Access to Controlled Medications Programme Zafar Mirza EM/RGO/DHS Willem Scholten HQ/EMP/QSM/ACMP...

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Access to Controlled Medications Programme Zafar Mirza EM/RGO/DHS Willem Scholten HQ/EMP/QSM/ACMP NPO Meeting 20 – 24 October 2008, Delhi, India

Transcript of Access to Controlled Medications Programme Zafar Mirza EM/RGO/DHS Willem Scholten HQ/EMP/QSM/ACMP...

Page 1: Access to Controlled Medications Programme Zafar Mirza EM/RGO/DHS Willem Scholten HQ/EMP/QSM/ACMP NPO Meeting 20 – 24 October 2008, Delhi, India.

Access to Controlled Medications Programme

Zafar MirzaEM/RGO/DHS

Willem Scholten HQ/EMP/QSM/ACMP

NPO Meeting

20 – 24 October 2008, Delhi, India

Page 2: Access to Controlled Medications Programme Zafar Mirza EM/RGO/DHS Willem Scholten HQ/EMP/QSM/ACMP NPO Meeting 20 – 24 October 2008, Delhi, India.

Drug Control

Currently 3 UN drug conventions:

● Single Convention on Narcotic Drugs (1961)● Convention on Psychotropic Substances

(1971)● Convention against Illicit Traffic in Narcotic

Drugs and Psychotropic Substances (1988)

Page 3: Access to Controlled Medications Programme Zafar Mirza EM/RGO/DHS Willem Scholten HQ/EMP/QSM/ACMP NPO Meeting 20 – 24 October 2008, Delhi, India.

Drug conventions are public health law

1961 and 1971 Conventions:

Two objectives:1. Prevention of harm from drug dependence2. Availability for rational medical use

Public health interests are best served if all control measures aim at the optimum between medical availability and abuse prevention

Page 4: Access to Controlled Medications Programme Zafar Mirza EM/RGO/DHS Willem Scholten HQ/EMP/QSM/ACMP NPO Meeting 20 – 24 October 2008, Delhi, India.

Controlled medicines on the WHO EML

– Opioid analgesicsmoderate to severe pain

– Opioids for substitution treatment

opioid dependence

– Ergometrine and ephedrine

emergency obstetrics

– Benzodiazepines

anxiolytics, hypnotics, anti-epileptics

– Phenobarbital

anti-epileptic

Page 5: Access to Controlled Medications Programme Zafar Mirza EM/RGO/DHS Willem Scholten HQ/EMP/QSM/ACMP NPO Meeting 20 – 24 October 2008, Delhi, India.

Morphine consumption per capita

Graphic: New York Times

Page 6: Access to Controlled Medications Programme Zafar Mirza EM/RGO/DHS Willem Scholten HQ/EMP/QSM/ACMP NPO Meeting 20 – 24 October 2008, Delhi, India.

Drug conventions

Page 7: Access to Controlled Medications Programme Zafar Mirza EM/RGO/DHS Willem Scholten HQ/EMP/QSM/ACMP NPO Meeting 20 – 24 October 2008, Delhi, India.

Millions have a drug problem

photo: WHO/Marko Kokic

They can't get any

Page 8: Access to Controlled Medications Programme Zafar Mirza EM/RGO/DHS Willem Scholten HQ/EMP/QSM/ACMP NPO Meeting 20 – 24 October 2008, Delhi, India.

Why does drug control impede medical access?

- Excessive fear for dependence

- Excessive fear for diversion

- Attention for medical needs neglected

Page 9: Access to Controlled Medications Programme Zafar Mirza EM/RGO/DHS Willem Scholten HQ/EMP/QSM/ACMP NPO Meeting 20 – 24 October 2008, Delhi, India.

Drug conventions

Recognizing that the medical use of narcotic drugs continues to be indispensable for the relief of pain and suffering and that adequate provision must be made to ensure the availability of narcotic drugs for such purposes …

(Preamble Single Conv. on Narcotic Drugs)

Page 10: Access to Controlled Medications Programme Zafar Mirza EM/RGO/DHS Willem Scholten HQ/EMP/QSM/ACMP NPO Meeting 20 – 24 October 2008, Delhi, India.

Conventions are a minimum

● Countries may apply stricter measuresExamples:– Licence requirement for community and hospital

pharmacies – Dispensing restricted to major hospitals– Government monopoly on morphine trade– Special prescription forms

● Stricter measures usually decrease medical availability

Page 11: Access to Controlled Medications Programme Zafar Mirza EM/RGO/DHS Willem Scholten HQ/EMP/QSM/ACMP NPO Meeting 20 – 24 October 2008, Delhi, India.

International Covenant on Economic Social and Cultural

Rights (ICESCR)

Article 12:1. The States Parties to the present Covenant

recognize the right of everyone to the enjoyment of the highest attainable standard of physical and mental health.

2. The steps to be taken by the States Parties to the present Covenant to achieve the full realization of this right shall include those necessary for:

(…) the creation of conditions which would assure to all medical service and medical attention in the event of sickness.

Page 12: Access to Controlled Medications Programme Zafar Mirza EM/RGO/DHS Willem Scholten HQ/EMP/QSM/ACMP NPO Meeting 20 – 24 October 2008, Delhi, India.

Right to Health includes:

● Access to Essential Medicines ● Chronically and terminally ill

– Spare avoidable pain– Die with dignity

● Non-discrimination – Women, children, prisoners, HIV-patients, people with heroin

dependence et cetera

● Protection against drug abuse● States, treaties and UN-bodies should promote right to

health internationally

General Comment 14 to the International Covenant on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights

Page 13: Access to Controlled Medications Programme Zafar Mirza EM/RGO/DHS Willem Scholten HQ/EMP/QSM/ACMP NPO Meeting 20 – 24 October 2008, Delhi, India.

Undue medical effectsof drug control

Untreated pain patients tens of millions

Preventable HIV infections > 250,000

Mortality from post-partal haemorrhage

75,000

Effect on mortality among patients with opioid dependence

2-3% 0.2–0.3%

Antiepileptics, anxiolytics ?(first three: annual prevalence)

Page 14: Access to Controlled Medications Programme Zafar Mirza EM/RGO/DHS Willem Scholten HQ/EMP/QSM/ACMP NPO Meeting 20 – 24 October 2008, Delhi, India.

Untreated pain patients(annually, globally)

All avoidable with controlled

medications

Cause Number of untreated pain patients

Cancer around 4 million

HIV/Aids 0.8 million

Emergencies 8 - 40 million

Surgery 8 - 40 million (overlap with emergencies)

Other 10 million (estimated)

Total 30 – 86 million

Page 15: Access to Controlled Medications Programme Zafar Mirza EM/RGO/DHS Willem Scholten HQ/EMP/QSM/ACMP NPO Meeting 20 – 24 October 2008, Delhi, India.

Substitution therapyeffects

● Prevents transmission of HIV and Hepatitis C– Reduction HIV seroconversion in IDU's:

55% - 85% (= 230,000 – 360,000)

● Reduces death rate of dependence patients to about normal– Reduction 90 – 95%

● Reduces public nuisance and petty crime– $ 1 investment yields $ 5 for society

Page 16: Access to Controlled Medications Programme Zafar Mirza EM/RGO/DHS Willem Scholten HQ/EMP/QSM/ACMP NPO Meeting 20 – 24 October 2008, Delhi, India.

Resolutions

● ECOSOC 2005/25– On treatment of pain using opioid analgesics

● World Health Assembly 58.22 (25-05-2005)– on Cancer Prevention and Control

"…..to examine jointly with the International Narcotics Control Board the feasibility of a possible assistance mechanism that would facilitate the adequate treatment of pain using opioid analgesics"

Page 17: Access to Controlled Medications Programme Zafar Mirza EM/RGO/DHS Willem Scholten HQ/EMP/QSM/ACMP NPO Meeting 20 – 24 October 2008, Delhi, India.

Access to Controlled Medications Programme (ACMP)

● To assist countries to improve access to controlled essential medicines

● Developed in consultation with the International Narcotics Control Board (INCB)

● Operated by WHO

Page 18: Access to Controlled Medications Programme Zafar Mirza EM/RGO/DHS Willem Scholten HQ/EMP/QSM/ACMP NPO Meeting 20 – 24 October 2008, Delhi, India.

Access to Controlled Medications Programme (ACMP)

Programme info on www.who.int/medicines:

- Framework - Briefing notes - Pain guideline development

Page 19: Access to Controlled Medications Programme Zafar Mirza EM/RGO/DHS Willem Scholten HQ/EMP/QSM/ACMP NPO Meeting 20 – 24 October 2008, Delhi, India.

ACMP Activities (1)

Step 1:Developing tools

Monitoring and planning tools- International Opioid Consumption Database

(interactive on-line database) (on-line by end of 2009) - methods for need estimation (ready for publication)

WHO Treatment Guidelines for all types of pain Focussed on opioid availability

ongoing; available by 2010-2012

Update of Guidelines on Opioid availability ("Achieving balance in national opioid control policies")

available by 2010

Page 20: Access to Controlled Medications Programme Zafar Mirza EM/RGO/DHS Willem Scholten HQ/EMP/QSM/ACMP NPO Meeting 20 – 24 October 2008, Delhi, India.

ACMP Activities (2)

Step 2: Direct country support

Policy analysis

Analysis of legislation and support for amendment process

Procurement of controlled substances (advice)

Estimates training

Support for training of health care professionals

Page 21: Access to Controlled Medications Programme Zafar Mirza EM/RGO/DHS Willem Scholten HQ/EMP/QSM/ACMP NPO Meeting 20 – 24 October 2008, Delhi, India.

ACMP Methods

6-country workshops - policies analysed by 3 government officials and 3 health

care workers - lectures

- national plans drafted

National workshops 50 – 200 stakeholders invited

Estimates training workshops for civil servants responsible for estimates

and statistics submission to INCB

Counselling

Page 22: Access to Controlled Medications Programme Zafar Mirza EM/RGO/DHS Willem Scholten HQ/EMP/QSM/ACMP NPO Meeting 20 – 24 October 2008, Delhi, India.

Other areas of work involved

Not a pharmaceutical topic exclusively:- HIV- Palliative care/cancer care- Surgery and emergency care- Child and adolescent health- Substance abuse

Page 23: Access to Controlled Medications Programme Zafar Mirza EM/RGO/DHS Willem Scholten HQ/EMP/QSM/ACMP NPO Meeting 20 – 24 October 2008, Delhi, India.

ACMP priority countries

AFRO● Cameroon, Ethiopia, Ghana, Ivory Coast, Kenya, Malawi,

Nigeria, Rwanda, Senegal, Sierra Leone, Tanzania, Zambia.EMRO● Egypt, Iran, Morocco, Oman, Pakistan, Sudan.EURO● Bosnia-Herzegovina, Bulgaria, Croatia, Cyprus, Czech

Republic, Estonia, Finland, Greece, Hungary, Italy, Latvia, Lithuania, Malta, Moldova, Poland, Romania, Serbia & Montenegro, Slovenia, Slovakia.

PAHO● Argentina, Colombia, Panama.SEARO● Indonesia, Bangladesh, IndiaWPRO● Vietnam, China, Philippines

Page 24: Access to Controlled Medications Programme Zafar Mirza EM/RGO/DHS Willem Scholten HQ/EMP/QSM/ACMP NPO Meeting 20 – 24 October 2008, Delhi, India.

Programme Duration and Cost

● Over 150 countries to go to● Expected to take over 15 years● Action Plan Phase I (2008 -2013)

– Needed budget: US$ 55.5 million● Funds to be raised from Members States and

donor organizations

Page 25: Access to Controlled Medications Programme Zafar Mirza EM/RGO/DHS Willem Scholten HQ/EMP/QSM/ACMP NPO Meeting 20 – 24 October 2008, Delhi, India.

ATOME Project

● Funded by European Commission● Consortium: 10 organizations from 7 EU

countries, including WHO (HQ/EMP, EURO)● "ACMP-like" activities in 12 Eastern

European countries● 2009 - 2014

Page 26: Access to Controlled Medications Programme Zafar Mirza EM/RGO/DHS Willem Scholten HQ/EMP/QSM/ACMP NPO Meeting 20 – 24 October 2008, Delhi, India.

Willem Scholten

Manager Access to Controlled Medications Programme

Quality Assurance and Safety: Medicines

Department of Essential Medicines and Pharmaceutical Policies

[email protected]

+41 22 79 15540

More information: