| Literature DB >> 28804171 |
Pakoyo Fadhiru Kamba1, Munanura Edson Ireeta1, Sulah Balikuna1, Bruhan Kaggwa1.
Abstract
In some low- and middle-income countries, the national stores and public-sector health facilities contain large stocks of pharmaceuticals that are past their expiry dates. In low-income countries like Uganda, many such stockpiles are the result of donations. If not adequately monitored or regulated, expired pharmaceuticals may be repackaged and sold as counterfeits or be dumped without any thought of the potential environmental damage. The rates of pharmaceutical expiry in the supply chain need to be reduced and the disposal of expired pharmaceuticals needs to be made both timely and safe. Many low- and middle-income countries need to: (i) strengthen public systems for medicines' management, to improve inventory control and the reliability of procurement forecasts; (ii) reduce stress on central medical stores, through liberalization and reimbursement schemes; (iii) strengthen the regulation of drug donations; (iv) explore the salvage of officially expired pharmaceuticals, through re-analysis and possible shelf-life extension; (v) strengthen the enforcement of regulations on safe drug disposal; (vi) invest in an infrastructure for such disposal, perhaps based on ultra-high-temperature incinerators; and (vii) include user accountability for expired pharmaceuticals within the routine accountability regimes followed by the public health sector.Entities:
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Year: 2017 PMID: 28804171 PMCID: PMC5537748 DOI: 10.2471/BLT.16.186650
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Bull World Health Organ ISSN: 0042-9686 Impact factor: 9.408
Examples of drug donations to low- and middle-income countries that did not appear useful, 1992–1999
| Country | Problematic drug donation | Reference |
|---|---|---|
| Albania | Only 20% of donated drugs in 1999 were found useful | Bonn |
| Bosnia and Herzegovina | Between 1992 and 1996, up to 60% of the 27 800–34 800 tonnes of medical supplies donated to what is now Bosnia and Herzegovina were not needed, resulting in 17 000 tonnes of pharmaceutical waste | McGregor |
| Djibouti | In 1994, only 12 co-trimoxazole tablets were found useful out of a large consignment of medicines donated to Médecins Sans Frontières, by a French nongovernmental organization | van der Heide and Schouten |
| Georgia | In 1994, 20 tonnes of silver sulfadiazine ointment that was one year past its expiry date were given to an aid organization without notice and a large consignment of donated short-acting insulin arrived just 3 days before its expiry and, in 1995, there were 12 tonnes of unneeded drug donations – including 9 tonnes of expired drugs | Schouten |
| Honduras | In 1998, many of the drug donations received were expired or close to expiry | Bonn |
| Sudan | In 1990, large amounts of inappropriate drugs were received as donations | Bonn |
| The former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia | In 1999, more than 40% of drug donations were unneeded and about 30% arrived when expired or about to expire | Bonn |
WHO: World Health Organization.