| Literature DB >> 29219098 |
Bvudzai Priscilla Magadzire1, Bruno Marchal2, Tania Mathys3, Richard O Laing4,5, Kim Ward6.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Centralized dispensing of essential medicines is one of South Africa's strategies to address the shortage of pharmacists, reduce patients' waiting times and reduce over-crowding at public sector healthcare facilities. This article reports findings of an evaluation of the Chronic Dispensing Unit (CDU) in one province. The objectives of this process evaluation were to: (1) compare what was planned versus the actual implementation and (2) establish the causal elements and contextual factors influencing implementation.Entities:
Keywords: Access to medicines; Centralized dispensing; Chronic Dispensing Unit; Medicines supply chain, theory-driven evaluation; South Africa; Western Cape
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2017 PMID: 29219098 PMCID: PMC5773901 DOI: 10.1186/s12913-017-2640-2
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Health Serv Res ISSN: 1472-6963 Impact factor: 2.655
Study participants
| Stakeholder group | Description and relevance to this study | Number of participants |
|---|---|---|
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| Responsible for organizing resources and coordinating implementation activities. | 8 |
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| Responsible for implementation at the frontline. | 32 |
Planned vs. actual activities and results
| Dimension | Planned activities and expected results | Actual activities and results |
|---|---|---|
| Patient selection | Selection of stable patients | Selection of patients who are not clinically stable because strict guideline application proved difficult within a context of: |
| Prescription quality | Clinicians issue prescriptions in accordance with legislation and policies | Overall rate of prescription rejection was an estimated 4–5% (of approximately 14,000 prescriptions each day). Errors were attributed to: |
| Pharmacists check all new prescriptions for compliance with legislation and policies | Pharmacists did not always check prescriptions before submitting them to the CDU because they felt it was time consuming. | |
| Dispensing and dispatch of patient medicine parcels (PMP) | Prescription verification, dispensing and delivery to the facility three working days before the collection date | Except when a prescription had been rejected for reasons earlier stated, PMP were delivered on time. |
| Medicines distribution | Pharmacist checks all parcels and fulfils the prescription requirements using pharmacy stock in case of stock-outs. Distribution of PMP follows at the facility or in the community. | Pharmacists did not check all parcels – the process was deemed to be time consuming and consequently to reduce the benefits of the intervention. Pharmacists recommended the use of transparent instead of opaque packaging and inclusion of prescriptions in the PMP to facilitate easier checking. That said, when there were stock-outs, the facility was provided with a list of outstanding prescriptions needs and these were fulfilled unless the facility was also stocked-out. |
| Health system causes for non-collected medicines | Patients are given 5 working days should they miss their scheduled appointment. Thereafter, PMP are returned to the CDU within 10 working days from the date of collection or the medication is absorbed into the facility’s pharmacy. | Challenges resulted from: |
| Management of non-collected medicines | If a patient misses 2 appointments consecutively, the prescription is stopped and the patient must consult the clinician for counselling and assessment. | Some pharmacy staff returned non-collected PMP while others opened PMP that were not collected. The reasons given for the latter were: |
| Monitoring and Evaluation | Data on all activities | Mid-level managers found it difficult to comprehend routine data and in some cases doubted its accuracy. Statistics on collection of PMP were still under reported because healthcare practitioners considered reporting a time-consuming task and feared negative views. |
Essential health system ‘software’ elements
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