E-DRUG: Survey of NGOs on their use of WHO’s prequalification program
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Dear E-Druggers,
re: Survey of nongovernmental organizations on their use of WHO’s prequalification programme
At the end of 2018, we conducted a qualitative study investigating the use of the WHO Prequalification Programme. To do so, we interviewed focal points of NGOs linked to QUAMED (https://www.quamed.org/?lang=en) and Be-cause Health (https://www.be-causehealth.be/en/).
The results of the study are presented in an article that will appear in the June issue of the Bulletin of the WHO, and the unformatted version is already publicly available in the site of the Bulletin of the WHO:
http://www.who.int/bulletin/online_first/BLT.19.233882.pdf .
The recommendations emerged from the study and included in the published paper are as follows:
First, to address current trends in global health, invitations for expression of interest for WHO-prequalified products could be issued for essential antibiotics and medicines for noncommunicable diseases.
Second, the WHO Prequalification Team could require manufacturers to make publicly available (in a dedicated website, for example) the lists, contacts and wholesaler prices of their authorized distributors, either acting internationally or regionally.
Third, the WHO Prequalification Team could consider facilitating a process of harmonization of quality assurance policies across all donors.
Another recommendation emerged for WHO Member States and funders, given the importance of prequalification for protecting the health of the most vulnerable. In 2013, WHO began charging fees for activities related to medicines prequalification to improve the financial sustainability of the programme.
We encourage stakeholders to sustain and increase support for the WHO prequalification programme, as a unique public good that is essential for the fulfilment of universal health coverage.
On another note, unrelated to the scope of the WHO Prequalification Team, we hope that transparent, stringent mechanisms can be put in place for a type of prequalification of wholesalers, distributors and procurement agencies. This could be helpful for small and medium-sized humanitarian, development and public-sector purchasers in low- and middle-income countries when seeking to procure quality-assured medical products.
With best wishes,
Raffaella Ravinetto
Public Health Department
Institute of Tropical Medicine
Antwerp, Belgium
Raffaella Ravinetto <rravinetto@itg.be>