The federal government, alongside other stakeholders in the health sector, on Monday in Abuja, inaugurated the National Electronic Pharmacy Policy and Strategic Implementation Plan to further transform the health sector.
Speaking during the event, health minister Ali Pate said the policy would regulate the production and sale of pharmaceuticals and allow Nigerians access to quality-assured medicines.
Mr Pate said it was geared towards modernising healthcare delivery and allowing Nigerians access to affordable medicine, no matter where they live.
According to the minister, though the rise of digital platforms has transformed nearly every sector of the nationโs economy, the pharmaceutical space has remained largely fragmented with limited oversight of online medicine sales.
He said that the free-hand access in the pharmaceutical sector had created dangerous gaps, where substandard and falsified medicines, unlicensed vendors, and misinformation thrived.
Mr Pate said that the platform would promote greater accountability for all actors in the pharmaceutical value chain, adding that the policy is a product of extensive collaboration.
The registrar/CEO of the Pharmacy Council of Nigeria, Ibrahim-Babashehu Ahmed, said the policy would provide strategic direction for regulation, especially for the PCN, being the implementing agency.
โWe have developed the regulation to guide this particular endeavour. The regulation was approved by the Coordinating Minister of Health and endorsed by the Minister of Justice,โ he said.
Munir Elelu, the director and team lead for the Pharmaceutical Society of Nigeria Foundation, lauded the project, describing it as good innovation for Nigeria.
He said that the project would be cut across for primary healthcare centre services and family planning services at communities and underserved entities in the country.
David Adeyemi, CEO/founder of Pharmachain Technologies, who was part of the team that drafted the policy, commended the team for producing it.
He identified the lack of implementation as a major setback to most policies in Nigeria, but assured that the NEPP would not be different.
(NAN)






































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