Novartis said it would provide medicines ranging for low- and lower-middle income nations.
Novartis said it would provide medicines ranging for low- and lower-middle income nations.
Novartis said it would provide medicines ranging from
antibiotics and steroids to diarrhea pills to 79 countries on the World Bank’s
list of low- and lower-middle income nations.
The Basel-based drugmaker plans to maintain the
zero-profit programme until the pandemic ends or a vaccine or cure is found,
Novartis Global Health Chief Operating Officer Lutz Hegemann said in an
interview.
While Novartis has not seen supply-chain shortages
despite increasing demands for Covid-19 medicines, Hegemann said this new programme
aimed to help to keep vulnerable healthcare systems in Africa, Asia, South
America and European countries Ukraine and Moldova from becoming overloaded.
“We shouldn’t underestimate the stress that Covid puts
particularly on fragile health systems,” Hegemann told Reuters, adding
Novartis hopes to work with health authorities, faith-based organisations and
NGOs to eliminate big markups.
“We are not targeting
classical commercial distribution channels, but very direct channels, to
influence that to the extent we can,” he said.
Novartis’s brand-name
drugs have had little application in treating the new coronavirus, but Sandoz
generics are among medicines commonly used to treat symptoms of those
hospitalised.
The list includes
antibiotics amoxicillin, ceftriaxone, clarithromycin, vancomycin and
levofloxacin, steroids dexamethasone, prednisone and prednisolone, gout
treatment colchicine, heart failure drug dobutamine, antifungal fluconazole,
blood thinner heparin, anti-diarrhoea drug loperamide, reflux medicine
pantoprazole and lung drug salbutamol.
Its malaria generic,
hydroxychloroquine, is not included after some Covid-19 trials concluded
it did not work and the United States cancelled emergency authorisation,
though Novartis continues to provide it for trials and on government requests.
Hegemann did not give
specifics on the drugs’ eventual costs, compared to commercial prices. The
drugs have been around for decades and are comparatively cheap to make.
ok
ReplyDeleteOk
ReplyDeleteOkay
ReplyDelete