Sunday, August 11, 2013

Cuba stands to gain as ALBA creates common medical market

Cuba stands to gain as ALBA creates common medical market

CUBA STANDARD — Opening the door for Cuba's pharmaceutical and medical
industry to a common market of 70 million people with a GDP of $636
billion, the members of the ALBA bloc officially announced the launch of
ALBAmed, a multinational body that includes a regulatory institution and
a central registry for pharmaceutical and medical products.

ALBAmed is expected to trigger concerted regional planning for
pharmaceutical production and save participating governments — Cuba,
Venezuela, Ecuador, Bolivia and Nicaragua — between 20 and 50 percent in
medical purchases, an Ecuadorian foreign ministry official told Spanish
news agency efe.

Although Cuba's pharmaceutical industry is offering many products
satisfying basic health needs of people in developing countries, exports
have faced major regulatory obstacles — even in ALBA member nations.

In 2011, for instance, Ecuadorean President Rafael Correa pledged his
country would buy up to $1.5 billion worth of Cuban-made medical drugs
and vaccines that year. The pledge came after the Ecuadorean health
minister toured Laboratorios Novatec and Laboratorios Farmacéuticos AICA
in Havana; Novatec produces, among others, generic versions of Aspirin
and Tamiflu, and AICA makes medical supplies such as vials and aerosols.
However, arguing that Cuban products were not registered in their
country, Ecuadorean critics were apparently able to significantly reduce
these purchases; Correa publicly complained about "sabotage" in his own
health ministry.

A regional approval process for pharmaceutical products and a central
registry will likely lower such hurdles for Cuban exports.

Cuban pharmaceutical exports are closing in on $500 million per year,
and state holding BioCubaFarma plans to double exports to more than $1
billion per year within five years.

Cuba's pharmaceutical industry stands to gain, as Cuban institutions and
officials will likely control much of the regulatory process. The
ALBAmed launch during the 12th ALBA summit in Guayaquil, Ecuador did not
include an announcement where the Centro Regulador de Medicamentos del
ALBA and the Registro Grannacional de los Medicamentos ALBA will be
based. Cuba, the ALBA member nation with most pharmaceutical and medical
know-how, coordinated the four-year long discussion process leading to
the creation of the institutions; Cuba's regulatory body for medicine,
CECMED, has received high ratings from the World Health Organization.

According to the Nicaraguan health ministry, the next ALBA project will
be the creation of ALBAfarma, a central purchasing, storage and
distribution entity for pharmaceutical and medical goods for Cuba,
Venezuela, Ecuador, Bolivia and Nicaragua. Cuba would also be a top
candidate to host ALBAfarma; as the coordinator of medical programs
funded by Venezuela, the Cuban government has gained experience with
massive medical purchases in third countries.

ALBAmed, according to the Nicaraguan health ministry, also aspires to
establish an alliance with other developing nations that produce drugs
and medical goods.

The ALBAmed project was launched in 2009. ALBAmed is funded by the Banco
del ALBA and designed to provide access to basic medicine for everyone,
"with quality, security, efficiency, and at the best prices for ALBA
countries," according to the official ALBA Website. ALBAmed has compiled
a provisional list of 489 essential medical products related to
treatment of the most widespread diseases, such as AIDS, tuberculosis
and malaria.

ALBAmed will now determine the needs of each participating country, and
which products will be included. The regulatory institution will be
operational in the first quarter of 2014.

Source: "Cuba stands to gain as ALBA creates common medical market «
Cuba Standard, your best source for Cuban business news" -
http://www.cubastandard.com/2013/08/10/cuba-stands-to-gain-as-alba-creates-common-medical-market/

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