| Literature DB >> 28226302 |
Claudia Marcela Vargas-Peláez1, Luciano Soares2, Marina Raijche Mattozo Rover3, Carine Raquel Blatt4, Aukje Mantel-Teeuwisse5, Francisco Augusto Rossi Buenaventura6, Luis Guillermo Restrepo7, María Cristina Latorre8, José Julián López9, María Teresa Bürgin10, Consuelo Silva11, Silvana Nair Leite12, Farias Mareni Rocha13.
Abstract
Medicines are considered one of the main tools of western medicine to resolve health problems. Currently, medicines represent an important share of the countries' healthcare budget. In the Latin America region, access to essential medicines is still a challenge, although countries have established some measures in the last years in order to guarantee equitable access to medicines. A theoretical model is proposed for analysing the social, political, and economic factors that modulate the role of medicines as a health need and their influence on the accessibility and access to medicines. The model was built based on a narrative review about health needs, and followed the conceptual modelling methodology for theory-building. The theoretical model considers elements (stakeholders, policies) that modulate the perception towards medicines as a health need from two perspectives - health and market - at three levels: international, national and local levels. The perception towards medicines as a health need is described according to Bradshaw's categories: felt need, normative need, comparative need and expressed need. When those different categories applied to medicines coincide, the patients get access to the medicines they perceive as a need, but when the categories do not coincide, barriers to access to medicines are created. Our theoretical model, which holds a broader view about the access to medicines, emphasises how power structures, interests, interdependencies, values and principles of the stakeholders could influence the perception towards medicines as a health need and the access to medicines in Latin American countries.Entities:
Keywords: Access to medicines; Essential medicines; Health needs; Human needs; Theoretical framework
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28226302 DOI: 10.1016/j.socscimed.2017.02.015
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Soc Sci Med ISSN: 0277-9536 Impact factor: 4.634