| Literature DB >> 28503310 |
Niranjan Konduri1, Megan Rauscher2, Shiou-Chu Judy Wang1, Tanya Malpica-Llanos1.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Medicines use related challenges such as inadequate adherence, high levels of antimicrobial resistance and preventable adverse drug reactions have underscored the need to incorporate pharmaceutical services to help achieve desired treatment outcomes, and protect patients from inappropriate use of medicines. This situation is further constrained by insufficient numbers of pharmaceutical personnel and inappropriate skill mix. Studies have addressed individual capacity building approaches of logistics, supply chain or disease specific interventions but few have documented those involving such pharmacy assistants/professionals, or health workers/professionals charged with improving access and provision of pharmaceutical services. We examined how different training modalities have been employed and adapted to meet country-specific context and needs by a global pharmaceutical systems strengthening program in collaboration with a country's Ministry of Health and local stakeholders.Entities:
Keywords: Capacity building; Human resources; In-service training; Pharmaceutical services; Pharmaceutical systems; Pre-service training
Year: 2017 PMID: 28503310 PMCID: PMC5422928 DOI: 10.1186/s40545-017-0104-z
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Pharm Policy Pract ISSN: 2052-3211
Fig. 1Number of pharmacist assistants graduating from the National Health Training Center, by year of graduation
Fig. 2Continuing Education and Continuing Professional Development Framework, including Roles of Different Stakeholders
Relevant Results (Namibia and DR Congo)
| As of December 2015 | Key Results | |
|---|---|---|
| Namibia | 41% increase in the number of certified pharmacy personnel | • B Pharm and PA competency framework developed |
| 97% of public health facilities are staffed with certified pharmacy personnel | ||
| DR Congo | 1103 persons trained in pharmaceutical management | • Pre-service competency framework developed with 5-year strategic plan |
| 2 health or allied health professional associations or councils receiving TA in pharmaceutical management education |
Number of Personnel Trained in Pharmaceutical Management, as of December 2015
| Country/portfolio | Number trained |
|---|---|
| Angola | 251 |
| Bangladesh | 15,594 |
| Burundi | 2890 |
| Cameroon | 741 |
| Dominican Republic | 2232 |
| DR Congo | 1103 |
| Ethiopia | 5110 |
| Guinea | 796 |
| Latin America and Caribbean Amazon Malaria Initiative | 554 |
| Lesotho | 438 |
| Mali | 1593 |
| Mozambique | 579 |
| Namibia | 501 |
| Neglected tropical diseases core portfolio | 35 |
| Philippines | 358 |
| South Africa | 1087 |
| South Sudan | 864 |
| Swaziland | 1092 |
| Tuberculosis core portfolio | 2695 |
| Turkmenistan | 22 |
| Ukraine | 280 |
| West Africa Regional | 120 |
| Total | 38,935 |
Relevant Results (Ukraine)
| By December 2015 | Milestones |
|---|---|
| 225,000 MDR-TB cases were in the e-TB Manager system | • TOT curriculum developed |
| More than 100 oblast officials reached over 1200 users in 26 oblasts | |
| Consistency between paper-based and electronically generated reports was about 99% |
Relevant Results (Mali)
| By December 2015 | Milestones |
|---|---|
| 1593 persons trained in pharmaceutical management | • Developed new LMIS that includes the community level |
Selected Results from the Pharmaceutical Leadership Development Program (South Africa) [85]
| Priority Areas | Province | Facility | Results |
|---|---|---|---|
| Waiting time | Western Cape | Kraaifontein Community Health Centre | Reduced average patient wait time at the pharmacy from 41 to 19 min over a 6 month period |
| Ensuring medicine accessibility | KwaZulu-Natal | Umzinto Primary Healthcare Clinic | Reduced the defaulter rate of patients collecting pre-dispensed chronic medicine from 28 to 23% |
| Eastern Cape | Midlands Hospital and nearby clinics | Developed referral system which facilitated delivery of chronic diseases medicines from Midlands Hospital to feeder clinics | |
| Improving medicine supply management | Eastern Cape | Cecilia Makiwane Hospital | Implemented a batch management system that cut the percentage of money wasted due to expired stock from 3.8% (as a percentage of expenditure) in April 2012 to 0.7% in June 2012, which is in keeping with international norms |
| KwaZulu-Natal | Multiple clinics | Reduced the quantity of expired stock from 3.4% to less than 0.5% of stock holding | |
| Ensuring compliance with standards | KwaZulu-Natal | Stanger, Montebello hospitals and Sundumbili CHC | Improved compliance with standard treatment guidelines for prescribing non-steroidal anti-inflammatory agents from 57 to 94%, 60 to 68%, and 37 to 67%, respectively |
| North West | 10 primary health care facilities | Increased compliance with national core standards from 33 to 77% by developing SOPs, distributing reference manuals, and building capacity in good pharmacy practice and medicine supply management | |
| Ensuring rational use of medicines | North West | Joe Morolong Memorial Hospital | Average number of patients initiated on isoniazid preventive therapy increased from 3 to 8 per month |
| North West | Four facilities in Bojanala District | Increased reporting of adverse drug events from 26 to 45% | |
| KwaZulu-Natal | Imbalenhle Community Health Centre | Reduced inappropriate prescriptions by 53% |
Fig. 3Feedback on training: results from Ethiopia (N = 153) and Bangladesh (N = 69)
Fig. 4Post-training factors that contributed to the results of the training in Bangladesh (N = 69) and Ethiopia (N = 153)
Reasons why training was cited as not helpful
| Reason provided by trainees surveyed | Bangladesh ( | Ethiopia ( |
|---|---|---|
| Training or capacity-building approach was not interesting | 3 | 5 |
| Training content was too challenging to understand and/or put into practice | 2 | 9 |
| Training content or technical area of the training did not correspond with the participants’ work | 3 | 3 |
| Appropriate environment was not in place to enable participants to use the knowledge gained during the training | 2 | 5 |
Fig. 5Top eight preferred learning methods, as chosen by survey participants in Bangladesh (N = 69) and Ethiopia (N = 153)