WHO Collaborating Centre for Governance, Accountability and Transparency in the Pharmaceutical Sector, University of Toronto, Toronto, Canada.
Faculty of Arts and Sciences, University of Toronto, Toronto, Canada.
Global Health. 2023 Sep 1;19(1):67. doi: 10.1186/s12992-023-00964-3.
To help promote the effective delivery of drug donations, the World Health Organization (WHO) developed the Guidelines for Medicine Donations. The need for revisions is timely given the large-scale influx of medicine donations since the start of the COVID-19 pandemic. This study analyses current policies of donors and recipients that are commensurate with the recommendations in the Guidelines and examines current practices, challenges, and revision suggestions.
A search for medicine donation policies of donors and recipients was conducted in May/June 2022 and repeated in January 2023. Potential donor countries were identified from the high-income countries on the United Nation's (UN) List of G20 Countries. Potential pharmaceutical company donors were selected from those with 2021 revenue of $30 billion or greater. Potential non-government organization donors came from the WHO list of non-governmental organizations (NGOs) and two other sources. Potential recipient countries were those on the UN List of Least Developed Countries. These four lists were supplemented with actual donors and recipients identified from the literature. All policies retrieved were screened to identify which of the 12 recommendations from the WHO Guidelines were incorporated. We identified 38 policies from 1 donor country, 6 brand-name multinational pharmaceutical companies, 6 NGOs and 25 recipient countries. Most policies incorporated all 12 recommendations. Twenty-five of the 38 policies were developed in 2010 or later. The majority of actual donors and recipients did not have policies that were publicly available. A rapid literature review for publications from 2010 onwards identified challenges in implementing the WHO Guidelines and suggested for revisions. Challenges included: (1) information management; (2) medication presentation; (3) influence from the pharmaceutical industry; (4) donation sustainability; and (5) the belief that donations are inherently good.
Our findings suggest that both donors and recipients could further align their policies with the existing Guidelines and both groups should be consulted on any revisions to ensure that their experiences are reflected and their needs are addressed. While the current WHO Guidelines for Medicine Donations are a solid base for medical humanitarian efforts, evidence points to the need for an update to meet current challenges.
为帮助促进药品捐赠的有效交付,世界卫生组织(世卫组织)制定了《药品捐赠准则》。鉴于 COVID-19 大流行开始以来药品捐赠大量涌入,现在及时修订这些准则非常必要。本研究分析了与准则建议相一致的当前捐赠方和受赠方政策,并审查了现行做法、挑战和修订建议。
2022 年 5 月/6 月和 2023 年 1 月对捐赠方和受赠方的药品捐赠政策进行了检索。从联合国(UN)二十国集团(G20)国家名单中的高收入国家中确定了潜在的捐赠方国家。从 2021 年营收 300 亿美元或以上的制药公司中选择了潜在的制药公司捐赠方。从世卫组织非政府组织(NGO)名单和其他两个来源中选择了潜在的非政府组织捐赠方。从联合国最不发达国家名单中确定了潜在的受赠方国家。这四个名单还补充了从文献中确定的实际捐赠方和受赠方。对检索到的所有政策进行了筛选,以确定世卫组织准则的 12 项建议中哪些被采纳。我们从 1 个捐赠方国家、6 家知名跨国制药公司、6 家非政府组织和 25 个受赠方国家确定了 38 项政策。大多数政策采纳了全部 12 项建议。38 项政策中有 25 项是在 2010 年或之后制定的。大多数实际捐赠方和受赠方没有公开的政策。对 2010 年以来出版物的快速文献综述确定了实施世卫组织准则面临的挑战,并提出了修订建议。这些挑战包括:(1)信息管理;(2)药品剂型;(3)制药业的影响;(4)捐赠可持续性;(5)认为捐赠本身是好事。
我们的研究结果表明,捐赠方和受赠方都可以进一步使各自的政策与现有准则保持一致,并且应该就任何修订内容征求这两个群体的意见,以确保反映其经验并满足其需求。虽然世卫组织现行《药品捐赠准则》为医疗人道主义努力提供了坚实基础,但有证据表明需要更新以应对当前挑战。