global survey on drug accessibility conducted in Senegal in 2001. The original tool we developed to measure drug affordability for this study considered 5 marker diseases and their corresponding medical treatments and determined the theoretical amount that each population quintile can devote to the purchase of these treatments at market prices without damaging their economic status (affordability threshold). These results were then compared with those obtained as part of a field survey of 987 patients at 41 health centres and 51 private chemists (pharmacists).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThis article seeks to shed light on the reasons for the lack of correlation between the price of drugs in this very poor sub-Saharan country and the population's ability to pay for them. The analysis is based on: (i) a comparison between the wholesale (exclusive of VAT and other taxes) and government-fixed retail prices and the corresponding prices of the same drugs in their country of origin (France); (ii) a description of the price-setting mechanisms in Senegal in both the public and private sectors; and (iii) an evaluation of public-sector retail price in Senegal, by end users and prescribing professionals in both sectors. The study found that: (i) patient expenditure would be one-fifth as high if all the drugs in the sample were sold at their government-fixed public-sector retail prices; (ii) the most cost effective drugs are sold at fixed retail prices higher than those of drugs not reimbursed by the national health insurance in France because considered less cost-effective; (iii) the mechanism for setting public retail prices seems to be unrelated to public health objectives, does not consider specific population groups, target diseases, or the drugs' therapeutic value, and therefore cannot be considered an effective tool for implementing national drug policies.
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