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Primary Health Care 3

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Title: Primary Health Care 3


1
Primary Health Care (3)
  • Health facilities, essential drugs and
    laboratories
  • HServ/Epi 531
  • Fall 2007
  • Steve Gloyd

2
Declaration of Alma-Ata (1978)
  • Health is a fundamental human right requires
    inter-sectoral action
  • Existing gross health inequality unacceptable
  • Improved health and peace require economic and
    social development based on a new international
    economic order (NIEO)
  • Governments have responsibility to provide
    adequate health and social measures for health
  • Primary health care is appropriate, accessible,
    acceptable, affordable and requires community
    participation (Specifies components of PHC)
  • Governments need the will to formulate and
    implement PHC policies
  • International cooperation is necessary
  • HFA 2000 requires redirecting resources from
    military to social expenditures (including health)

Source WHO, 1978
3
Essential components of Primary Health Care
  • Health education
  • Environmental sanitation, especially food and
    water
  • The employment of community or village health
    workers
  • Maternal and child health programs, including
    immunization and family planning
  • Prevention of local endemic diseases
  • Appropriate treatment of common diseases and
    injuries
  • Provision of essential drugs
  • Promotion of nutrition
  • Traditional medicine

Source Alma-Ata Conference documents.
4
Condition of health facilities
  • Worse and better than we think (but dynamic and
    changing)
  • Maintenance is key

5
Mixed varieties of hospitals in Pakistan
6
Philippines clinic franchises
7
Many faces of Health Facilities in Mozambique
8
Drugs Primary Health Care
  • 1978, Alma ata conference of WHO/UNICEF
  • essential drugs concept adopted as a component of
    primary health care
  • WHO prepared its first EDL, 224 drugs and vaccines

9
Why drugs are important
  • Drugs save lives and improve health
  • Drugs promote trust and participation in health
    services
  • Drugs are costly
  • Drugs are different from other consumer products
  • Substantive improvements are possible

10
Historical perspective
  • 1897 aspirin
  • 1941 penicillin
  • 1943 chloroquine (malaria)
  • 1944 streptomycin (tuberculosis)
  • 1950s oral contraceptives, anti-diabetics, drugs
    for mental illness, vaccines

11
Access to drugs
  • 30-35 lack access worldwide
  • in poor Africa and Asia, 50 lack access
  • More accessibility in cities
  • Shortages in the supply of the right drugs
  • 50-90 drugs in poor countries are paid for out
    of pocket
  • burden falls heavily on poor

12
Individual private spending on drugs (as a of
total drug spending)
(WHO,97)
13
Cost to Governments
  • 25-50 of national health budgets for drugs
  • many ineffective and expensive drugs in use
  • expensive drugs used

14
Pharmaceutical spending as of total health
spending is greatest in developing countries
Developed countries (7-20)
Transitional countries (15-30)
Developing countries (24-66)
WHO, 97
15
Inappropriate utilization of drugs in poor
countries
  • 75 of antibiotics prescribed inappropriately
  • 50 of patients worldwide take medications
    incorrectly
  • 90 of consumers can only buy 3 days supply or
    less for antibiotics Modified package inserts and
    recommendations
  • Drugs with serious side effects (Clioquinol,
    chloramphenicol)
  • Polypharmacy toxicity antimicrobial resistance

16
Poor quality of drugs
  • Unregulated manufacturers (Italy, local)
  • 10-20 of sampled drugs fail quality control
  • Poor storage (light, cold chain)
  • Expired drugs
  • Street manufacture
  • Counterfeit drugs
  • 75B by 2010

17
Street sales cures STI
18
Proliferation of brands little regulation
Number of brands in country
19
Aggressive marketing of drugs
20
Drug Promotion
  • Inadequate education to providers, public
  • Misleading and dubious claims (Squibb-UK cough
    tonic promoted as a brain tonic in India)
  • Conflicting drug indications (Antihistamine
    cyproheptadine sold as an appetite suppressant in
    India and Pakistan)
  • Advertising practices (package inserts) Free
    drug samples (get providers patients hooked)
  • Gifts (pens, books, conferences)
  • Pressure tactics (bribes, threats)

21
The rise of the Essential drugs concept
  • Why not concentrate first on a basic list of
    reliable drugs to meet the most vital needs
  • Norway - before WWII
  • Papua New Guinea - in 1950s
  • Sri Lanka - in 1959
  • Cuba - in 1963
  • WHO by 1970s

22
WHO essential drug program
  • 1970-75 Concerns voiced by NGOs, Churches, WHO
  • Halfdan Mahler (1975) those drugs considered to
    be of utmost importance and hence basic,
    indispensable, and necessary for the health needs
    of the population should be available at all
    times, in the proper dosage forms to all segments
    of society
  • 1975 WHO Expert advisory committee
  • 1977 First Model Essential Drug List (EDL)
  • 208 drugs
  • 1997 306 drugs (166 new, 68 deleted)
  • 2007 340 drugs
  • 136/192 countries have adopted EDLs

23
Additional action Program on Essential Drugs
(1977)
  • National drug policies
  • Health economics and drug financing
  • Drug management and supply strategies
  • Rational use of drugs
  • Regulation and quality assurance capacity

24
National Drug Policy
  • Policy and Legal framework (NDP, Legislation,
    Production policy, Regulation)
  • Drug management Strategy (selection, procurement,
    distribution, Rational use)
  • Support systems (organization management,
    financing sustainability, Information
    resources, human resources)

25
Rural Hospital in MozambiquePhysician in
Pharmacy
26
Rural Hospital Pharmacy - Mozambique
27
Rural Health Center - Mozambique
28
Rural health post with one nurse
29
Botswana Health Center pharmacy
30
Health post pharmacy in Sudan
31
Pakistan Essential drugs for ER
32
Pakistan public hospital
33
Bamako Initiative "Women and Childrens's health
through funding and management of esssential
Drugs at the community level
  • Mandate drug charges to recover expenditures
  • 180m for 1989-91
  • start-up costs for basic equip
  • short term provision of basic drugs
  • support costs (supervision, training, social
    mobilization)
  • first years proceeds as seed capital
  • second and successive years as replenishment
  • Community health committees planned for 75 of pop

34
WTO and multilateral trade agreements (mandatory
compliance)
  • Trade Related Intellectual Property (TRIPs)
  • Patent protection harmonized to 20 yrs
  • Alternatives
  • Compulsory licensing
  • a government can license a manufacturer to
    produce a patented product without the agreement
    of the patent holder - as long as the patent
    holder receives substantial compensation
  • Parallel importing
  • A government can purchase brand name drugs from a
    third party in another country, rather than from
    the manufacturer (prices vary in different
    countries)

35
Drug regulation status in selected countries
(WHO, 98)
36
Differences in Amoxil, by country
(Consumer project on technology)
37
Laboratory Capacity
  • Quality varies tremendously at all levels
  • Maintenance
  • Reagent stockouts
  • Qualified Personnel
  • Quality control systems

38
Varied conditions
39
Quality control is possible - Mozambique
40
Donations everywhere
Rural Cote dIvoire
Rural Mozambique
41
Chem 20
CD4
but no reagents
42
Medical equipment in Rawalpindi, Pakistan
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