| Literature DB >> 27814729 |
Alisa M Jenny1, Meng Li2, Elizabeth Ashbourne3, Myron Aldrink4, Christine Funk5, Andy Stergachis6,2.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Medical donation programs for drugs, other medical products, training and other supportive services can improve access to essential medicines in low- and middle-income countries (LMICs) and provide emergency and disaster relief. The scope and extent to which medical donation programs evaluate their impact on recipients and health systems is not well documented.Entities:
Keywords: Evaluation; Impact; Low- and Middle-Income Countries; Medical Donations; Monitoring; Neglected Tropical Diseases
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27814729 PMCID: PMC5096304 DOI: 10.1186/s12992-016-0210-8
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Global Health ISSN: 1744-8603 Impact factor: 4.185
Fig. 1Framework for Measuring Impact of Medical Donations
Donation program characteristics by whether an impact evaluation was reported
| Total | |
|---|---|
| Year program was initiated | |
| 2005 and before | 15 (44 %) |
| 2006–2010 | 7 (21 %) |
| 2011–2015 | 10 (29 %) |
| Don’t know | 2 (7 %) |
| Reasons considered a major donation program | |
| Addresses a major unmet need | 26 (76 %) |
| Has the most units donated | 18 (53 %) |
| Of strategic importance to the organization | 18 (53 %) |
| One of the longest | 14 (41 %) |
| One of the most costly | 8 (24 %) |
| Has the most employees work on it | 7 (21 %) |
| Othera | 5 (15 %) |
| Types of events targeted by donation | |
| Ongoing unmet needs in low-resource settings | 23 (68 %) |
| Strengthening or rebuilding healthcare infrastructures | 14 (41 %) |
| Natural disaster | 9 (26 %) |
| Epidemics | 8 (24 %) |
| Complex emergencies, conflict, war | 6 (18 %) |
| Displaced populations, refugee support | 6 (18 %) |
| Famine, food insecurity | 2 (7 %) |
| Otherb | 7 (21 %) |
| Types of products donated | |
| Medical devices, medical equipment | 23 (68 %) |
| Anti-infectives | 14 (41 %) |
| Medical supplies | 13 (38 %) |
| Analgesics | 11 (32 %) |
| Nutritional | 10 (29 %) |
| Respiratory | 9 (26 %) |
| Skin | 9 (26 %) |
| Gastrointestinal | 7 (21 %) |
| Vaccines | 7 (21 %) |
| Oncology medications | 6 (18 %) |
| Oral health | 5 (15 %) |
| Diabetes medications | 3 (9 %) |
| Vector control | 2 (6 %) |
| Otherc | 4 (12 %) |
| Estimated fair market value (FMV) of donationsd | |
| ≥$50,000,000 | 9 (26 %) |
| $25,000,000–$49,999,999 | 6 (18 %) |
| $5,000,000–$24,999,999 | 5 (15 %) |
| $1,000,000–$4,999,999 | 7 (21 %) |
| <$1,000,000 | 3 (9 %) |
| Don’t know | 4 (12 %) |
aOther reasons that were mentioned in the responses included combining equipment and clinical training; maintaining customer relations; strengthening healthcare system; historical involvement with the disease; and involving a reliable, capacity building partner
bOther types of events included continuing education; support to frontline health workers; rare diseases; and breast cancer
cOther types of donated products included anesthetics; medicines for cardiovascular diseases; medicines for mental illnesses; ophthalmic medicines; and enzyme replacement therapies for rare diseases
dSome organizations used internal formulas or list prices to calculate the FMVs for donated products
Training, monitoring, and impact evaluations
| Frequency | |
|---|---|
| Training conducted as part of the donation program | |
| Yes | 17 (50 %) |
| Program monitoring conducted | |
| Yes | 26 (76 %) |
| Phase when monitoring plan was developed | |
| Inception of the program | 13 (38 %) |
| During the program | 11 (32 %) |
| After products were donated or distributed | 12 (35 %) |
| Impact evaluations conducted | |
| Yes | 10 (29 %) |
| Phase when impact evaluation was developed | |
| Inception of the program | 6 (18 %) |
| During the program | 6 (18 %) |
| After products were donated or distributed | 4 (12 %) |
| Cost of impact evaluation | |
| ≤$50,000 | 7 (21 %) |
| $50,001–$100,000 | 0 |
| $100,001–$250,000 | 2 (6 %) |
| $250,001–$500,000 | 0 |
| >$500,000 | 1 (3 %) |
| Reasons for not conducting impact evaluations | |
| Lack of technical staff to conduct impact evaluation | 9 (26 %) |
| Lack of funding | 6 (18 %) |
| Lack of donor interest | 2 (6 %) |
| Lack of CO or NGO interest | 3 (9 %) |