Ghana to Host 3rd Biennial Scientific Conference on Medical Products Regulation

Black Star Square, Accra

Accra, November 24, 2017//-Ghana is to host the third Biennial Scientific Conference on Medical Products Regulation in Africa from 27-28th November, 2017 at the Alisa Hotel in Accra.

Organised by international stakeholders with support from the West African Health Organisation, (WAHO), NEPAD, the Government of Ghana, African Union Commission (AUC), the World Health Organization (WHO), National Medicines Regulatory Authorities (NMRAs), Regional Economic Communities (RECs), Regional Health Organizations (RHOs),  International Federation for Pharmaceutical Manufacturers (IFPMA) and Associations and Federation of African Pharmaceutical Manufacturers Associations (FAPMA), the meeting will bring together the key stakeholders including regulators, policymakers, academia, the scientific community, private sector and civil society from across Africa.

The theme for the conference is: ‘Sustaining the Momentum for Regulatory Harmonisation in Africa’. This theme will enable participants to contribute towards the future of regulation and harmonisation in Africa, which affects both industrial and regulatory aspects, as well as the aspirations of civil society and its wish to benefit from best practice, and best medicine.

The conference will also provide a platform for stakeholders to brainstorm on the role of ethical and regulatory approval of clinical trials of new medicines. With many neglected tropical diseases, mechanisms need to be found to encourage greater research and ethical clinical testing on all their products to find solutions for these diseases, but is a good thing that now a days many companies are dedicated to product testing specifically, and there are options which can be found online, you can learn more here about this.

Delegates are expected from across the continent, as well as from industry and international regulatory agencies, according to a statement issued by Hlazo Mkandawire of NEPAD and Jerry Sam of Penplusbytes respectively.

Significant strides have been made over the years to enhance and modernize the regulation of pharmaceutical manufacturing and product quality across the world.

However, the drug registration system in Africa remains complex and varied, and with each country invoking separate audit and assessment processes, it almost guarantees that Africans will be the last to benefit from new drugs launched onto the international market. Harmonisation of the processes for medicine registration is long overdue.

Under the African Medicines Regulatory Harmonization (AMRH) initiative, there are some ongoing pilot projects aimed at improving national registration processes and these will go a long way towards meeting the goal of regulatory harmonization and convergence.

Many countries deal with regulatory issues independently, which means that the manufacturers have to make a formal registration in every country, and each country’s regulatory agency will assess whether the drug is right for its market.

These assessments may include visits to the manufacturing country to determine whether medicines are produced using good manufacturing systems and processes. What is needed is a single agency, which can do all this work once (rather than 50+ times) and then allow applicants and individual countries to benefit from it.

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