Some pharmacists have urged the Federal Government to provide pharmaceutical intervention funds to manufacturers to boost local production of drugs.
The pharmacists who spoke in Lagos on Wednesday said that such funds would help manufacturers increase production capacity.
The pharmaceutical stakeholders, under the Federation of Nigerian Pharmaceutical Industry Associations (FeNPIA), in February 2024, urged the federal government to create a N600 billion Pharmaceutical Manufacturing Development Fund at five per cent interest over a minimum tenure of seven to ten years.
According to the body, the fund will support the local production of Active Pharmaceutical Ingredients (APIs), vaccines, critical supply chain interventions, and Research & Development (R&D), among others.
The National Chairman of the Association of Community Pharmacists of Nigeria (ACPN), Wale Oladigbolu, said such a fund should be a long-term intervention that would scale up drug production.
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Oladigbolu also said that the funds, if made available by the Federal Government, should cut across industrialists and retailers as well.
“The government needs to put investment down for the pharmaceutical industry and support manufacturers that can convert our edible starch to pharmaceutical starch.
“This intervention is crucial to transform drug production in the country.
“It should be a long tenure fund, in such a way that beneficiaries won’t be under pressure to pay back, and it must be made available to manufacturers and also retailers who need support,” he said.
The ACPN National Chairman added that the government must also make the health insurance effective to relieve Nigerians of the high costs of medicine.
He said:” If health insurance works well, nobody will care about the increase in the price of drugs when you pay only 10 per cent for both treatment and drugs at the hospital.
“South Africa has a population of less than 60 million with a pharmaceutical industry worth over 3 billion dollars because their health insurance is very effective.
“Nigeria, with a population of over 200 million, can only boost a pharmaceutical industry worth over 1 billion dollars.
“Government needs to ensure that health insurance works because healthcare should not be based on whether people can afford it or not, it should be a fundamental human right”.
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Also, the Immediate Past Chairman of ACPN Lagos Chapter, Lawrence Ekhator, said such an intervention fund is critical to the enhancement of the pharmaceutical industry.
According to Ekhator, the issue of insufficient energy and import duties should also be addressed to ensure optimal increased local drug production.
He said: “The pharmaceutical industry needs a long-time fund at a good interest rate to enable local manufacturers to increase their output.
“Secondly, the importation of active pharmaceutical ingredients still attracts some duties that we hope will be removed or reduced to the nearest minimum.
“The number one component in manufacturing is energy cost; when you consider the amount manufacturers spend on diesel, it is disheartening. Government must do something urgently to address these issues,” he said.
(NAN)