| Literature DB >> 28830500 |
Abhishek Sharma1,2, Shiva Raj Mishra3, Warren A Kaplan2.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Nepal was struck by devastating earthquakes in April-May 2015, followed by the India-Nepal border blockade later that year.Entities:
Keywords: Access to medicines; Border blockade; Health diplomacy; India; Nepal; Trade and health
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28830500 PMCID: PMC5568715 DOI: 10.1186/s12992-017-0282-0
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Global Health ISSN: 1744-8603 Impact factor: 4.185
Net price residuals (in 2015 USD) for health commodities during India-Nepal border blockade
| Commodity (1) | Comtrade commodity number (2) | No. Standardized Residuals >2 during Sept 2015-March 2016 (3) | Net Residual (Constant 2015 U.S. Dollars) Sept 2015-March 2016 (4) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Medicaments, therapeutic, prophylactic use, in dosage form | 3004 | 3 | + 22.31E + 06 |
| Penicillins and streptomycins derivatives, in dosage form | 300410 | 0 | + 2.15E + 06 |
| Antibiotics “not elsewhere specified”, in dosage form | 300420 | 0 | + 0.803E + 06 |
| Insulin, in dosage form | 300431 | 0 | - 121,690 |
| Medical dressings | 300510 | 0 | - 47,452 |
Fig. 1Net weight (kilograms: solid line) and unit price (USD/g: dotted line) of all retail medicines imported from India into Nepal before and after the border blockade (vertical line)
Fig. 2Net weight (kilograms: solid line) and unit price (USD/g: dotted line) of insulin products imported from India into Nepal before and after the border blockade (vertical line)
Fig. 3Net weight (kilograms: solid line) and unit price (USD/g: dotted line) of medical dressings imported from India into Nepal before and after the border blockade (vertical line)
| RESEARCH IN CONTEXT |
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| In the 1990s, critics began to argue that economic sanctions indiscriminately and unjustly targets poor and innocent elements of society. We searched PubMed, Web of Science and GoogleScholar without date restrictions for English language sources on February 4th and 6th, 2017, using several search combinations with the terms ‘Trade’, ‘border’, ‘blockade’, ‘embargo’, ‘medicines’, ‘access to medicines’, and ‘access to health commodities’ to find articles on primary assessment of impact of border blockade on access to healthcare commodities. Previous research has explored the negative impact of long-lasting (i.e., multi-year) economic sanctions on the public’s health in Cuba, Haiti, Iraq, Yugoslavia, Iran, Syria and the occupied Palestinian territory. However this evidence is primarily focused on the impact of such sanctions on human behavior and psychology as well as morbidity and mortality, and relies on case studies, media reports and other qualitative forms of information. Furthermore, several articles encompass the debates focused on aligning trade policies with human rights and improving access to essential health technologies, but have been limited primarily to the global intellectual property rights regime. When the literature focuses on specific medicines, it emphasizes medicine shortages and increased retail prices within the impacted country, with no comparisons to the pre-sanction period. |
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| Using comprehensive import-export data (2011–2016), we studied the relatively short-lived trade sanction of several months (September 2015 to early-February 2016) and focused on the time course of medicine trade before and after the sanctions. Although Nepal relies upon India as its largest trading partner, we found that the unit price of a “basket” of all retail medicines increased as the blockade took effect and trade volume decreased. For most of the blockade, the increase in unit price was far in excess of what the pre-sanction trade relationship between price and volume would have predicted. While one could also have predicted that such a short-term (5 month) trade blockade imposed by India in late 2015 would also have little impact on medicine prices and, by implication, medicine access, the amount of extra money Nepal paid for this diminished supply of medicines, even over this relatively short time period, indeed had significant opportunity costs. Nonetheless, for some medicines, e.g., insulin, various antibiotics, there was little obvious impact of the trade blockade on unit price. One might have predicted that Nepali earthquakes of April–May 2015 would impact quantities and prices of medicines exported into Nepal from its largest traded partner India, but that was not the case. |
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| Besides media and health advocacy organizations often document the health-related experiences of local populations during trade disruptions, there is little empirical evidence on the impact of trade disruptions on access to health commodities. Trade policies cannot be separated from population health, and governments and health professionals must facilitate appropriate and effective policy coherence between the two. This study demonstrates what it means for one country to be, in effect, dependent on a single exporter. In principle, nations will engender public health risk if they are not regularly importing biomedical commodities from other nations worldwide and are most vulnerable if they have no or limited local production. |