New partnerships aim to fix Africa's broken medical supply chains

Africa is grappling with a severe medical supply crisis, with fragmented procurement systems and high costs leading to stock shortages and the spread of counterfeit drugs. However, a new wave of alliances — including nonprofits, social enterprises, and logistics firms — is emerging to bridge these gaps.

At a recent health summit in Nairobi, experts identified inefficient procurement structures as a key driver, inflating the cost of medicines and leaving health care systems vulnerable.

“Access to lifesaving health care and medicine is not just a challenge to discuss, but it is a problem to solve,” said Emmanuel Akpakwu, CEO of Axmed, an organization helping low- and middle-income countries access affordable, high-quality medicines. “Patients struggle to gain access to medicines and healthcare not because medicines do not exist or the solutions are unknown, but because our systems are fragmented.”

This article is free to read - just register or sign in

Access news, newsletters, events and more.

Join us