Department of Geography Education, University of Education, Winneba, Ghana.
Department of Population and Health, University of Cape Coast Faculty of Social Sciences, Cape Coast, Ghana.
BMJ Glob Health. 2023 Sep;6(Suppl 3). doi: 10.1136/bmjgh-2023-013426.
Global health efforts such as malarial control require efficient pharmaceutical supply chains to ensure effective delivery of quality-assured medicines to those who need them. However, very little is currently known about decision-making processes within antimalarial supply chains and potential vulnerabilities to substandard and falsified medicines. Addressing this gap, we report on a study that investigated decision-making around the stocking of antimalarial products among private-sector medicine retailers in Ghana. Licensed retail pharmacies and over-the-counter (OTC) medicine retail outlets were sampled across six regions of Ghana using a two-stage stratified sampling procedure, with antimalarial medicines categorised as 'expensive,' 'mid-range,' and 'cheaper,' relative to other products in the shop. Retailers were asked about their motivations for choosing to stock particular products over others. The reasons were grouped into three categories: financial, reputation/experience and professional recommendation. Reputation/experience (76%, 95% CI 72.0% to 80.7%) were the drivers of antimalarial stocking decisions, followed by financial reasons (53.2%, 95% CI 48.1% to 58.3%) and recommendation by certified health professionals (24.7%, 95% CI 20.3% to 29.1%). Financial considerations were particularly influential in stocking decisions of cheaper medicines. Moreover, pharmacies and OTCs without a qualified pharmacist were significantly more likely to indicate financial reasons as a motivation for stocking decisions. No significant differences in stocking decisions were found by geographical location (zone and urban/rural) or outlet (pharmacy/OTC). These findings have implications for the management of antimalarial quality across supply chains in Ghana, with potentially important consequences for malaria control, particularly in lower-income areas where people rely on low-cost medication.
全球卫生工作,如疟疾控制,需要高效的药品供应链,以确保将质量有保证的药物有效提供给有需要的人。然而,目前对于抗疟供应链中的决策过程以及劣药和假药的潜在漏洞知之甚少。为了弥补这一空白,我们报告了一项研究,该研究调查了加纳私营部门药品零售商在库存抗疟产品方面的决策。我们采用两阶段分层抽样程序,在加纳六个地区抽取了持牌零售药店和非处方(OTC)药品零售店,将抗疟药品相对于店内其他产品归类为“昂贵”、“中等”和“便宜”。我们询问零售商选择库存特定产品而不是其他产品的动机。这些原因分为三类:财务、声誉/经验和专业推荐。声誉/经验(76%,95%置信区间 72.0%至 80.7%)是抗疟药物库存决策的驱动因素,其次是财务原因(53.2%,95%置信区间 48.1%至 58.3%)和认证健康专业人员的推荐(24.7%,95%置信区间 20.3%至 29.1%)。财务考虑因素在较便宜药物的库存决策中尤为重要。此外,没有合格药剂师的药店和 OTC 更有可能表示财务原因是库存决策的动机。地理位置(区和城乡)或网点(药店/OTC)对库存决策没有显著影响。这些发现对加纳供应链中抗疟药物质量的管理具有影响,对抗疟控制具有潜在的重要影响,特别是在低收入地区,人们依赖低成本药物。