ICIUM 2011
description
Transcript of ICIUM 2011
Essential Medicines and Pharmaceutical Policies Unit Sept 2010– ICIUM 2011 1
Third International Conference for Improving Use of Medicines (ICIUM2011):
Informed Strategies, Effective Policies, Lasting Solutions
Bibliotheca Alexandrina
April 10th-14th 2011
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WHO Eastern Mediterranean Region22 countries
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Introduction
The diversity in the region hinders any regional generalization.
Contexts are markedly different and so are the priorities.
A low income country – Pakistan – has a sizeable pharmaceutical industrial base.
A highest income country – Qatar – does not have any pharmaceutical company.
A lower middle income country – Jordan – has an FDA with a more than 400 staff.
An upper middle income country – Libya – has almost negligible regulatory capacity
Pharmaceutical Context & Priorities
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Classification of EMR countries by income(World bank 2009)
High-income Upper-middle-incomeBahrainKuwaitOmanQatarSaudi ArabiaUAE
LebanonLibya
Lower-middle-income Low-incomeDjiboutiEgyptIran, Islamic RepublicIraqJordanMoroccoPakistanPalestineSudanSyrian Arab RepublicTunisia
AfghanistanSomaliaYemen
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Analytical Matrix
W M S
Medicine Policy
Access
Quality - Regulation
Rational Use
Pharmaceutical Context & Priorities
Low Income
Countries
Lower M Income
Countries
Upper M Income
Countries
High Income
Countries
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Expenditure on medicinesfrom 9 NHA studies in the Region
■ 40% of total health expenditure is on medicines
■ Up to 30% of the budget of ministries of health is spent on medicines
■ Out-of-pocket expenditure is high
Egypt: 53% of all medicines are purchased directly by households
Morocco: 74%
Pharmaceutical Context & Priorities
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ICIUM Conferences
Goals:
•Assemble the state-of-the-art knowledge about ways to improve medicines use and health, especially for the most vulnerable populations
•Recommend evidence-based strategies for improving use at different levels in the health care system
•Identify ways to monitor and evaluate policy impacts
•Develop a research agenda to further knowledge about how to improve medicines use
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ICIUM conferences are unique
They focus on use of medicines in low and middle income countries
They are highly interactive
They produce actionable results
ICIUM 1997 and 2004 proceedings available at www.icium.org
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Partners Supporting ICIUM 2011
•International Network for Rational Use of Drugs
•World Health Organization•Eastern Mediterranean Regional Office •Department of Essential Medicines and Pharmaceutical Policies
•Harvard Medical School and Boston University School of Public Health: WHO Collaborating Center in Pharmaceutical Policy
•Karloniska Institute, Division of Global Health
•Management Sciences for Health, Strengthening Pharmaceutical Systems
•University of Alexandria
•Bibliotheca Alexandrina
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Conference Structure: Focus Areas
Conference discussions will focus on each on the following levels in health care systems where changes to improve medicines use take place:
Global
National
Institutional and
Individual (health care providers and consumers, including community systems)
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Conference Structure: Topic Track Objectives
•To cover major areas of clinical and programmatic interest related to pharmaceuticals in low and middle income countries
• To encourage cross-fertilization of ideas by having participants from different topic areas
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Conference Structure: Provisional Topic Tracks
Access (policy, regulation, governance)
HIV/AIDS, TB
Malaria
Maternal and child health (IMCI, pediatric medicines)
Chronic care (diabetes, hypertension, mental health, information technology for adherence)
Drug resistance (surveillance, containment strategies, drug development)
Economics, financing, insurance systems (cost, affordability, incentives, medicines coverage, policy options, impacts)
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ICIUM 2011 Participants
Each of the 500 or so participant of ICIUM2011 will be expected to play an active role in the conference.
Those with submitted abstracts are much more likely to be accepted.
ICIUM 2004 had 472 participants from 70 countries. There were 299 presentations and 326 posters.
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ICIUM 2011 Registration and Abstract Submission
Details of how to register and how to submit abstracts are posted on the ICIUM 2011 website www.icium.org
Abstracts must be submitted by 7 December 2010.
Each abstract will be peer reviewed. If improvements are needed authors will be mentored.
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Thank you
See you April 10th-14th 2011 in the Bibliotheca Alexandria
Watch www.icium.org for more information