| Literature DB >> 25164588 |
Anita K Wagner1, Jonathan D Quick, Dennis Ross-Degnan.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Medicines are a major driver of quality, safety, equity, and cost of care in low and middle-income country health systems. Universal health coverage implementers must explicitly address appropriate use of medicines to realize the health benefits of medicines, avoid wasting scarce resources, and sustain the financial viability of universal health coverage schemes. DISCUSSION: Medicines are major contributors to the health and well-being of individuals and populations when used appropriately, and they waste resources and endanger health when used unnecessarily or incorrectly. Stakeholders need to balance inherently competing objectives in the pharmaceutical sector. Emerging and expanding UHC schemes provide potential levers to balance competing system objectives.To use these levers, sustainable universal coverage programs will require a) information systems that can track medicines utilization, expenditures, and quality of medicines use; b) routine monitoring of indicators of medicines availability, access, affordability, and use; c) policies and programs that facilitate appropriate medicines use by prescribers, dispensers, and patients; d) transparency in setting priorities for medicines coverage under resource constraints; and e) a system perspective to engage diverse actors.As they operationalize paths toward universal health coverage and include targeted medicines coverage policies and programs, systems can build on, and innovate, pharmaceutical policy frameworks and management tools from different countries' settings.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2014 PMID: 25164588 PMCID: PMC4158132 DOI: 10.1186/1472-6963-14-357
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Health Serv Res ISSN: 1472-6963 Impact factor: 2.655
Figure 1Competing objectives in the medicines sector and selected approaches to balance them.
Examples of indicators to monitor medicines policies in UHC systems
| Domain and question | Sample indicator | Possible data source |
|---|---|---|
|
| ||
| Does local industry produce a reliable supply of needed high-quality, low-cost generics? | Volume and percent of locally-produced generics that meet quality and price standards | Industry data |
| Quality test records | ||
| Do risk-sharing strategies between pharmaceutical companies and payers to provide access to selected high-cost medicines for selected patients achieve intended outcomes, and what are unintended ones? | Percent patients with a target conditions who receive an innovative product that results in expected health benefits | Industry risk sharing program data |
|
| ||
| Do people receive the medicines they need? | Percentage of people with a diagnosed chronic illness who currently have an appropriate medicine available to treat their condition | Household surveys |
| How does access to appropriate medicines differ between groups of patients? | Percentage of patients with a given diagnosis who receive a recommended first-line drug in different subgroups (categorized by insurance scheme, geographic location, age group, gender, race and ethnicity, socioeconomic status) | Prescriptions or dispensing records at health facilities |
| Insurance claims records | ||
|
| ||
| Are we overusing medicines? | Percentage of primary care patients who receive an antibiotic | Prescriptions or dispensing records at health facilities |
| Insurance claims records | ||
| Are we underusing medicines? | Percentage of patients with a chronic condition (e.g., diabetes, hypertension) who receive at least one of the recommended treatments | Prescriptions or dispensing records at health facilities |
| Insurance claims records | ||
|
| ||
| How much does the insurance scheme/health system spend on medicines? | Medicines expenditures per member per month (overall, by member category, by specific diagnoses, by specific therapeutic categories) | Insurance reimbursement records |
| What is the financial burden associated with medicines spending in households? | Proportion of patients who indicate that they forego medicines treatment or spend less on other basic needs due to medicines costs | Household surveys |