Deficient supplies of drugs for life threatening diseases in an African community
Open Access
- 15 June 2007
- journal article
- Published by Springer Nature in BMC Health Services Research
- Vol. 7 (1) , 86
- https://doi.org/10.1186/1472-6963-7-86
Abstract
Background: In Malawi essential drugs are provided free of charge to patients at all public health facilities in order to ensure equitable access to health care. The country thereby spends about 30% of the national health budget on drugs. In order to investigate the level of drug shortages and eventually find the reasons for the drugs shortages in Malawi, we studied the management of the drug supplies for common and life threatening diseases such as pneumonia and malaria in a random selection of health centres. Methods: In July and August 2005 we visited eight out of a total of 37 health centres chosen at random in the Lilongwe District, Malawi. We recorded the logistics of eight essential and widely used drugs which according to the treatment guidelines should be available at all health centres. Five drugs are used regularly to treat pneumonia and three others to treat acute malaria. Out-of-stock situations in the course of one year were recorded retrospectively. We compared the quantity of each drug recorded on the Stock Cards with the actual stock of the drug on the shelves at the time of audit. We reviewed 8,968 Patient Records containing information on type and amount of drugs prescribed during one month. Results: On average, drugs for treating pneumonia were out of stock for six months during one year of observation (median value 167 days); anti-malarial drugs were lacking for periods ranging from 42 to138 days. The cross-sectional audit was even more negative, but here too the situation was more positive for anti-malarial drugs. The main reason for the shortage of drugs was insufficient deliveries from the Regional Medical Store. Benzyl penicillin was in shortest supply (4% received). The median value for non-availability was 240 days in the course of a year. The supply was better for anti-malarial drugs, except for quinine injections (9 %). Only 66 % of Stock Card records of quantities received were reflected in Patient Records showing quantities dispensed. Conclusion: We conclude that for the eight index drugs the levels of supply are unacceptable. The main reason for the observed shortage of drugs at the health centres was insufficient deliveries from the Regional Medical Store. A difference between the information recorded on the Stock Cards at the health centres and that recorded in the Patient Records may have contributed to the overall poor drug supply situation. In order to ensure equitable access to life saving drugs, logistics in general should be put in order before specific disease management programmes are initiated.Keywords
This publication has 11 references indexed in Scilit:
- Healthcare reform involving the introduction of user fees and drug revolving funds: influence on health workers’ behavior in southeast NigeriaHealth Policy, 2005
- Pilfering for survival: how health workers use access to drugs as a coping strategyHuman Resources for Health, 2004
- The weakest link: competence and prestige as constraints to referral by isolated nurses in rural NigerHuman Resources for Health, 2004
- Ensuring access to essential medicines in the developing countries: a framework for actionClinical Pharmacology & Therapeutics, 2003
- The availability of drugs: what does it mean in Ugandan primary careHealth Policy, 2003
- Twenty-five years of essential medicines.2002
- User fees and drugs: what did the health reforms in Zambia achieve?Health Policy and Planning, 2000
- Intervention Research in Rational Use of Drugs: A ReviewHealth Policy and Planning, 1999
- Supply and use of essential drugs in sub-Saharan Africa: Some issues and possible solutionsSocial Science & Medicine, 1991
- Self-care and the informal sale of drugs in South CameroonSocial Science & Medicine, 1987