Advancing African Medicines Agency through Global Health Diplomacy for an Equitable Pan-African Universal Health Coverage: A Scoping Review
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Materials and Methods
2.1. Literature Search
2.2. Inclusion Criteria
2.3. Selection of Studies
2.4. Quality Assessment
3. Results
3.1. Regulation of Medical Products in Africa
Regulatory Harmonization Process in Africa
3.2. Evolution of African Medical Agency (AMA)
3.3. The Growing Importance of Global Health Diplomacy in Africa
Establishment of African Medicines Agency
3.4. Anticipated Benefits and Advantages of Fully Functional AMA
3.4.1. Growth of Local Pharmaceutical Manufacturing Capacity
3.4.2. Promoting Regulatory Cooperation and Harmonization
- a.
- Adopting AMRH’s workstreams, AMA would facilitate the medicines evaluation and registration through Common Technical Document formation. Currently, the marketing authorization can vary from 4 to 7 years in line with the resourcefulness of the individual NMRA. This lengthy period has adversely impacted the pharmaceutical companies in supplying medicines to the continent [37]. Mary Ampomah, President and CEO of the Global Alliance of Sickle Cell Disease Organizations (GASCDO) stressed the value of getting access to safe drugs and a chance for a better life in Africa. She highlighted that the AMA would speed up the approval process, and as a result, the medicines will be available sooner to the people.
- b.
- Although adopted in February 2019 by the member states of AU, as of February 2021, only eight members out of the required fifteen member states have ratified; a required legal process before AMA could come into effect. One of the challenging factors is the lack of legislation and how it would affect the activity and authority of NMRA in any given member state. However, learning from Ghana’s experience in harmonizing their legislation to AMA, member states must provide the required coordination and recognition of common purpose from the Ministry of Health (parent ministry), current Government, Ministry of Finance, Ministry of Foreign Affairs, and the Office of Attorney General [38]. Despite being a complex process, this now forms the legitimate platform effort to adopt and utilize AMA’s objectives to benefit Ghana’s population. This is paramount as there is a major variation among what is being regulated by NMRAs across Africa. As noted by Ndomondo-Sigonda et al., out of 26 NMRAs, only 15% are mandated to perform every regulatory activity, while 65% control veterinary medicines, 69% regulate herbal medicines, and more than two-thirds regulate items that include foods, pesticides, poisons, bottled water, cosmetics, and animal food supplements [37]. Therefore, harmonization through a common regulatory framework can prevent further delays in bringing important medicines to the public.
- c.
- Other regulatory functions of pharmacovigilance (PV) also showed a significant gap as only eight countries out of 26 sub-Saharan African countries had collected data on adverse events. Varying proportions of countries showed poor post-marketing surveillance (PMS), leading to SSFFCs (substandard, spurious, falsely labeled, falsified, and counterfeit) medicines being available in the market. AMA is expected to ease the process by bringing different technology strengths, technical expertise, and shared human and financial resources.
- d.
- Impact on training and education: The establishment of RCOREs meets training and education standards as these RCOREs possess the expertise on one or more aspects of the capacity building for NMRAs, i.e., training, education, regulatory, manufacturing, quality assurance, and control.
3.4.3. Continental Relevance of Priorities
3.4.4. Information Availability
3.4.5. Ensuring Robust Response to Counterfeit Medicine
4. Discussion
4.1. Enhancing the Role of a Clinical Trial in Shaping the Population Health
4.2. Greater Coordination among African Countries
4.3. Efficient Implementation of Intellectual Property Rights
4.4. South–South Cooperation and African Medical Agency
4.5. Impact of India’s Health Diplomacy
4.6. Impact of China’s Health Diplomacy
4.7. Future of Africa with African Medicines Agency in Action
5. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
Appendix A
Appendix B
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S. No | Broader Function | Specific Activities |
---|---|---|
1 | Coordinate (5) |
|
2 | Convene (1) |
|
3 | Designate (1) |
|
4 | Develop (1) |
|
5 | Evaluate (1) |
|
6 | Examine (1) |
|
7 | Monitor (1) |
|
8 | Promote (3) |
|
9 | Provide (4) |
|
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Chattu, V.K.; Dave, V.B.; Reddy, K.S.; Singh, B.; Sahiledengle, B.; Heyi, D.Z.; Nattey, C.; Atlaw, D.; Jackson, K.; El-Khatib, Z.; et al. Advancing African Medicines Agency through Global Health Diplomacy for an Equitable Pan-African Universal Health Coverage: A Scoping Review. Int. J. Environ. Res. Public Health 2021, 18, 11758. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph182211758
Chattu VK, Dave VB, Reddy KS, Singh B, Sahiledengle B, Heyi DZ, Nattey C, Atlaw D, Jackson K, El-Khatib Z, et al. Advancing African Medicines Agency through Global Health Diplomacy for an Equitable Pan-African Universal Health Coverage: A Scoping Review. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health. 2021; 18(22):11758. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph182211758
Chicago/Turabian StyleChattu, Vijay Kumar, Vishal B. Dave, K. Srikanth Reddy, Bawa Singh, Biniyam Sahiledengle, Demisu Zenbaba Heyi, Cornelius Nattey, Daniel Atlaw, Kioko Jackson, Ziad El-Khatib, and et al. 2021. "Advancing African Medicines Agency through Global Health Diplomacy for an Equitable Pan-African Universal Health Coverage: A Scoping Review" International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health 18, no. 22: 11758. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph182211758
APA StyleChattu, V. K., Dave, V. B., Reddy, K. S., Singh, B., Sahiledengle, B., Heyi, D. Z., Nattey, C., Atlaw, D., Jackson, K., El-Khatib, Z., & Eltom, A. A. (2021). Advancing African Medicines Agency through Global Health Diplomacy for an Equitable Pan-African Universal Health Coverage: A Scoping Review. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health, 18(22), 11758. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph182211758