| Literature DB >> 27933178 |
N Athuraliya1, E J Walkom2, S Dharmaratne3, J Robertson2.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: There is substantial evidence of poor dispensing practices with inadequate packaging and labelling of medicines, and limited advice on their usage in low and middle-income countries (LMICs). We examined the labelling and packaging of medicines identified during a survey of 1322 households in six regions of Sri Lanka between 2010 and 2013 conducted using the World Health Organization (WHO) methodology for household surveys. We compared medicines obtained from public and private sources and asked interviewees if they understood how to take the medicines.Entities:
Keywords: Dispensing; Labelling; Low-middle income countries; Medicines; Packaging; Pharmacy practice
Year: 2016 PMID: 27933178 PMCID: PMC5123401 DOI: 10.1186/s40545-016-0091-5
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Pharm Policy Pract ISSN: 2052-3211
Household characteristics and medicines by surveyed district
| Ampara | Colombo | Kandy | Monaragala | Polonnaruwa | Rathnapura | Total | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Households surveyed ( | 216 | 213 | 210 | 216 | 255 | 212 | 1322 |
| Persons per household (mean, range) | 4.3 (1–9) | 4.3 (1–8) | 4.4 (1–9) | 4.1 (1–9) | 4.1 (1–8) | 4.2 (1–9) | 4.2 (1–9) |
| Western medicines ( | 765 | 1074 | 980 | 989 | 847 | 1101 | 5756 |
| Western medicines per household (mean, range) | 3.5 (0–14) | 5.0 (0–15) | 4.7 (0–15) | 4.6 (0–15) | 3.3 (0–15) | 5.2 (0–14) | 4.4 (0–15) |
| Traditional medicines per household (mean, range) | 0.8 (0–5) | 0.9 (0–5) | 0.5 (0–5) | 1.3 (0–7) | 0.7 (0–9) | 0.8 (0–4) | 0.8 (0–9) |
Adequacy of packaging and labelling of western medicines issued by public and private facilities and by district
| Surveyed districts in Sri Lanka ( | |||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Ampara | Colombo | Kandy | Monaragala | Polonnaruwa | Rathnapura | Total | |
| Medicines obtained from Public facilities | |||||||
| Total medicines | 453 | 284 | 336 | 439 | 478 | 425 | 2415 |
| Adequate Label | 106 (23.4) | 118 (41.5) | 68 (20.2) | 100 (22.8) | 152 (31.8) | 117 (27.5) | 661 (27.4) |
| Adequate Packaging | 320 (70.6) | 213 (75.0) | 234 (69.6) | 322 (73.3) | 359 (75.4) | 325 (76.5) | 1773 (73.5) |
| Both Adequate | 106 (23.4) | 109 (38.4) | 64 (19.0) | 97 (22.1) | 134 (28.0) | 115 (27.1) | 625 (25.9) |
| Medicines obtained from Private facilities | |||||||
| Total medicines | 232 | 687 | 549 | 473 | 287 | 590 | 2818 |
| Adequate Label | 128 (55.2) | 440 (64.0) | 288 (52.5) | 229 (48.4) | 138 (41.8) | 247 (41.9) | 1470 (52.5) |
| Adequate Packaging | 217 (93.5) | 655 (95.3) | 492 (89.6) | 412 (87.1) | 251 (87.5) | 444 (75.3) | 2471 (87.7) |
| Both Adequate | 127 (54.7) | 438 (63.8) | 266 (48.5) | 219 (46.3) | 127 (44.3) | 234 (39.7) | 1411 (50.1) |
Public = public hospital, health centre or dispensary; Private = private health care provider or pharmacy
Fig. 1Example of medicines sourced from private facilities
Fig. 2Example of medicines sourced from public facilities
Fig. 3Example of unsatisfactory packaging using paper to wrap medicines