Availability of essential medicines in Ethiopia: an efficiency‐equity trade‐off?
- 12 October 2009
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Wiley in Tropical Medicine & International Health
- Vol. 14 (11) , 1394-1400
- https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1365-3156.2009.02383.x
Abstract
To investigate the availability and cost of essential medicines in health centres in rural Ethiopia, and to explore if the fee waiver system protects patients from having to pay for medicines. The study took place in five health centres in rural Ethiopia. Availability and price of selected key essential medicines was established in the budget and special pharmacy of the health centre, as well as private outlets. Information on availability and cost of prescribed drugs was obtained through patient exit-interviews. Availability based of essential drugs at facility level was 91% based on a list of selected drugs vs. 84% based on prescriptions filled. However, less than half the prescribed drugs were obtained from the budget pharmacy, and one in six patients was forced to purchase drugs in the private sector, where drugs are roughly twice as expensive. The waiver system did not safeguard against having to pay for medicines. A revolving drug fund system in Ethiopia seems to improve availability of medicines, and can improve affordability by protecting people from purchasing drugs in the private sector. However, it may result in a parallel system, whereby the poor cannot access drugs if these are not available in the budget pharmacy. Equity is a concern in the absence of an adequate mechanism to protect the poor from catastrophic health expenditure.Keywords
This publication has 5 references indexed in Scilit:
- The impact of user fees on health service utilization in low- and middle-income countries: how strong is the evidence?Bulletin of the World Health Organization, 2008
- Household catastrophic health expenditure: a multicountry analysisThe Lancet, 2003
- Assessment of the Free Health Care Provision System in Bahir Dar Area, northern EthiopiaEthiopian Journal of Health Development, 2002
- Are user charges efficiency‐ and equity‐enhancing? A critical review of economic literature with particular reference to experience from developing countriesJournal of International Development, 2001
- User fees plus quality equals improved access to health care: Results of a field experiment in CameroonSocial Science & Medicine, 1993