Pharmacy premises licensing policy formulation: experience from Ghana
Loading...
Date
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
Health Research Policy and Systems
Abstract
Background: Licences to operate pharmacy premises are issued by statutory regulatory bodies. The Health Institutions
and Facilities Act (Act 829) and Health Professions Regulatory Bodies Act (Act 857) regulate pharmacy premises
and the business of supplying restricted medicines by retail, respectively, and this could create a potential regulatory
overlap for pharmacy practice in Ghana. We theorise that the potential overlap of regulation duties stems from how
law-makers framed issues and narratives during the formulation of these Acts.
Objective: To describe the policy actors involved, framing of narratives and decision-making processes relating to
pharmacy premises licensing policy formulation.
Methods: A qualitative study was conducted and data gathered through interviewing eight key informants and
reviewing Hansards, reports, bills, memoranda and Acts 829 and 857. Data were analysed to map decision-making
venues, processes, actors and narratives.
Results: The Ministry of Health drafted the bills in July 2010 with the consensus of internal stakeholders. These were
interrogated by the Parliament Select Committee on Health (with legislative power) during separate periods, and
decisions made in Parliament to alter propositions of pharmacy premises regulations. Parliamentarians framed pharmacies
as health facilities and reassigned their regulation from the Pharmacy Council to a new agency. The Pharmacy
Council and the Pharmaceutical Society of Ghana could not participate in the decision-making processes in Parliament
to oppose these alterations. The laws’ contents rested with parliamentarians as they made decisions in venues
restricted to others. Legislative procedure limited participation, although non-legislative actors had some level of
influence on the initial content.
Conclusion: Implementation of these laws would have implications for policy and practice and therefore understanding
how the laws were framed and formulated is important for further reforms. We recommend additional
research to investigate the impact of the implementation of these Acts on pharmacy practice and business in Ghana
and the findings can serve as bargaining information for reforms.
Description
Research Article