Accra, Nov. 29, - Dr Owen Laws
Kaluwa, Representative of the World Health Organisation (WHO) in Ghana, has
asked African governments to increase investments in research and development
of new medicines, especially in the conduct of clinical trials.
He said investments in the
development of new products was not at a fast enough pace to keep up with the
need for new diagnostic and other products to deal with health issues on the
continent.
He made the statements at the
Assembly of the African Vaccine Regulatory Forum (AVAREF), held in Accra, on
Wednesday, on the theme: “Regulatory Preparedness and Response for Resilience
for Health Systems”.
Dr Kaluwa said African
governments and actors must, especially, focus on working on products for
diseases that disproportionately affected Africa.
He noted that two major
challenges in the development of new products were the scarcity of research
into new products needed to deal with the diseases in Africa; and the long time
it took to complete the processes for approval of clinical trials.
He explained that the processes
involved in the approval was so long that by the time an efficacious medicine
or vaccine was developed for a disease, a lot of time had been spent in the
process.
The focus thus, he noted, should
be how to advocate for more resources to do more work in finding new tools and
how to speed up approvals of the research or trials that had to take place to
identify efficacious medicines.
“The need to have systems to
speed up the approval of new products is important, the need for oversight is
very important, and that will help to move forward and be prepared to deal with
many diseases and challenges that we face in the health sector…,” Dr Kaluwa
said.
He said the countries must take
ownership, by allocating more resources to clinical trial sites and regulatory
authorities, and also improving governance and transparency by ensuring the
compulsory registration of all clinical trials in the region prior to
authorisation in the Pan-African Clinical Trial Registry or any WHO-primary
registry.
“Investments in ethics committees
and NRAs and effective management of trial sites will permit development and
implementation of new, safe and more effective health products to address
national priorities,” he noted.
Dr. Afisah Zakaria, Chief
Director of the Ministry of Health, host of the conference, commended the WHO
for convening the AVAREF Assembly and the African Union Commission and the
NEPAD Planning and coordinating agency for jointly organising the fifth African
Medicines Regulatory Authorities Conference, which follows the AVAREF Assembly
tomorrow.
Speaking on behalf of the
Minister of Health, she noted that quality-assured, safe and effective
medicines, vaccines and medical devices, including in-vitro diagnostics, were
fundamental to a functioning health system; thus the need to strengthen
regulatory systems to provide good quality, safe, and efficacious products for
optimum health care response.
She also stressed the need for
capacity building of regulatory agencies, as the absence of adequate numbers
and technical capacity of such agencies where they existed, had contributed to
the incidence of sub-standard or falsified medical products on African markets.
“There is the need to build the
capacity of staff working in regulation of medical products and provide them
with the needed logistics and remuneration to undertake their mandate without
fear or favour,” she stated.
AVAREF is a network of national
regulatory authorities and ethics committees of African countries, convened by
the WHO, as a platform to build ethics and regulatory capacity and to promote
the harmonisation of practices in support of oversight of clinical trials in
the region.
Its proposed goal is to build the
capacities of National Regulatory Authorities (NRAs) and Ethics Committees
robustly, as well as those of Regional Economic Communities to ensure
efficient, transparent, high quality and timely clinical trials, and licensing
of medicines and vaccines critical to improved maternal, family and general
health in Africa.
GNA

No comments:
Post a Comment