CASE STUDY: MARKET OPPORTUNITY ASSESSMENT FOR SELECT MEDICAL DEVICES IN ALGERIA

Overview: Medical Devices Market in Algeria

Valued at $120Mn in 2016, the Algerian medical devices market is being driven by opportunities through risk sharing models with the government sector as well as increased uptake in private sector hospitals. With a practically non-existent healthcare infrastructure in the northern parts, Algeria’s medical device market may depend upon specific opportunities at primary, secondary and tertiary levels:

-> Devolution of healthcare may allow additional impetus and autonomy for district level hospitals to purchase medical devices

-> Enactment of Special Economic Zones Act to aid manufacturing of low cost supplies and devices

-> Free maternity care in public hospitals leading to increased birthing at hospitals

“With 74% of its population in rural areas, and health insurance being extended only to 25% of the entire population, healthcare access is limited to a few key regions in Algeria”

Our Client: A major innovator of radiology, cardiology, and surgical products as well as healthcare IT solutions globally.
Challenge Statement: Our client was looking to understand the feasibility of launching low-cost medical devices in Algeria while also understanding the need for sophisticated high-end equipment. The sales strategy was to be devised based on the overall heat-map of current need-gaps, disease burden, capacity and skills as well as competitive landscape.
Research Design: The first step in understanding the addressable market was to create an in-depth segmentation of healthcare delivery facilities in the country. A detailed list of all hospitals in the country including primary, secondary and tertiary care hospitals was created. EMeRG conducted a deep dive into the installed base of medical devices across various hospital types utilizing various data sources including social media research. The various hospital departments and specialties were mapped at a hospital level to understand the current addressable market and the penetration of medical technologies across 90% of all Algerian hospitals.

Research Methodology: Secondary research utilizing regional sources of information was employed to understand the healthcare delivery structure in public and private facilities while assessing the distribution by tiers of care delivery. The public healthcare facilities in Algeria included 292 sites with in-patient facilities including referral hospitals, provincial hospitals, district hospitals, sub-district hospitals as well as about 766 health centers. The non-governmental sector

“Patients come to Nairobi all the way from Western Rift Valley and Moi. Most of them reach at advanced stages of diseases. Basic radiology services in district hospitals would help early diagnosis…”

Research Outcome: EMeRG’s research revealed significant need-gaps across various care areas in both public and private hospitals.  Significant need-gap in north-east Algeria especially for antenatal care (68% of women deliver without the assistance of a skilled medical professional and 25% receive no antenatal care at all). EMeRG utilized a detailed market opportunity model incorporating TAM/SAM while mapping it with current disease burden, availability of skilled workforce (among others) across major regions in Algeria. The findings helped internalize a detailed sales strategy while utilizing direct sales and channel partners across regions and customer segments identified in the heat map.