Access to essential medicines for diabetes care: availability, price, and affordability in central Ethiopia

IF 4 2区 医学 Q1 PUBLIC, ENVIRONMENTAL & OCCUPATIONAL HEALTH
Hachalu Dugasa Deressa, Habtamu Abuye, Alemayehu Adinew, Mohammed K. Ali, Tedla Kebede, Bruck Messele Habte
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Abstract

Background

Diabetes is a major global public health burden. Effective diabetes management is highly dependent on the availability of affordable and quality-assured essential medicines (EMs) which is a challenge especially in low-and-middle-income countries such as Ethiopia. This study aimed to assess the accessibility of EMs used for diabetes care in central Ethiopia’s public and private medicine outlets with respect to availability and affordability parameters.

Methods

A cross-sectional study was conducted in 60 selected public and private medicine outlets in central Ethiopia from January to February 2022 using the World Health Organization/Health Action International (WHO/HAI) standard tool to assess access to EMs. We included EMs that lower glucose, blood pressure, and cholesterol as these are all critical for diabetes care. Availability was determined as the percentage of surveyed outlets per sector in which the selected lowest-priced generic (LPG) and originator brand (OB) products were found. The number of days’ wages required by the lowest paid government worker (LPGW) to purchase a one month’s supply of medicines was used to measure affordability while median price was determined to assess patient price and price markup difference between public procurement and retail prices.

Results

Across all facilities, availability of LPG and OB medicines were 34.6% and 2.5% respectively. Only two glucose-lowering (glibenclamide 5 mg and metformin 500 mg) and two blood pressure-lowering medications (nifedipine 20 mg and hydrochlorothiazide 25 mg) surpassed the WHO’s target of 80% availability. The median price based on the least measurable unit of LPG diabetes EMs was 1.6 ETB (0.033 USD) in public and 4.65 ETB (0.095 USD) in private outlets. The cost of one month’s supply of diabetes EMs was equivalent to 0.3 to 3.1 days wages in public and 1.0 to 11.0 days wages in private outlets, respectively, for a typical LPGW. Thus, 58.8% and 84.6% of LPG diabetes EMs included in the price analysis were unaffordable in private and public outlets, respectively.

Conclusions

There are big gaps in availability and affordability of EMs used for diabetes in central Ethiopia. Policy makers should work to improve access to diabetes EMs. It is recommended to increase government attention to availing affordable EMs for diabetes care including at the primary healthcare levels which are more accessible to the majority of the population. Similar studies are also recommended to be conducted in different parts of Ethiopia.

Abstract Image

糖尿病护理基本药物的获取:埃塞俄比亚中部的可用性、价格和可负担性
背景糖尿病是全球主要的公共卫生负担。有效的糖尿病管理在很大程度上取决于能否获得价格合理、质量有保证的基本药物(EMs),这在埃塞俄比亚等中低收入国家尤其是一项挑战。本研究旨在评估埃塞俄比亚中部公立和私立药店用于糖尿病治疗的基本药物的可获得性,包括可获得性和可负担性参数。方法 采用世界卫生组织/国际健康行动组织(WHO/HAI)的标准工具,于2022年1月至2月在埃塞俄比亚中部选定的60家公立和私立医疗机构开展了一项横断面研究,以评估EMs的可及性。我们将降低血糖、血压和胆固醇的药物纳入评估范围,因为这些药物对糖尿病护理都至关重要。可用性是指在每个部门的调查网点中发现所选最低价非专利药(LPG)和原研品牌(OB)产品的百分比。用收入最低的政府工作人员(LPGW)购买一个月用量的药品所需的工资天数来衡量可负担性,同时确定价格中位数,以评估患者价格和政府采购价与零售价之间的加价差异。只有两种降糖药(格列本脲 5 毫克和二甲双胍 500 毫克)和两种降压药(硝苯地平 20 毫克和氢氯噻嗪 25 毫克)的供应率超过了世界卫生组织规定的 80% 的目标。根据液化石油气糖尿病少见病的最小计量单位计算,公共销售点的价格中位数为 1.6 埃提(0.033 美元),私营销售点的价格中位数为 4.65 埃提(0.095 美元)。对于一个典型的液化石油气工人来说,一个月的糖尿病 EMs 供应成本在公共商店分别相当于 0.3 至 3.1 天的工资,在私营商店相当于 1.0 至 11.0 天的工资。因此,价格分析中包括的 58.8%和 84.6%的液化石油气糖尿病 EMs 在私营和公共销售点分别是买不起的。政策制定者应努力改善糖尿病用药的可及性。建议政府更加关注提供负担得起的糖尿病治疗用电子显微镜,包括在大多数人更容易获得的初级医疗保健层面。还建议在埃塞俄比亚不同地区开展类似研究。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
Global Health Research and Policy
Global Health Research and Policy Social Sciences-Health (social science)
CiteScore
12.00
自引率
1.10%
发文量
43
审稿时长
5 weeks
期刊介绍: Global Health Research and Policy, an open-access, multidisciplinary journal, publishes research on various aspects of global health, addressing topics like health equity, health systems and policy, social determinants of health, disease burden, population health, and other urgent global health issues. It serves as a forum for high-quality research focused on regional and global health improvement, emphasizing solutions for health equity.
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