Dr Mansukh Mandaviya Launches National Lists of Essential Medicines
(NLEM) 2022
·
384
Drugs included in NLEM 2022; 34 New Drugs Added
·
“Under
Hon. PM’s vision of Sabko Dawai, Sasti Dawai NLEM another step towards
affordable healthcare with reduced Out-of-Pocket-Expenditure (OOPE)”
·
It
will further ensure Efficacy, Safety, Quality, Affordability and Accessibility
of Medicines
·
Dr
Bharati Pravin Pawar Urges Stakeholders to Create Awareness on Antimicrobial
Resistance
“Union Health
Ministry is taking various steps under vision of Hon. Prime Minister Narendra
Modi ji towards Sabko Dawai, Sasti Dawai. In this direction, National List of
Essential Medicines (NLEM) plays an important role in ensuring accessibility of
affordable quality medicines at all levels of healthcare. This will give boost
to cost-effective, quality medicines and contribute towards reduction in Out of
Pocket Expenditure on healthcare for the citizens.” This was stated by Dr
Mansukh Mandaviya, Union Minister for Health and Family Welfare as he launched
National Lists of Essential Medicines (NLEM) 2022, on 13 September 2022.
384 drugs have been
included in this list with addition of 34 drugs, while 26 from the previous
list have been dropped. The medicines have been categorized into 27 therapeutic
categories.
Speaking on the
occasion, Union Health Minister stated that the “essential medicines” are those
that satisfy the priority health care needs, based on efficacy, safety, quality
and total cost of the treatment. The primary purpose of NLEM is to promote
rational use of medicines considering the three important aspects i.e., cost,
safety and efficacy. It also helps in optimum utilization of healthcare resources
and budget; drug procurement policies, health insurance; improving prescribing
habits; medical education and training for UG/PG; and drafting pharmaceutical
policies. In NLEM, the medicines are categorized based on level of healthcare
system as- P- Primary; S- Secondary and T- Tertiary.
He elaborated that
the concept is based on the premise that a limited list of carefully selected
medicines will improve quality of health care, provide cost-effective health
care and better management of medicines. He added that the NLEM is a dynamic
document and is revised on a regular basis considering the changing public
health priorities as well as advancement in pharmaceutical knowledge. The
National List of Essential Medicines was first formulated in 1996 and it was
revised thrice earlier in 2003, 2011, and 2015.
“The independent
Standing National Committee on Medicines (SNCM) was constituted by Union Health
Ministry in 2018. The Committee after detailed consultation with experts and
stakeholders has revised the NLEM, 2015 and submitted its report on NLEM, 2022
to the Ministry of Health & Family Welfare. The Government of India has
accepted the recommendations of the Committee and adopted the list”, he stated.
He also noted that the process of creation of NLEM depends on the feedback
backed by scientific sources from stakeholders and inclusion/exclusion
principle followed.
While congratulating
the stakeholders for the revised NLEM which takes the country forward in the
direction of provisioning of affordable healthcare to its citizens, Dr Bharati
Pravin Pawar, Union Minister of State stressed on enhancing awareness regarding
Antimicrobial Resistance (AMR) which “is emerging as a big challenge for our
scientists and community and we need to create awareness in the society about
AMR”.
Revision of NLEM 2022
has been done after constant consultation with stakeholders spanning from
academia, industrialists and public policy experts etc., and crucial documents
like WHO EML 2021.
The following
criteria are followed for inclusion in NLEM:
1.
be useful in diseases which is a public
health problem in India
2.
be licensed/ approved Drugs Controller
General (India) (DCGI)
3.
have proven efficacy and safety profile based
on scientific evidence
4.
be comparatively cost effective
5.
be aligned with the current treatment
guidelines
6.
recommended under National Health Programs of
India. (e.g. Ivermectin part of Accelerated Plan for Elimination of Lymphatic
Filariasis 2018).
7.
when more than one medicine are available
from the same therapeutic class, one prototype/ medically best suited medicine
of that class to be included.
8.
price of total treatment is considered and
not the unit price of a medicine
9.
fixed dose combinations are usually not
included
10. vaccines
as and when are included in Universal Immunization Program (e.g. Rotavirus
vaccine).
NLEM 2022 can be
accessed here:
https://cdsco.gov.in/opencms/opencms/system/modules/CDSCO.WEB/elements/download_file_division.jsp?num_id=OTAxMQ==
Rajesh Bhushan, Union
Health Secretary, Dr. V. G. Somani, DCGI, Dr Mandeep Kumar Bhandari, Joint
Secretary, Dr Y K Gupta, Vice Chairman SNCM and other senior officials of the
Ministry were present at the launch.