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Onya: We need government to declare state of emergency in pharmaceutical sector

By Chukwuma Muanya
04 September 2016   |   4:15 am
Dr. Steve Onya is the Chief Executive Officer (CEO) and Managing Director of Chi Pharmaceuticals Limited. Onya is also a member of the Pharmaceutical Manufacturers Group ...
Pharmacy shop stocked with essential medicines

Pharmacy shop stocked with essential medicines

Dr. Steve Onya is the Chief Executive Officer (CEO) and Managing Director of Chi Pharmaceuticals Limited. Onya is also a member of the Pharmaceutical Manufacturers Group of the Manufacturers Association of Nigeria (PMG-MAN). In this interview with CHUKWUMA MUANYA, he said new policies introduced by the Federal Government, including the National Drug Distribution Guidelines (NDDG) and Common External Tariff (CET) are killing local drug production and, if implemented, they will among other things lead to loss of over 300,000 jobs and dearth of research and development of new products.

Considering the problems of electricity and other infrastructure in the country, how possible is it to locally produce drugs in Nigeria and still make profit?
Local production is very difficult and the issue of critical infrastructure comes to play. It takes more than $4 to $5b to develop one pharmaceutical product. That makes it one of the most expensive industries to invest in. In Nigeria, it becomes much more difficult because of lack of critical infrastructure. Most of our companies today are not only building their own power plants, they are also even constructing access roads and this has made the cost of production very expensive and therefore non-competitive in the global arena. That is just the major problem we have as a pharmaceutical industry.

These avoidable and unnecessary costs have made the cost of drug manufactured locally very expensive and therefore not globally competitive. Some PMG-MAN members have lost global tenders to other African and Asian countries because of this non-competitiveness premised on high cost of doing business in Nigeria, especially manufacturing.

So how are you surviving in the light of all these constraints?
It is difficult as I said before, but of course we have to continue business because the pharmaceutical industry is not only a service to the healthcare sector it is also a real sector creating employment. So, we will continue to do that, hoping that one day this new government will be able to intervene and we are able to make progress.

What role does the PMG-MAN play in all of these things?
You must first of all understand that PMG-MAN is the Pharmaceutical Manufacturers sub-sector of the Manufacturers Association of Nigeria.

It is not only a healthcare service provider to the entire nation, and in particular, the healthcare industry, it is also a real sector that provides employment to healthcare personnel and other Nigerians. This sector significantly contributes to the Gross Domestic Product (GDP) as a real sector.

The pharmaceutical industry is one of the few industries that employ a multidisciplinary approach in its operations. It employs pharmacists, doctors, biomedical scientists, other Para-medical scientists, engineers, accountants, and lawyers especially on intellectual property.

It costs about $4billion-$5billion to introduce a new product. This amount is more than so many industry-groups in Nigeria put together.

Specifically, to the health sector, the pharmaceutical industry is the nucleus of the health care sector. Without access to essential medicines, including regular evidence based research to new molecules for emerging new disease challenges; the healthcare system will be of no effect. Humanity will face extinction.

You may also recall what happened during the Ebola crisis, when a country refused Nigeria access to some of the essential drugs that seem to have some promise in managing the Ebola Viral Diseases (EVDs). So the issue of drug security comes to play. The industry is the only one that provides drug security.

Four drug companies in Nigeria have achieved WHO certification in terms of Good Manufacturing Practice (GMP). What does this portend in the light of development of the local industry?
Regarding the WHO GMP Certification, this is one of the greatest achievements the industry has recorded in the recent time.

It is a very complex process that involves a lot of investment in both capital projects and human resources, including time.

Fortunately for me as a person, the company that I work for, Chi Pharmaceutical Limited happens to be one of the four companies that made it. I must personally acknowledge the support of the former Director-General of the National Agency for Food Drug Administration and Control (NAFDAC), Dr. Paul Orhii, and his management team for the leadership they provided throughout this process.

Having WHO GMP certification essentially means that your production facility meets global standards. It means that your product quality is not only internally consistent to the local regulatory agency quality standards, but also externally competitive to any other global quality standards known to man, at least for today.

We have about eight to nine companies in Africa that have achieved this certification, of which four are from Nigeria.

What level of support do drugs manufacturing companies get from government?
The government support for the industry is mainly theoretical to say the least. When only overseas companies were allowed to supply the United Nation (UN) Global Fund Malaria initiative in Nigeria that was worth millions of naira, the local industry were told that they wont participate because we do not have WHO certification.

The four companies struggled and invested to achieve this WHO certification and the government is not showing any appreciation. The current policies of government clearly show that they do not have interest in local drug manufacturing. We hope the new government will reverse this trend.

The Common External Tariff (CET) recently came into effect in Nigeria. How is this policy affecting local pharmaceutical manufacturers?
The Common External Tariff (CET) if implemented as presently constituted will result to high mortality rate in the pharmaceutical industry. It is unimaginable that a country will allow a policy that charges zero duty tariffs for imported finished drugs, while charging five to 10 per cent duty tariff for raw materials meant to produce drugs locally. This will result to dumping. Most local manufacturers are beginning to consider closing factories and go for importation which is easier and more profitable. Again, the government is not sensitive when it comes to issues that will encourage local drug manufacturing.

We understand the politics that are behind this policy within the member Economic Community of West African States (ECOWAS) countries. We understand also that CET is an essential component of the economic regional integration road map, but every government has the latitude or window to protect their local industry. The provision for “Import Adjustment Tax” is there as an escape route. The government should utilize it.

Allowing this policy to stay as it is presently constituted simply means rewarding inefficiency and subsidizing labour cost in the exporting countries.

This to us is very important because Nigeria controls close to 85 per cent of all the pharmaceutical industries in the ECOWAS sub-region. The other countries without industries will not be interested in protecting local industries, so it is only those that have industries that will like to fight it. So, it is only the government that has the opportunity or the window to impose ‘Import Adjustment Tax’ without running foul of the CET spirit of calling it duty.

Besides the Import Adjustment Tax, what other things should the government do to ameliorate the effect of the CET?
We are basically trying to tell government that in the short terms what they can do is to approach the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) and tell it to bar any product that the industry has local capacity to manufacture from using the official exchange window. When they do that because of the differential between the official window and the parallel window, which is about 20 per cent, which will automatically bring succor for the industry for the short term, while they plan what is going to happen in the future.

Your group recently expressed reservations about the new National Drug Distribution Guidelines (NDDG) announced by the Federal Ministry of Health. How exactly does these affect local manufacturers?
The new NDDG as announced by the Federal Ministry of Health was fraught with a lot of dangers.

PMG-MAN leadership saw the dangers of this policy and set up a committee to look into it and advise government. From the committee report, it was clear to all stakeholders that if the guideline were implemented as constituted, would have resulted in monopoly or ‘cartel’ as the industry supply chain will be controlled by foreign companies. Just imagine what will happen when another person, especially a foreign company controls your supply chain. He will become the channel captain and dictate the pace of the industry. This would have been a disaster.

Another thing that is going to happen to us, we said very clearly, is that there will be closure of major pharmaceutical companies especially the Small and Medium scale Enterprises (SMEs).

Now there will be high cost of drugs to patients because they have introduced another layer of chain.

There will also be dearth of research and development for new products. You cannot introduce a new product any longer because they cannot survive.

More importantly, also is that there will be loss of over 300,000 jobs in the first few months of its implementation.

What does the NDDG mean?
What it means as the policy demands that manufacturers and importers can only sell their products to a few mega distributors. These mega distributors of mainly Asian extraction were not also willing to take all the products of local manufacturers. The implication of this is that the mega distributors will abandon new products that are not in high market demand and the poor manufacturer will be left to his fate, as he or she has no alternative route to sell his product. The policy runs against all business logic in the contemporary free market enterprise world. No sane person will be willing to invest in the manufacture of new products or molecules knowing very well that the mega-distributors will not stock his product and he or she has no escape route to sell his or her product. This is why we are saying that the NDDG as presently constituted will kill the industry, if we allow it to stand. But we are very glad that the government is listening to us and is trying to make an alternative.

The position of PMG-MAN on NDDG is very clear, and this has been communicated to the Federal Ministry of Health and its agencies.

For the industry to grow and meet stakeholders and patients expectations, local manufacturers must be allowed to have alternative point of sales for distributing their products outside the mega distributors.

We are also of the strong opinion that unregulated market places where drugs are sold must gradually be phased- out by providing alternative regulated platform where all regulatory agencies are allowed to enforce their regulatory function within the purview of the governing extant laws.

We are glad that the government is listening to us and are taking the lead to review the NDDG with a view to protecting the entire pharmaceutical industry from collapsing.

So you are not calling for abolishment of the NDDG, but a review?
We are calling for a review because the industry wants the drug distribution channel to be sanitized. We are in full support of the sanitization. However, we are saying that it must follow a process that makes provision for the growth of the industry, a process that allows the industry to be sanitized at various channels. We are saying critically that you cannot clean this system by only imposing a mega distributor, who does not contribute anything. We are working with government to sanitise other levels of distribution, including the retail and wholesale system. We have made it clearly to government that the problem we have in Nigeria is the wholesale system.

Another major issue we have in Nigeria is that of fake drugs. What is your group doing to curtail the incidence of fake drugs in Nigeria?
PMG-MAN is in constant collaboration with NAFDAC and other healthcare professionals to stamp-out this ugly incidence of fake drugs. It is gladdening to note that the incidence is rapidly coming down, but there is no margin for error when it comes to health or life. We are committed to zero tolerance on fake and adulterated products starting from members. Apart from taking lives, fake drugs are taking a lot of employment and income including GDP. So we are saying no fake and adulterated drugs.

If you could sit with the President, what recommendations will you make as regards the pharmaceutical industry?
If I were to meet the President and set the agenda for pharmaceutical industry intervention in Nigeria, I will advise as follows: Declare state of emergency in the pharmaceutical sector because of its importance to the entire healthcare delivery system and job creation in Nigeria.

I will also ask him to reverse the CET in favour of local manufacturing and defend his position before his colleagues in the ECOWAS on the basis that about 85 per cent of all pharmaceutical industries in ECOWAS region are sited in Nigeria.

I will also want him to know clearly that he must direct the Federal Ministry of Finance to immediately release and disburse the N200b Pharmaceutical Intervention Fund, to industries at a single digit interest rate.

I will also like to tell him to begin to enforce the National Drug Policy that makes it mandatory that government at all levels must give priority to locally manufactured drugs during procurement planning and tender pre-qualifications.

I will also want him to immediately put on prohibition list all drugs that the local manufacturers have adequate and sufficient capacity to meet the national need. If that is done it will also conserve foreign reserve.

The PMG MAN and other manufacturers in Nigeria, do they have the capacity to manufacture all the country’s drug needs?
The combined capacity of PMG-MAN members together with other non-member local manufacturers is enough; to meet the country needs in some essential medicines.

There are however some products-groups where the local capacity is very low. Such areas include high-tech products like biological, vaccines and so on.

The issue of capacity is relative; I think when the industry is challenged through local patronage and other favourable policies from government, then, we can evaluate the actual local capacity of PMG-MAN members in relation to the total drug needs of the country.

Today, the actual capacity utilization for the industry stands at about 33 per cent. This shows that at full capacity, the industry could meet the national drug needs in so many therapeutic categories. We think the industry has the capacity to meet national drug needs, except in few areas.

Are you in anyway recommending ban on drug importation as a way of encouraging local industry?
PGM-MAN is not advocating for a blanket banning of all drugs imported into the country. What is reasonable is that all Drugs in which local manufacturers have sufficient capacity should be placed on prohibition list. This list will continue to grow as the industry shows progress on other therapeutic groups. Other developing countries have also toed this path of sustainable growth strategy.
What percentage of your raw material for production is sourced locally? What are you doing to solve the problem?

In the pharmaceutical Industry, raw materials consist mainly of the Active pharmaceutical Ingredients (API) and excipients. Today, less than five per cent of the total raw materials are sourced locally. However, for companies that are into liquid preparations, this percentage may increase to 20 to 30 per cent if water is considered as part of the raw materials. This clearly shows that the Federal Government needs to revisit the industry’s plea on harnessing the outputs of petrochemical industries.

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