Information School, University of Washington, Seattle, Washington, USA.
International Training and Education Center for Health-Malawi, Lilongwe, Malawi.
J Glob Health. 2022 Aug 1;12:04063. doi: 10.7189/jogh.12.04063.
Access to effective mental health services in low- and- middle income countries (LMICs) is limited, leading to a substantial global treatment gap. Amitriptyline, an anti-depressant, and diazepam, an anxiolytic drug, are classified as essential medications by the World Health Organization (WHO). They are the only psychotropic medications whose availability in health facilities is documented as part of Service Provision Assessment surveys. Our objective was to characterize the availability of these medicines in seven countries.
We pooled nationally representative data from Service Provision Assessment surveys of health facilities conducted in Bangladesh, Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC), Haiti, Malawi, Nepal, Senegal, and Tanzania, from 2012 to 2018. We estimated the distribution and determinants of facility-level amitriptyline and diazepam availability in each country.
We analysed data from 7958 health facilities. An estimated 8.2% of facilities had amitriptyline and 46.1% had diazepam on the day of assessment. There was significant heterogeneity in both amitriptyline and diazepam availability across countries and within countries across facility characteristics. Multivariable models indicated that hospitals, faith-based and private-for-profit facilities, facilities with more staff, and facilities with more technological resources were more likely to have each medicine, relative to primary care facilities, public sector facilities, facilities with fewer staff, and facilities with fewer technological resources, respectively.
Our results indicate limited availability of amitriptyline in health facilities in these seven LMICs. Diazepam is much more commonly available than amitriptyline. Efforts to narrow the global treatment gap for mental health - and especially to integrate mental health services into primary care in LMICs - will be limited without the availability of essential medicines like amitriptyline. Efforts to expand purchasing, distribution, and capacity-building in the appropriate use of essential mental health medicines in LMICs are warranted.
在中低收入国家(LMICs),获得有效的心理健康服务受到限制,导致全球存在巨大的治疗缺口。阿米替林是一种抗抑郁药,地西泮是一种抗焦虑药物,它们被世界卫生组织(WHO)列为基本药物。它们是唯一两种被记录在案的精神药物,可在卫生机构中获得,这是服务提供情况评估调查的一部分。我们的目标是描述这两种药物在七个国家的供应情况。
我们汇集了 2012 年至 2018 年期间在孟加拉国、刚果民主共和国(DRC)、海地、马拉维、尼泊尔、塞内加尔和坦桑尼亚进行的服务提供情况评估调查的全国代表性数据。我们估计了每个国家的医疗机构中阿米替林和地西泮的供应分布及其决定因素。
我们分析了来自 7958 个卫生机构的数据。据估计,8.2%的机构在评估当天有阿米替林,46.1%的机构有地西泮。各国之间以及各国内部的阿米替林和地西泮供应情况存在显著差异,与初级保健机构、公共部门机构、员工较少的机构和技术资源较少的机构相比,医院、信仰为基础的和私营盈利性机构、员工较多的机构以及技术资源较多的机构更有可能拥有这两种药物。
我们的结果表明,这七个 LMICs 的卫生机构中,阿米替林的供应有限。地西泮的供应比阿米替林普遍得多。如果没有像阿米替林这样的基本药物的供应,缩小全球心理健康治疗差距的努力——特别是将心理健康服务纳入 LMICs 的初级保健服务——将受到限制。有必要在 LMICs 扩大基本精神卫生药物的采购、分配和能力建设,以促进其合理使用。