ENTREPRENEURSHIP SCENARIO AFTER THE PHARMACY EDUCATION_Essay by Babita Sarangi
Introduction
Entrepreneurship
can be viewed as a creative and innovative response to the environment and an ability
to recognize, initiate and exploit an economic opportunity. An entrepreneur is
an innovator who introduces something new in an economy. Entrepreneurship is
doing things that are generally not done in the ordinary course of business.
Innovation may be in, introducing a new manufacturing process that has not yet
been tested and commercially exploited, introduction of a new product
with which the customers are not familiar or introducing a new quality in an
existing product, locating a new source of raw material or semi finished
product that was not exploited earlier, opening a new market, until now
unexploited, where the company products were not sold earlier, developing a new
combination of means of production. Innovation involves problem solving and an
entrepreneur is a problem solver. An entrepreneur does things in a new and a
better way. Innovation leads to the dynamics that governs the interaction
between science, industry, and society. Innovative organization wants must have
to prepare for renewing the offerings and its delivery process to its
stakeholders to survive in today’s globalised world.
Our
educational programs have worked diligently to promote critical thinking and
questioning, problem solving, and life-long learning throughout the curriculum.
An entrepreneurial spirit can be thought to include elements such as
creativity, uniqueness, adaptability, risk taking, developing potential, and
business savvy, and ultimately can be self-destructive, if not realized and
managed. As such, the word “entrepreneur” has had many definitions ranging from
negative connotations such as pursuing business opportunities with or without
regard for other resources and individuals for personal gain, to positive
connotations such as being a trailblazer and leader, envisioning and creating
new opportunities for their generation and beyond. Without intellectual
curiosity and an entrepreneurial spirit, many of the technologies and
approaches considered commonplace today would not exist. One need only look as
far as cell phones and other electronic and computer devices, as well as
technologies used in patient care, to demonstrate how intellectual curiosity and
an entrepreneurial spirit have changed contemporary life, health care, and wellness.
Current
Problems in Pharmacy field and need of Pharma
entrepreneurs
There has been a tremendous increase
in the number of Pharmacy colleges in India, and hence the number of Pharmacy
graduates is increasing year by year. The pharmaceutical industry is either
reluctant to hire fresher or employ graduates at a very low salary scale and
the scenario is not so different for M.Pharm graduates. The Ph.D. degree has also become a joke in few universities. The research and development activity in the Indian
pharmaceutical industry still needs a lot of support in terms of funding. The
pharmacy education in India is suffering from serious problems and the core
streams like Community Pharmacy and Hospital Pharmacy have been neglected too
much.
Recently The Hindu also reported about
this issue Pharm.D graduates take to the Streets. Hence, the pharmacy graduates are getting disheartened and
frustrated.
Due to surplus availability of
pharma manpower, it will be beneficial and appropriate if young pharmacy
graduates seek out to exploit their full potential by starting their own
ventures and thus becoming job generators rather than job seekers. Moreover the
salaries being paid to pharmacy graduates are also not attractive and are not
on par with other vocations. Hence this necessitates the pharmacy colleges in
the country to take necessary steps to promote entrepreneurial learning
programmes in the pharmacy curriculum so that the pharmacy graduate coming out
from the colleges can become self reliant and inspire students towards self
employment in their early career. Hence the pharmacy colleges should keep their
attention on developing a syllabi which not only produces trained manpower for
pharmaceutical industry but also produces self reliant entrepreneurial pharmacy
graduates which accelerates the process of economic development and growth of
the country.
Pharmacist as entrepreneurs
A Pharma technocrat through entrepreneurship can bring a
radical change that can meet the challenges of emerging changes due to
liberalization and globalization. Fast changing Pharma industrial scenario,
growing obsolescence in pharmacy curriculum stresses the need for Pharma
entrepreneurship among the graduates. Pharmacy graduates have a strong bent of
mind in science and are capable of maximizing their skills if given the right
training. Entrepreneurship development among the pharmacy graduates will be an
effective mechanism of renaissance in technology innovations and industrial
development of a nation.
Pharmacists
need to view themselves as entrepreneurs and examine their individual careers
as startup companies. Those who do so will be prepared to succeed in the future
delivery model of health care and achieve professional satisfaction. Entrepreneurs are usually viewed as individuals
who take substantial risks to go out and start new companies, but most
pharmacists go to work for entities that are already established, such as a
community pharmacy or hospital. Such positions are generally considered safe,
as they promise a steady paycheck and continued employment. For that reason,
entrepreneurship is not commonly listed among a pharmacist’s skill sets. A Nobel Peace
Prize winner, Muhammad Yunus, quoted that “all human beings were self-employed
at the start of human history, but that entrepreneurship was suppressed as civilized
societies were formed”.
Entrepreneurship
is generally associated with the establishment of community pharmacy and
business management. However, entrepreneurship and its associated skills are
key to the development of a range of health services in community and hospital
sectors. Medication therapy management programs allow pharmacists to counsel
patients on drugs, while interactive voice recognition tools remind patients to
order or pick up prescriptions. Innovation is a key component of the
pharmaceutical industry and biomedical research. Every drug or medicinal product
developed and released to the market stems from an intellectual curiosity that
requires a proof of concept spanning years. Pharmacists and health care
professionals have a responsibility for the health and well-being of the
population, the so-called “social capital.” Therefore, pharmacists may be
defined as “social entrepreneurs” rather than the standard “business
entrepreneur,” for whom financial profit is key to successful enterprise. Entrepreneurs
have an outward vision in order to recognize fully the opportunity that
confronts them and look forward in order to plan its growth and future
prospects. Followings are the key traits that successful Pharma entrepreneurs
share:
Ø Pharma entrepreneurs
draw inspiration from their unique experiences.
Ø Pharma entrepreneurs
surround themselves with like-minded individuals.
Ø Pharma entrepreneurs use
technology to reach more patients in new ways.
Ø Pharma entrepreneurs
strive to advance the practice of pharmacy through their unique skillsets.
Ø Pharma entrepreneurs are
adaptive to change.
Ø Pharma entrepreneurs view
taking action to achieve their dreams as an exciting challenge.
Ø Pharma entrepreneurs
don’t listen to naysayers.
Ø Pharma entrepreneurs are
proactive in helping others and building support systems.
Ø Pharma entrepreneurs
aren’t afraid to adjust to market demands.
Ø Pharma entrepreneurs know
that innovation takes courage.
Few themes for
entrepreneurship after pharmacy education include:
1. Healthcare Industry
2. New drug
molecule / Active Pharmaceutical Ingredients (API) / New Chemical Entity (NCE)
3.
Manufacturing and Production of new formulations
4.
Production of Pharmaceuticlas, R&D
5. Contract
Research Organizations (CROs)
6. E-Pharmacy in India
1. Healthcare Industry
Entrepreneurial strategies to lower
costs and improve outcomes, such as telehealth applications and retail clinics
have recently emerged and may have the ability to lower costs and improve
outcomes in healthcare industry. Technology has facilitated patient
self-management at home and remote provider consultations. Development of
retail clinics and use of community health workers has expanded access to care.
In
the early twentieth century, several factors led to a consolidation of
healthcare delivery in the modern hospital. Advancements in medical technology
had made medical care much more complex and expensive, such that only large
institutions could afford to own and operate the new diagnostic and
life-sustaining equipment. In addition, professional round-the-clock nursing
care had demonstrable value and was available to most people only in a hospital
setting. At the same time, the practice of medicine was largely dependent upon
the intuition of a limited number of well-trained physicians and most clinical
outcomes were the result of their trial-and-error experimentation. Optimizing
good outcomes necessitated employing and training many specialists within the
same institution, and hospitals became the sole source of solutions to complex
medical problems. In fact, this pattern of consolidated expertise reflects the
early stages of many industries, as it represents the optimum way to maximize use
of costly and scarce resources when production outcomes remain largely
uncertain. However, as hospitals’ capabilities and functions have expanded over
time, they have been slow to spin off more routine work to new institutions of
care, a process that would typically lower per unit costs. Nevertheless, an
increasing amount of clinical care has been offloaded to less costly providers
working in decentralized venues. The trend toward outpatient care in ambulatory
settings has existed for decades, but a more recent example is the rapid
expansion of retail clinics staffed by pharmacists, at least in states that
allow pharmacists to provide care without direct physician supervision.
Advances in telehealth and home monitoring have further shifted care into patients’
homes, and select patient groups, such as type 1 diabetics, have already
assumed much of the routine, day-to-day management of their diseases.
2. New drug molecule / New Chemical
Entity (NCE)
India became a
hub for drug discovery collaborations in the late-1990s when global
pharmaceutical and biotechnology companies started outsourcing non-IP-sensitive
chemistry such as chemical libraries, intermediates and reference compounds. Even
though Western companies are looking increasingly for added value beyond cheap
labor, cost arbitrage together with the availability of synthetic chemistry
expertise, generics development and manufacturing business had largely been the
drivers to a large extent. The service offerings expanded beyond chemistry into
biology and pharmacology and a number of deals gradually evolved into
IP-generating collaborations with Indian inventors. In addition to a
growing network of smaller companies, this led to the rise of several large
contract research companies.
The
launch of biotechnology and startup companies with the aim to generate IP and
licensing revenues by discovering new drugs and by partnering these for development
is a more recent addition to the country’s pharmaceutical environment. This is
due to the significantly higher risk involved, which some companies compensate
in part by generating a revenue stream from offering, in addition to discovery
collaborations, a range of discovery and development services to Indian and
global companies.
It
was identified that total 28 major Indian pharmaceutical companies and 14
biotech and startup companies that have reported proprietary NCE R&D with
preclinical or clinical development compounds between 1994 and mid-2016. India
is however making progress in putting in place an ecosystem which is more
conducive to biotechnology entrepreneurship through a series of grant schemes
to foster innovation and bio-incubators which provide space, access to
scientific equipment, connections to industry and mentorship for IP management
to startup companies.
3. Manufacturing and Production of
new formulations
Indian
Pharma sector has registered 1.5 times higher growth rate than the overall GDP
growth of the country. Even as contract manufacturing of pharmaceuticals products
has provided ample opportunity for small and medium enterprises to attain high
growth however the sector remains a distant dream for fresh entrepreneurs.
Costly machinery, stringent regulatory norms and price controls are seen as
major deterrent for new entrepreneurs from venturing into pharmaceuticals
business including contract manufacturing, which contributes about 50 per cent
to the country’s domestic drug business worth Rs. 77,000
crore. According to industry insiders, contract manufacturing in the country is
growing at the rate of 20 per cent per annum.
According
to industry experts, government support is required to make contract
manufacturing lucrative for entrepreneurs and boost exports from India. Last
year, India exported Pharma products including formulations and Active Pharmaceutical
Ingredients (API) worth Rs. 90,000 crore.
India exports Pharma products to about 210 countries with 28 per cent going to
the US, 19 per cent to Europe and 19 per cent to Africa.
S
V Veerra Mani president, Indian Drug Manufacturers’ Association (IDMA) at the
inauguration of fifth edition of “Pharma India 2014” at Mahatma Mandir in
Gandhinagar said that “This is an
industry, which is highly regulated with highly controlled prices. Also, it
calls for zero defects with stringent regulatory requirements. So, even if we
have seen new investments taking place in the sector, no new company has been
launched.
4. Production of Pharmaceuticlas, R&D
Producing
pharmaceuticals is a complex process that requires a reliable, high quality
supply of raw materials, technical expertise and a stable supply of
electricity, gas and other utilities, plus sufficient human resource capacity
with Ph.D.level scientists and expertise in pharmaceutical process and
regulation. Pharmaceutical plants are capital intensive and take many years to
develop and tend to be located in countries with good infrastructure, reliable
utilities and access to technical expertise. Indeed, there already appears to
be enough capacity to produce all needed active ingredients as well as to
finish bulk formulations sourced from global suppliers. Thus, it has been
argued that increase in production can be accomplished within the present
capacity of the global industry. Certainly, the vast majority of the
manufacturing cost is in the primary manufacture of active ingredients and the
opportunity for smaller local manufacturers to save cost is limited. The
distinctions brought out earlier between local production as industrial policy
and as a stimulator of pharmaceutical “access” are relevant. The fact that a
developing country with manufacturing facilities is able to finish off bulk
active ingredients sourced from developed or other countries at high costs may
have no impact whatever on patient access to needed medicines.
India's
pharmaceutical industry is one of the most highly regulated industries in the
country. Price controls have a strong effect on profitability in the industry.
Before 2005, India had no product patent protection but this posed only a
short-term threat to foreign investment in India's drug market. The sheer size
and growth of India's domestic pharmaceutical industry is making it
increasingly difficult for the government to regulate prices for every single
firm. The market structure of the Indian pharmaceutical industry is skewed with
a small number of large firms and many smaller pharmaceutical companies. The
large private sector includes domestic manufacturers, foreign controlled companies
and smaller private firms. The Indian foreign controlled companies import most
of their bulk drug requirements and produce formulations, their focus being the
domestic market. Pharmaceutical policy in India is perceived as industrial
policy, not health policy. Since 1970, domestic firms have increased in number
and since 1999, about 8-10 of these have developed sufficient in house R&D
capacity to be able to develop new drug molecules as well as produce bulk
drugs. Indeed, some of these large Indian companies have become multinationals
themselves. However, the vast majorities of private manufacturers are
small-scale and have problematic quality assurance systems and procedures. The
success of the Indian pharmaceutical sector has come mainly from the larger
Indian corporations. Smaller firms have limited capability for brand building
or for developing distribution networks and will tend to contract with larger
firms or collaborate with universities or research labs to remain viable. In
terms of health policy, there is considerable variability in the quality and
pricing of drugs throughout India and these differences are due primarily to
differences in quality of training and infrastructure.
5. Contract
Research Organizations (CROs)
Contract
research organizations (CROs) provide clinical trial and other
research support services for the pharmaceutical, biotechnology, medical
device industries and also serve government institutions, foundations, and
universities. In the changing economy, pharmaceutical companies are
increasingly looking to outsource critical functions, including manufacturing
and research. More and more of the major corporations are using CROs to lead
clinical trials and develop new medications. CRO is a service organization that
provides support to the pharmaceutical industry and offers a wide range of
"outsourced" pharmaceutical research services to aid in R&D
process and is thus an essential tool for undertaking clinical trials in the
present scenario when high stakes are involved in the drug discovery process.
This industry also offers a safe option of investment as the industry is
largely recession-proof, with a significant upscale growth. Presently India
occupies a very small pie of the global market share in the Clinical Trials
Industry but it reached at 5% of global clinical trials by 2012. The global CRO
industry valued $18 bn in 2008 and the market annual growth rate was 14%
between 2009 and 2013. Top multinational pharmaceuticals companies are
venturing into the Indian business, in collaboration with the Indian Drug
Companies. According to a recent study by Mckinsey & Company, the Indian
Clinical Research Industry attracted $1.5 bn of revenue from US and EU by 2010.
Such an increase in outsourcing from the western countries has led the global Pharma
companies and Indian entrepreneurs to set up Contract Research Organizations
(CROs) in India. To bring this into realization and fulfill the market demand,
while simultaneously aiding in improving the country's economical standards and
market position, joint and well-coordinated efforts on part of the government,
industry, and working professionals are needed in terms of regulatory affairs,
audits, transparency in work affairs, garnering patient confidence and pharmacovigilance.
6. E-Pharmacy in India
According to
Transparency Market Research, the global e-Pharmacy market was around US $29.3
Billion in 2014 and is estimated to grow at a CAGR of 17.7% to reach a
valuation of US $128 Billion by 2023. The global e-Pharmacy market is currently
led by North America and Europe. However, the major opportunity for the global
e-Pharmacy market lies in the vast unmet needs of the developing Asia Pacific
market. According to a Boston Consulting Group report released in April 2016,
the e-Pharmacy market in China was around US $1.1 Billion in 2014 and is on an
upturn.
E-Pharmacy is at
its nascent stage in India, but like other categories, it has the potential to
be a very large industry segment in the near future. Factors driving the demand
for e-Pharmacy in India include rising number of people with unmet medical
needs due to large population and increasing penetration of internet in both
urban and rural India. With the rapidly changing consumer behavior in India,
there is a huge demand for accessing a wide range of products at the click of a
button, and at competitive prices. It is expected that the e-Pharmacy model
could account for 5-15% of the total Pharma sales in India, largely by
enhancing adherence and access to the medicines for a lot of under-served
population. The
Government of India has set up approximately 250,000 common services centers (CSC) across the country which
plays a pivotal role in delivering various e-health services, like
telemedicine, e-Diagnostics, e-Pharmacy, especially to the rural population.
An
e-Pharmacy aligns very well with the national development objectives and has
clear and tangible benefits to the consumers as well as the industry.
Meanwhile, it has also been observed that growth of e-Commerce and retail are
complimentary and reinforce each other. By leveraging the technology in a smart
way and under stringent regulatory control, the e-Pharmacy has a scope of
adding immense value to the existing retail industry in India.
Conclusion
Pharmacy
education will enrich the entrepreneurial scope and skill. It will enhance the capacity
of graduates to provide more innovative pharmaceutical services to society
either as owners of pharmaceutical businesses or as managers in such operations.
The pharmacy education requires a solid educational foundation to promote
critical and lateral thinking, problem solving including study skills and
team-working skills, leadership skills, effective communication, and the
analysis and use of numerical data. For the benefit of student learning, a
deeper appreciation of what is required to be an effective entrepreneur is
needed. Development of entrepreneurial
spirit and positive attitude towards entrepreneurship should be an important component
of such an educational process. Entrepreneurship
has more scope for innovative ideas, problem solving attitude and creativity. The
need of the hour is to encourage more entrepreneurship in pharmaceutical sector
so that the drugs and pharmaceuticals can be produced at affordable prices. Every
pharmacy college should launch an entrepreneurship development cell with a view
to encourage students to consider self employment as a career option, provide
training in entrepreneurship through modular courses and to teach the relevance
of management. This cell will introduce the concept of entrepreneurship in
curricula of pharmacy. It also facilitates self employment and entrepreneurship
development through formal and non-formal programmes. A faculty development
programme can be conducted by the cell to develop professionals in
entrepreneurship development so that they can act as resource persons in
guiding and motivating the students to take up entrepreneurship as their
career. This faculty development programmes will provide a platform from which
formal and informal programmes can be conducted to support skill development
activities particularly catering to specific areas of requirement to identify
and provide solutions for the problems of small business management and
entrepreneurs to provide training and retraining of entrepreneurs through
variety of programmes and to train trainers, counselors and motivators involved
in the development of pharmaceutical entrepreneurship.
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