Drug costs would push mlns more into poverty – study

LONDON, (Reuters) – Tens of millions of people in low  and middle income countries would be pushed below the poverty  line by buying common but vital medicines which are already  unaffordable to hundreds of millions more, a study has found.

Laurens Niens’ team at Erasmus University Rotterdam analysed  the number of people who would be pushed below an income level  of $1.25 or $2 a day — poverty indicators used by the World  Bank — by paying for four important, widely used medicines.

The Dutch researchers whose work was published in the Public  Library of Science (PLoS) Medicine journal yesterday said their  findings showed that greater effort is needed to encourage the  use of cheaper generic drugs in poor countries and to ensure  more medicines are made available through the public sector.

The drugs studied were a salbutamol inhaler, used for the  management of asthma, glibenclamide, a common diabetes drug,  atenolol, which belongs to a drug class commonly known as  beta-blockers and is used to treat high blood pressure, and  amoxicillin, a broad spectrum antibiotic.

Using data from the World Bank and the World Health  Organisation, the researchers generated “impoverishment rates”  for these medicines in 16 low- and middle-income countries.

The results of their study — available at  http://www.plosmedicine.org/article/ info%3Adoi%2F10.1371%2Fjournal.pmed.1000333 — show the much greater impoverishing effect of  branded drugs which are sometimes the only option available in  countries where public sector provision is often patchy.

In Yemen, for example, where seven percent of people live on  less than $1.25 a day, buying branded glibenclamide — sold as  Daonil by Sanofi-Aventis <SASY.PA> — would impoverish another  22 percent, but buying the cheapest generic equivalent would  only push another 3 percent below the poverty line.
In Nigeria, amoxicillin is already unaffordable to the 56  percent of the population who live on less than $1.25 per day. A  further 23 percent of Nigerians would be pushed into poverty by  by having to buy branded version Amoxil, made by GlaxoSmithKline  <GSK.L>, while only another 12 percent would be impoverished by  buying the cheapest generic version.