• A propos de nous ?
  • Notre équipe
  • Devenir correspondant
  • Politique éditoriale
  • Contactez-nous
Les Scoops d'Afrique
No Result
View All Result
Advertisement
  • Accueil
  • Politique
  • Economie
  • Diplomatie
  • Société
  • Santé
  • Culture
  • Environnement
  • Multimédia
  • Sports
  • Editorial
Les Scoops d'Afrique
  • Accueil
  • Politique
  • Economie
  • Diplomatie
  • Société
  • Santé
  • Culture
  • Environnement
  • Multimédia
  • Sports
  • Editorial
No Result
View All Result
Morning News
No Result
View All Result
Home AMA

New Report Finds Blood Pressure Drugs Can Cost Up to 40 Times More in Regions with the Most Strokes and Heart Attacks

LSA-De notre Correspondant by LSA-De notre Correspondant
12 mai 2022
in AMA
0
16
SHARES
17
VIEWS
Partager sur FacebookPartager sur Twitter

High cost, low availability and variable quality of medicines increase risk of heart attacks and strokes from high blood pressure – the world’s leading cause of death

NEW YORK, USA, 12 May, 2022 -/African Media Agency(AMA)/-A new report released today by Resolve to Save Lives (RTSL) and Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF) shows that excessive and inequitable hypertension medication pricing hinders efforts to control high blood pressure in low- and middle-income countries (LMICs). High blood pressure, known as hypertension, is the world’s leading cause of death, killing more than 10 million people every year – more than all infectious diseases combined. Three quarters of people with high blood pressure live in LMICs, but fewer than one in 10 people with hypertension in LMICs is effectively treated. Increasing access to affordable, safe and essential hypertension medicines can save millions of lives.

Under Pressure: Strategies to Improve Access to Antihypertensive Medicines in Low- and Middle-Income Countries, is the first report of its kind, and reveals large disparities among countries in hypertension drug affordability and availability. It also serves as a roadmap to help policymakers, pharmaceutical manufacturers and health advocates achieve the World Health Organization’s (WHO) goal of reducing hypertension prevalence by 33% globally between 2010 and 2030. The report has three major findings: 

  • Current market prices in the five surveyed LMICs were more than 40 times the estimated cost-based generic price, suggesting that cost of manufacture alone is a minor component of prices
  • Pills combining two or more medicines are recommended as the standard, but combination pills are often unavailable or unaffordable to patients
  • Current prices put treatment of high blood pressure out of reach of many people living in LMICs 

“Where you live should not determine your ability to control your blood pressure, avoid a preventable heart attack or stroke, and live a longer, healthier life,” said Dr. Tom Frieden, President and CEO of Resolve to Save Lives. “Exorbitant drug pricing is forcing many people in lower- and middle-income countries to choose between food, shelter or life-saving medication. No one should have to make this choice. Leaders from governments, civil society and the pharmaceutical industry must make these medicines more affordable and accessible to the millions of people living with high blood pressure.” RTSL and MSF took estimates of the cost-based generic prices of the most common hypertension medications and compared them with how much those same drugs actually cost in five large LIMCs: Brazil, Lebanon, Nigeria, the Philippines and South Africa. The report found:

LIRE EGALEMENT

Promoting African agency on the global stage: communicators gather in Rwanda to establish roadmap 

More than 59 million internally displaced in 2021

  • The market prices in the five LMICs were up to 41 times higher than the estimated cost-based generic prices. For example, amlodipine, a widely used blood pressure medication which is the first drug recommended for most patients, had an estimated cost-based generic price of $0.01 USD per tablet, but the actual per tablet cost for private payers was $0.11 in South Africa and $0.22 in Lebanon. 
  • Other individual and combination medications, including hydrochlorothiazide, losartan and telmisartan, also had very high actual prices in some countries, suggesting that affordable, and more equitable prices among countries can reduce patients’ out-of-pocket expenses substantially.  
  • Most national Essential Medicines Lists (EMLs) and clinical guidelines of the surveyed LMICs exclude WHO-recommended single-pill combinations (also known as fixed-dose combinations), which include two or more hypertension drugs in one pill. Single-pill combinations of multiple drugs at low or moderate doses improve patient adherence to medicines and reduce costs for pharmaceutical management.  

Based on the findings, RTSL and MSF recommend that Ministries of Health make essential hypertension medicines universally available and more affordable. RTSL and MSF also call for countries to update their national EMLs and standard hypertension treatment guidance to include single-pill combination formulations of essential hypertension medicines, all of which are available as generic formulations. Pharmaceutical manufacturers should register WHO-recommended hypertension drugs in LMICs to expand access to medications that are safe, have high efficacy and comply with quality standards.

“In some settings, using single-pill combinations is already less costly than the sum of the individual medicines, and estimated cost-based generic pricing data suggests that the single-pill combinations are not more expensive to make,” said Helen Bygrave, Chronic Diseases Advisor for MSF’s access Campaign. “With less than 10% of people living with hypertension having their blood pressure controlled in low- and middle-income countries, we need to reimagine and simplify how we deliver hypertension treatment. Access to single-pill hypertension combinations is an important part of this change”

Under Pressure underscores the need for a transformation of the global hypertension medicines market to make essential hypertension medicines affordable and available to all patients regardless of where they live. It offers practical ways policymakers, pharmaceutical manufacturers and civil society can work together to help patients such as Olabisi Obelawo from Osogbo, Nigeria who spoke at an event featuring the new report.

“Both of my parents had high blood pressure when they were young. They passed away and the same thing is happening to people in my community now. I don’t want this to happen to me.” said Ms. Olabisi Obelawo, “Paying for my high blood pressure medicine is difficult on top of my household expenses. If we can get high- quality drugs more affordably, our lives can be extended.”
Read Under Pressure report here. 
To watch the full video of the briefing, click here.

Distributed by African Media Agency on behalf of Resolve to Save Lives.

About Resolve to Save Lives
 Resolve to Save Lives is a not-for-profit organization partnering with countries, communities and organizations to prevent 100 million deaths from cardiovascular disease and make the world safer from epidemics.To find out more, visit: https://www.resolvetosavelives.org or Twitter @ResolveTSL.

Media Contact:
 Steven Chlapecka, Senior Media Strategist, Resolve to Save Lives, schlapecka@resolvetosavelives.org, +1.917.623.0246  
General press inquiries, press@resolvetosavelives.org

Source : African Media Agency (AMA)

Related Posts

AMA

Promoting African agency on the global stage: communicators gather in Rwanda to establish roadmap 

23 mai 2022
1
AMA

More than 59 million internally displaced in 2021

20 mai 2022
6
AMA

Top Cryptocurrency Exchange Bybit Offers Up to 30% APY on Its New Liquidity Mining Pools

19 mai 2022
18
AMA

Four tips for redeploying high-value skills within your organisation 

19 mai 2022
9
AMA

The Russia – Ukraine Conflict and its Impact on the Infrastructure and Built Environment Industry in Africa 

17 mai 2022
11
AMA

Ghana Enterprise Agency partners with IE University’s Africa Center to promote women entrepreneurship 

17 mai 2022
10
Next Post

Cameroun:les deux boîtes noires d'un avion retrouvées intactes après le Crash

Laisser un commentaire Annuler la réponse

Votre adresse de messagerie ne sera pas publiée. Les champs obligatoires sont indiqués avec *

Newsletter

ARTICLES POPULAIRES

Femmes,voici les cinq secrets du « bois sacré » pour redevenir vierge

27 février 2019
19.7k

Comment réussir dans l’élevage de poulets de chair

23 décembre 2018
15.8k

Cameroun:Quatrième pays au monde où les hommes ont le sexe le plus développé

10 mai 2019
5.5k

Colonel ONANA MBARGA Oscar:”rien n’est fait au hasard à l’EMIA”

24 janvier 2020
2.9k

Au Cameroun, la chaîne Bnews1 s’offre du JSK

4 janvier 2021
178k

Cameroun-Congo:Démarrage imminent d’un projet de 5 500 milliards de Franc cfa !

11 janvier 2022
76.9k

Cameroun:La ménace qui vient de la République Centrafricaine

4 décembre 2020
176.9k
Facebook Twitter Instagram Youtube RSS

Catégories

  • A La Une
  • Actualités
  • AMA
  • Culture
  • Diplomatie
  • Droit et Liberté
  • Economie
  • Editorial
  • Elections
  • Environnement
  • Insécurité
  • Multimédia
  • Politique
  • Santé
  • Science et Technologie
  • Société
  • Sports
  • Terrorisme

© 2020 Les Scoops d'Afrique - Powered by Webmaster Freelance.

No Result
View All Result
  • Accueil
  • Culture
  • Diplomatie
  • Droit et Liberté
  • Economie
  • Editorial
  • Elections
  • Environnement
  • Insécurité
  • Multimédia
  • Politique
  • Santé
  • Science et Technologie
  • Société
  • Sports
  • Terrorisme

© 2020 Les Scoops d'Afrique - Powered by Webmaster Freelance.