Mhazo Alison T, Maponga Charles C
Ministry of Health, Community Health Sciences Unit (CHSU), Private Bag 65, Area 3, Lilongwe, Malawi.
Department of Pharmacy and Pharmaceutical Sciences, Faculty of Medicine and Health Sciences, University of Zimbabwe, P. O. Box A178, Avondale, Zimbabwe.
Health Res Policy Syst. 2021 May 3;19(1):72. doi: 10.1186/s12961-021-00724-y.
Lack of access to essential medicines presents a significant threat to achieving universal health coverage (UHC) in sub-Saharan Africa. Although it is acknowledged that essential medicines policies do not rise and stay on the policy agenda solely through rational deliberation and consideration of technical merits, policy theory is rarely used to direct and guide analysis to inform future policy implementation. We used Kingdon's model to analyse agenda setting for essential medicines policy in sub-Saharan Africa during the formative phase of the primary healthcare (PHC) concept.
We retrospectively analysed 49 published articles and 11 policy documents. We used selected search terms in EMBASE and MEDLINE electronic databases to identify relevant published studies. Policy documents were obtained through hand searching of selected websites. We also reviewed the timeline of essential medicines policy milestones contained in the Flagship Report, Medicines in Health Systems: Advancing access, affordability and appropriate use, released by WHO in 2014. Kingdon's model was used as a lens to interpret the findings.
We found that unsustainable rise in drug expenditure, inequitable access to drugs and irrational use of drugs were considered as problems in the mid-1970s. As a policy response, the essential drugs concept was introduced. A window of opportunity presented when provision of essential drugs was identified as one of the eight components of PHC. During implementation, policy contradictions emerged as political and policy actors framed the problems and perceived the effectiveness of policy responses in a manner that was amenable to their own interests and objectives.
We found that effective implementation of an essential medicines policy under PHC was constrained by prioritization of trade over public health in the politics stream, inadequate systems thinking in the policy stream and promotion of economic-oriented reforms in both the politics and policy streams. These lessons from the PHC era could prove useful in improving the approach to contemporary UHC policies.
在撒哈拉以南非洲,获取基本药物的机会匮乏对实现全民健康覆盖构成了重大威胁。尽管人们认识到基本药物政策并非仅通过理性审议和对技术优点的考量就能登上并持续留在政策议程上,但政策理论很少被用于指导分析以告知未来的政策实施。我们运用金登模型分析了在初级卫生保健(PHC)概念形成阶段撒哈拉以南非洲基本药物政策的议程设定情况。
我们回顾性分析了49篇已发表文章和11份政策文件。我们在EMBASE和MEDLINE电子数据库中使用选定的检索词来识别相关的已发表研究。政策文件通过人工搜索选定网站获得。我们还查阅了世界卫生组织2014年发布的旗舰报告《卫生系统中的药物:促进获取、可承受性和合理使用》中包含的基本药物政策里程碑的时间线。金登模型被用作解读研究结果的视角。
我们发现,20世纪70年代中期,药品支出不可持续的增长、药品获取的不平等以及药品的不合理使用被视为问题。作为政策回应,引入了基本药物概念。当提供基本药物被确定为初级卫生保健的八个组成部分之一时,出现了一个机会之窗。在实施过程中,政策矛盾出现了,因为政治和政策行为体以符合自身利益和目标的方式界定问题并看待政策回应的有效性。
我们发现,在初级卫生保健下有效实施基本药物政策受到政治流中贸易优先于公共卫生、政策流中系统思维不足以及政治流和政策流中经济导向改革的推动等因素的制约。初级卫生保健时代的这些经验教训可能有助于改进当代全民健康覆盖政策的方法。