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Teaching Hospitals’ Debt To Drug Manufacturers Hits ₦30 Billion — PSN - Health - Nairaland

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Teaching Hospitals’ Debt To Drug Manufacturers Hits ₦30 Billion — PSN by milann: 6:52am On Jul 29, 2021
The Pharmaceutical Society of Nigeria, PSN, on Wednesday raised the alarm over what it described as “gross mismanagement: of the Drug Revolving Fund, DRF, by most institutions especially the tertiary health institutions, disclosing that debts owed by Teaching Hospitals to pharmaceutical companies has grown to N30 billion at the last count.

The PSN who said the debts have left the pharmaceutical companies without drugs also alerted that despite the fact that 90 percent of the Central Bank of Nigeria, CBN, Pharmaceutical Intervention Fund, has been disbursed, most of the 40 pharma companies who have accessed the funds have no access to Forex.

At a briefing to mark this year’s World Hepatitis Day in Lagos organised by the PSN in collaboration with Mega Life Sciences, the President of the PSN, Pharm. Mazi Sam Ohuabunwa said the N30 billion Drug Revolving Fund owed the pharmaceutical industry by federal and state agencies, teaching hospitals, Federal Medical Centres parastatals, among other institutions, are over two to three years overdue.

He said the huge debt has further encumbered their operations and left the pharmacy shelves empty. To ensure the availability of drugs in health institutions, the PSN is proposing a bill to institutionalise and regulate DRF.

He said the DRF was one of the fallouts of the Bamako Initiative, towards better health of the people through the Primary health care model.


“DRF is programmed to provide quality and affordable medicines through a fund set aside to procure medicines and dispense same to patients at a minimal cost.

“Unfortunately, this has been grossly mismanaged by most institutions especially the tertiary health institutions, where pharmaceutical companies are owed huge sums of monies.

“We know that these debtor institutions receive regular subventions from the government, and they have sold the items to patients for cash.

“We could not understand why they are using the government space and reputation to incur debts and embarrass the nation as a difficult place to invest in and do business.

“One hospital, National Orthopaedic Hospital Igbobi, was running this system perfectly they were able to raise additional capital to build a house of about 200 million, but in some hospitals, they have diverted the money to other things and so the money is no longer available and they are owing pharmaceutical companies about N30 billion the last time we check because the drug revolving fund is no longer revolving.

“We are appealing to government especially the tertiary health institution where they owe a huge amount of money and left the pharmacy store empty to ensure quick payment. It is the easiest way for the government to maintain a certain level of drug availability.”

“The DRF has been grossly mismanaged by most institutions especially the tertiary health institutions, where pharmaceutical companies are owed huge sums of monies that have further encumbered their operations and left the pharmacy shelves empty.

To ensure the availability of drugs in health institutions, Ohuabunwa disclosed that the PSN is proposing a bill to institutionalise and regulate DRF, adding that letters have been sent to the House of Assembly, Ministry of health and other government agencies in that regard.

Speaking on the CBN intervention fund, Ohuabunwa said about 90 per cent of the fund has been disbursed to a pharmaceutical company.

Stating that they are starting to raise issues for a second tranche as the first fund was like a drop in a very big ocean, he said only one company could have mopped up that N100 billion but CBN gave a maximum of N2.5 billion to about 40 pharmaceutical companies.

“The money has been disbursed on paper. A significant number of pharmaceutical companies have the money in their bank account, but none of them has been able to produce much because most of the raw materials and equipment needed to produce drugs are imported.

“Others are still struggling to get foreign exchange. The major problem is FOREX. If they can get FOREX, they will be able to buy equipment. We have written to CBN on this.”

He called on the CBN to make FOREX available for those who have received loans to acquire machinery and critical raw materials.

Describing the CBN and COVID-19 intervention funds as laudable ideas, he said the objectives are yet to be achieved.

The impact of difficulty in forex access is that it portends grave danger and may undermine the noble objectives. First, the longer it takes to get the machines and equipment in, the longer it will be for Nigeria to begin to see an enhanced local production.

“Second, the longer it takes, the more difficult it will be for the benefitting companies to begin production and generate cash flow to meet the interest and repayment obligation, as the moratorium is fast depleting.

“Third is that with forex at rates higher than the planned or forecasted rates in the business plan, the money received in Naira may no longer be sufficient to meet the stated needs.

And fourth is that the longer the Naira is left in the Banks awaiting piecemeal allocation of forex, the faster the value depreciates by growing inflation and the fewer the number of machinery and equipment or even raw materials that can be bought. “

Speaking, on local production of vaccines, he said some pharmaceutical companies have set up a vaccine laboratory, but need NAFDAC approval before they can start the process of local production of vaccines.

Lamenting the spread of the Delta variant into Nigeria, he urged Nigerians to always wear their face mask and get a vaccine.

He dismissed conspiracy theories about COVID-19 vaccines insisting that the vaccines are safe and efficacious.


https://www.vanguardngr.com/2021/07/teaching-hospitals-debt-to-drug-manufacturers-hits-n30bn-psn/

2 Likes

Re: Teaching Hospitals’ Debt To Drug Manufacturers Hits ₦30 Billion — PSN by omowolewa: 6:58am On Jul 29, 2021
Debtors
Re: Teaching Hospitals’ Debt To Drug Manufacturers Hits ₦30 Billion — PSN by Nobody: 7:32am On Jul 29, 2021
The elephant in the room is the fact that healthcare prices in Nigeria are kept very very low.

Some people think that our hospitals are expensive. Infact, go and find out how much a caesarean costs in the US, and how much the same proccedure costs in Nigeria and you would know that things are cheap.

Many Nigerian hospitals are broke. They thus use the cash from the drug revolving fund to pay for things not related to drugs. Add the corruption too, and you would see why things are so bad.

The solution is to either allow government hospitals run at a profit, or charge higher taxes. We only tax 30% of the taxable population, and our tax to gdp raito is 6.1%, and oil prices have not passed $100 since 2014.

13 Likes

Re: Teaching Hospitals’ Debt To Drug Manufacturers Hits ₦30 Billion — PSN by inoki247: 7:49am On Jul 29, 2021
Debtor everywhere mak dem use Lapo agent to help go retrieve the money e b lik say dem too sabi aw to recover money....

1 Like

Re: Teaching Hospitals’ Debt To Drug Manufacturers Hits ₦30 Billion — PSN by habsydiamond(m): 7:52am On Jul 29, 2021
Public hospitals in debt... Why is it everywhere when it as to do with fraud... Greed is the major cause of this. May God help us all.

1 Like

Re: Teaching Hospitals’ Debt To Drug Manufacturers Hits ₦30 Billion — PSN by Kingcalls: 7:59am On Jul 29, 2021
The drug companies wey de give them drugs b like charity organisation
Re: Teaching Hospitals’ Debt To Drug Manufacturers Hits ₦30 Billion — PSN by newsheadlines: 7:59am On Jul 29, 2021
CBN go pay
Re: Teaching Hospitals’ Debt To Drug Manufacturers Hits ₦30 Billion — PSN by MANNABBQGRILLS: 8:00am On Jul 29, 2021
He dismissed conspiracy theories about COVID-19 vaccines insisting that the vaccines are safe and efficacious.
Good news.

2 Likes 3 Shares

Re: Teaching Hospitals’ Debt To Drug Manufacturers Hits ₦30 Billion — PSN by sammysmiles(m): 8:00am On Jul 29, 2021
Everything about Nigeria na to dey owe
Re: Teaching Hospitals’ Debt To Drug Manufacturers Hits ₦30 Billion — PSN by WeNoGoDie(m): 8:02am On Jul 29, 2021
Are they giving the drugs for free??

1 Like

Re: Teaching Hospitals’ Debt To Drug Manufacturers Hits ₦30 Billion — PSN by Coldie(m): 8:03am On Jul 29, 2021
Nigerians are the reason y nobody takes black seriously, government can't manage anything now even u too

1 Like

Re: Teaching Hospitals’ Debt To Drug Manufacturers Hits ₦30 Billion — PSN by Coldie(m): 8:03am On Jul 29, 2021
WeNoGoDie:
Are they giving the drugs for free??
Are they even treating for free

1 Like

Re: Teaching Hospitals’ Debt To Drug Manufacturers Hits ₦30 Billion — PSN by Nobody: 8:05am On Jul 29, 2021
habsydiamond:
Public hospitals in debt... Why is it everywhere when it as to do with fraud... Greed is the major cause of this. May God help us all.

Yeah, there is corruption, but the main reason has to do with

1.Cheap prices of servicies...which means most hospitals don't earn enough

2.People not paying bills on time or not paying at all.

3.Low subventions from government

4.A healthcare budget that isn't enough (We spend 3 billion dollars on health in this country annually. For comparison, Spain spends something like $100 billion annually). The budget is low because we don't have the tax to gdp ratio to fund it.

1 Like

Re: Teaching Hospitals’ Debt To Drug Manufacturers Hits ₦30 Billion — PSN by Jayboi(m): 8:07am On Jul 29, 2021
Inasmuch as I know the govt is owing them, I'm sure the 30 billion is exaggerated
Re: Teaching Hospitals’ Debt To Drug Manufacturers Hits ₦30 Billion — PSN by Ngasky(m): 8:08am On Jul 29, 2021
Corruption from the management of our hospitals.
On another note why are the pharmaceutical companies looking for forex to procure machine and equipments to produce the drugs? Does that mean they dont have the capacity in the first place and still they went and source for the funds from the government? 40 pharma companies? Who are these companies and what is their physical addresses and drug production type and capacity?
I dont think we have upto 10 standard pharmaceutical companies in Nigeria. So who are those mushroom companied trying to dupe the nation?
Our problems start with us as people

4 Likes

Re: Teaching Hospitals’ Debt To Drug Manufacturers Hits ₦30 Billion — PSN by WeNoGoDie(m): 8:11am On Jul 29, 2021
Coldie:

Are they even treating for free

Na wah! There must be serious fraud somewhere.

1 Like

Re: Teaching Hospitals’ Debt To Drug Manufacturers Hits ₦30 Billion — PSN by Enn214(m): 8:14am On Jul 29, 2021
cool

Naija
Re: Teaching Hospitals’ Debt To Drug Manufacturers Hits ₦30 Billion — PSN by Amorprincesa24: 8:19am On Jul 29, 2021
Apt
Beancounter94:
The elephant in the room is the fact that healthcare prices in Nigeria are kept very very low.

Some people think that our hospitals are expensive. Infact, go and find out how much a caesarean costs in the US, and how much the same proccedure costs in Nigeria and you would know that things are cheap.

Many Nigerian hospitals are broke. They thus use the cash from the drug revolving fund to pay for things not related to drugs. Add the corruption too, and you would see why things are so bad.

The solution is to either allow government hospitals run at a profit, or charge higher taxes. We only tax 30% of the taxable population, and our tax to gdp raito is 6.1%, and oil prices have not passed $100 since 2014.

2 Likes

Re: Teaching Hospitals’ Debt To Drug Manufacturers Hits ₦30 Billion — PSN by Coldie(m): 8:26am On Jul 29, 2021
WeNoGoDie:


Na wah! There must be serious fraud somewhere.
There must be is understanding, there is serious fraud going on

1 Like

Re: Teaching Hospitals’ Debt To Drug Manufacturers Hits ₦30 Billion — PSN by olowo1930: 8:27am On Jul 29, 2021
Beancounter94:
The elephant in the room is the fact that healthcare prices in Nigeria are kept very very low.

Some people think that our hospitals are expensive. Infact, go and find out how much a caesarean costs in the US, and how much the same proccedure costs in Nigeria and you would know that things are cheap.

Many Nigerian hospitals are broke. They thus use the cash from the drug revolving fund to pay for things not related to drugs. Add the corruption too, and you would see why things are so bad.

The solution is to either allow government hospitals run at a profit, or charge higher taxes. We only tax 30% of the taxable population, and our tax to gdp raito is 6.1%, and oil prices have not passed $100 since 2014.
sir am not in agreement with your quote, why must we borrow and incurs huge debt every day. Can't we get a greater benefit from govt ? All the taxes our three tires received per day,per transaction, per month,per year. Can't they use it for meaningful thing. In UK. You can't get any drugs except is recommended by a physician. But we can never have that structure in Nigeria. The debt should be off set by the people that commit it not spreading it to the masses

1 Like

Re: Teaching Hospitals’ Debt To Drug Manufacturers Hits ₦30 Billion — PSN by Olodo24: 8:32am On Jul 29, 2021
Have they not been receiving allocations?
Re: Teaching Hospitals’ Debt To Drug Manufacturers Hits ₦30 Billion — PSN by adioolayi(m): 8:35am On Jul 29, 2021
Wahala for marketers who keeps supplying these institutions!!!

Nigeria is broke...I understand it's difficult to ignore them, because of the sales volume they give...But, debt recovery is also hallmark of a good sales man...The best approach to this is to avoid these institutions for now..if not, they will wreck your organisation.

You cannot risk long credit outstanding days in a country where Naira is on a free fall... Manufacturers and supply should think twice.
Re: Teaching Hospitals’ Debt To Drug Manufacturers Hits ₦30 Billion — PSN by Nobody: 8:35am On Jul 29, 2021
olowo1930:
sir am not in agreement with your quote
No problem.
, why must we borrow and incurs huge debt every day. Can't we get a greater benefit from govt ? All the taxes our three tires received per day,per transaction, per month,per year. Can't they use it for meaningful thing

Well, considering that

1.We have a very low tax to gdp ratio of 6.1% (for comparison, South Africa and Ghana have theirs at 23%)

2.Tax only 30% of the taxable population (due to the fact that most people are working in the informal sector)

3.Oil has been below what we need it to be at sustenance level since 2014(some would argue since 2008 self)....

Nigeria is doing the best with the little we have, even with the massive looting going on.

. In UK. You can't get any drugs except is recommended by a physician. But we can never have that structure in Nigeria. The debt should be off set by the people that commit it not spreading it to the masses

1. In Nigeria, you cannot get most drugs without a physician's prescription too. (I tried to get some intravenous diazepam for a patient without a prescription from a pharmacy a few years ago..it was kind of an emergency. Pharmacist said no can do...bring a prescription..in Nigeria.). And in the UK, you can get painkillers like ibuprofen sans physcian's prescription

1 Like

Re: Teaching Hospitals’ Debt To Drug Manufacturers Hits ₦30 Billion — PSN by WeNoGoDie(m): 8:42am On Jul 29, 2021
Coldie:

There must be is understanding, there is serious fraud going on

N30 billion Naira fraud. No be small thing oh.
Re: Teaching Hospitals’ Debt To Drug Manufacturers Hits ₦30 Billion — PSN by FreeStuffsNG: 8:47am On Jul 29, 2021
Beancounter94:
The elephant in the room is the fact that healthcare prices in Nigeria are kept very very low.

Some people think that our hospitals are expensive. Infact, go and find out how much a caesarean costs in the US, and how much the same proccedure costs in Nigeria and you would know that things are cheap.

Many Nigerian hospitals are broke. They thus use the cash from the drug revolving fund to pay for things not related to drugs. Add the corruption too, and you would see why things are so bad.

The solution is to either allow government hospitals run at a profit, or charge higher taxes. We only tax 30% of the taxable population, and our tax to gdp raito is 6.1%, and oil prices have not passed $100 since 2014.
You seem to be making excuses for the thieves in the public health sector. Igbobi managed it so well that it realised a profit of N200m from the same DRF!
The problem is that these funds are not well managed and PSN should petition EFCC as well. This is glaring cases of theft and corruption leading to serious sabotage of the country. You take medicines without paying, sold it at small margin and instead of remitting the fund to the owner Pharmaceutical company, you stole both his money and the margin while causing more public health problems. The medicines were sold but the money stolen and the question is, should we allow the thieves to continue or go away? No sir. EFCC should move into this matter before it kills these companies and the already challenged public health care system

3 Likes

Re: Teaching Hospitals’ Debt To Drug Manufacturers Hits ₦30 Billion — PSN by Nobody: 8:53am On Jul 29, 2021
FreeStuffsNG:

You seem to be making excuses for the thieves in the public health sector. Igbobi managed it so well that it realised a profit of N200m from the same DRF!
The problem is that these funds are not well managed and psn should petition EFCC as well.

And you would notice that I mentioned corruption in my comment.

Plus our health budget is too low. And Igbobi is an orthopedic hospital,(orthopedics is just one subspecialty of surgery) not a larger and more specialized teaching hospital.(which may take on as many as several specialties, including surgery)

The corruption and sharp practices is a symptom, and also fuels the problem.
Re: Teaching Hospitals’ Debt To Drug Manufacturers Hits ₦30 Billion — PSN by FreeStuffsNG: 9:02am On Jul 29, 2021
Beancounter94:


And you would notice that I mentioned corruption in my comment.

Plus our health budget is too low. And Igbobi is an orthopedic hospital,(orthopedics is just one subspecialty of surgery) not a larger and more specialized teaching hospital.(which may take on as many as several specialties, including surgery)

The corruption and sharp practices is a symptom, and also fuels the problem.

Sir, this is not rocket science. Let me explain what PSN is saying once again. The Pharmas supply medications on return on sales (ROS) to the hospitals, These hospitals sell it at profit, receive the payments from the patients who pay for these medications the Pharmas supplied the hospitals, so where's the money? The patients paid for those drugs and the hospital earned profit from the sale. Where's the money? The money is traceable.

For most public hospitals, they have a phoney system where the hospital CMD creates a bank account to receive the payments even without the Pharmacy not a signatory to the account, they then steal and divert the funds they should remit to the Pharmas and steal the profit due to the hospital !

That's the criminal angle EFCC should investigate along with how the seed fund for the DRF vanished in the first place. This malfeasance and corruption is already leading to loss of lives because critically needed medications are no longer being supplied by the Pharmas because they don't have money to replace the previous supply they made that the return has been stolen or hidden in interest-yielding phoney bank accounts.

3 Likes

Re: Teaching Hospitals’ Debt To Drug Manufacturers Hits ₦30 Billion — PSN by Kubernetes: 9:24am On Jul 29, 2021
WeNoGoDie:
Are they giving the drugs for free??

The problem may be from the hospital administration of not remitting the funds to the drug companies.
No tertiary hospital gives drug for free. The drugs are gvn to patients upon presentation of cash receipt.
Re: Teaching Hospitals’ Debt To Drug Manufacturers Hits ₦30 Billion — PSN by slowice(m): 9:59am On Jul 29, 2021
They should getat with their silly talk... A whole 30b and they still supply them more drugs on credit? The corruption favours them all, the drug company inflate the prices to get more gains while the hospitals inflate supply quantities to get more money.

They fg should audits them now you ll see heads rolling all around

1 Like

Re: Teaching Hospitals’ Debt To Drug Manufacturers Hits ₦30 Billion — PSN by wallarwallar(m): 10:38am On Jul 29, 2021
I did not bother to read the long epistle but my question is where are the beneficiary of the drugs. l'm very sure no government hospital give free drug. Even buying drug at government hospitals with your money are always under stress and wahala. I'm not sure if dis country wud even change for good because it seems all institutions are corrupt and we are not backing down at all everybody just want to be rich not minding what the negative effects might be.

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