Get all your news in one place.
100’s of premium titles.
One app.
Start reading
The Guardian - UK
The Guardian - UK
Environment

Sustainable community pharmacy network launched in Kenya

The recognisable Pharmnet facade.
The recognisable Pharmnet facade. Photograph: Pharmnet

The distinctive blue and white facades of Pharmnet-branded pharmacies in Kahawa West, located on the outskirts of Nairobi, are fast becoming beacons of quality assurance for surrounding communities. It is here that Pharmnet is piloting its marketing strategy and innovative group purchasing business model – developed with technical assistance from the Private Sector Innovation Programme for Health (PSP4H). With 100 pharmacies already branded in Nairobi and Mombasa, and a further 250 to be branded in other counties over the next quarter, Pharmnet officially launched on 20 August, 2015 at the Crowne Plaza in Nairobi.

Helping Kenyans access affordable pharmaceuticals

Pharmacies are the first point of contact for the majority of Kenyans seeking healthcare. Yet according to research by PSP4H, only 4,000 of the 12,000 pharmacies in Kenya are licensed with the Pharmacy and Poisons Board. This means that consumers cannot be confident in the quality, authenticity or value of the medicines they purchase. According to PSP4H, Kenya’s “mass market” for healthcare – 22 million people or 50% of the population – earn between KSh500 and KSh1000 a day, leaving them particularly vulnerable when illness strikes.

With little disposable income (between 60p and £2 per day), this low-income group is forced to pay out-of-pocket for healthcare and suffers the “poverty penalty”: the need to pay multiple times for healthcare since initial care from informal operators does not properly treat illnesses. The launch of Pharmnet could not have come soon enough for Kenya’s mass market.

PSP4H partners with the Kenya Pharmaceutical Association

Funded by the UK government’s Department for International Development (DFID), PSP4H is an action research programme designed to improve the for-profit health market in Kenya so that low-income communities can get better value for money on healthcare spending. Pharmnet meets the key criteria of PSP4H’s market systems approach to development.

Working with existing initiatives and partner organisations, the Kenya Pharmaceutical Association (KPA), with a membership of 7,000, ensures that interventions can be scaled up sustainably.

The Pharmnet concept was already being pursued by KPA, yet it lacked the capacity for implementation. PSP4H has therefore taken on a facilitation role, providing technical assistance to develop training, quality assurance systems, the Pharmnet brand, a marketing and communication strategy, a pooled procurement business model administered by KPA’s subsidiary Nairobi Tech Pharm and business skills training for its members (through links with other PSP4H interventions). The result is that KPA members now have the capacity to launch and implement the Pharmnet network.

As Mr. Elo Mapelu, senior member of KPA and chairman of Nairobi TechPharm has stated “PSP4H has given us the technical support to develop Pharmnet as a commercial retail chain of pharmacies … we [members of KPA] are not trained in business but they have helped bridge this gap”.

This market-systems approach is aligned with core principles of the Business Call to Action, a partnership hosted by the United Nations Development Programme, which challenges companies to develop inclusive business models delivering commercial success along with development impact and inclusive growth for low-income communities. In December 2014, PSP4H and BCtA co-hosted a forum in Nairobi focused on exploring innovative market-driven approaches to healthcare delivery for low-income Kenyans.

The outcome of PSP4H’s Pharmnet initiative

Since partnering with KPA in May 2014, the first cadre of Pharmnet-branded operators have already benefitted from access to affordably priced quality-assured drugs, improved community pharmacy practices and business skills training. With more branding set to take place and the rollout of Pharmnet posters in Kenya’s brightly colored matatus (buses), complemented with radio advertisements blaring to passengers, PSP4H is scaling up the intervention, with the goal of branding 1,000 Pharmnet outlets to reach 2.1 million people by the the end of 2017.

Essentially, the pharmaceutical retail sector in Kenya is formalising itself: helping Kenya’s Ministry of Health to remove unlicensed, unqualified outlets – and substandard and counterfeit medicines – from the healthcare market.

This initiative demonstrates the potential of partnerships among professional medical associations, public institutions and private for-profit pharmacies. The benefits of improved quality, access and affordable medicines are already being passed on to low-income consumers – improving health and potentially saving millions of lives.

Impact

As the crisp blue and white Pharmnet brand spreads throughout Nairobi and is scaled up nationwide, low-income communities will be able to clearly identify the means to access affordable, quality-assured medicines and healthcare. They will avoid having to pay multiple times for substandard treatment, freeing up money for other necessities – reducing poverty and ensuring a healthier more productive society.

For more information contact info@psp4h.com and follow @PSP4H

Content on this page is paid for and provided by Business Call to Action, sponsor of the role of business in development hub

Sign up to read this article
Read news from 100’s of titles, curated specifically for you.
Already a member? Sign in here
Related Stories
Top stories on inkl right now
One subscription that gives you access to news from hundreds of sites
Already a member? Sign in here
Our Picks
Fourteen days free
Download the app
One app. One membership.
100+ trusted global sources.