Availability of Access, Watch, and Reserve groups of essential antibiotics: a cross-sectional survey
Rafi S, Anjum SM, Usman M, Nawaz HA, Chaudhry M, Babar ZU, Rasheed H
Frontiers in public health · 2024-01
Abstract
Background Lower-middle income countries face drastic challenges in Access to essential medicines. Data regarding Pakistan is scarce with no comprehensive study in this regard. The objectives of the study are to document and compare public and private sector availability of all essential antibiotics as well as to conduct a comparison among the AWaRe groups. Methods The study analyzed 103 essential antibiotics comprising 51 Access, 29 Watch, 6 Reserve, and 17 anti-tuberculosis drugs from 15 th August to 10 th September 2020 in Lahore, Pakistan. It included on-spot physical availability and availability trend surveys. The survey sites included five public tertiary care hospitals with one as anchor and four randomly selected. Their hospital pharmacies and one randomly selected private retail pharmacy from the vicinity each hospital comprised the ten sampling sites. Percentage availability for each antibiotic was categorized as high (>80%), fairly high (50-80%), low (30- 30->0%), and not available (0%). Results The mean percentage on-spot availability was 23.76% ± 5.19 (14-25%) for public facilities and 59.20% ± 4.45 (54-66%) for private sector retail pharmacies. The overall percentage of available essential antibiotics varied significantly ( p p ** Conclusion Non-availability of essential medicines is a significant public health challenge at public-sector facilities in Pakistan. It was observed that a number of essential antibiotics were not available in both public and private sectors. A number of corrective strategies are required. This includes the engagement of stakeholder and government bodies. This can help to improve supply chain barriers.
MeSH terms
- Drugs, Essential
- Antitubercular Agents
- Cross-Sectional Studies
- Public Sector
- Health Services Accessibility
- Surveys and Questionnaires