A public-health approach to site-specific formulary management: addressing deficient drug supplies in Malawi

Objectives  Maintaining a well‐stocked dispensary at a private non‐profit clinic in a developing country can often be challenging due to limited financial and human resources. Organizations face frequent drug shortages, excesses of unnecessary medications and potentially inappropriate international...

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Published in:The International journal of pharmacy practice Vol. 19; no. 3; pp. 201 - 205
Main Authors: Lauffenburger, Julie C., Jonkman, Lauren J., Lange, C. Elliott, Connor, Sharon E., Sibale, Chakunja
Format: Journal Article
Language:English
Published: Oxford, UK Blackwell Publishing Ltd 01-06-2011
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Abstract Objectives  Maintaining a well‐stocked dispensary at a private non‐profit clinic in a developing country can often be challenging due to limited financial and human resources. Organizations face frequent drug shortages, excesses of unnecessary medications and potentially inappropriate international donations. To promote adherence to international recommendations and enable targeted requests for international drug donations, this paper describes a process using a public‐health approach to create a site‐specific pharmacy formulary in a resource‐poor setting using the World Health Organization's (WHO) Model List of Essential Medicines (‘Model List’). Methods  The study site was a Malawian‐run non‐profit private clinic serving over 3000 people annually. The organization focuses on providing community support for orphans from the HIV/AIDS crisis in sub‐Saharan Africa. While using the Model List as a backbone, we incorporated the clinic's drug inventory, patient needs, clinician prescribing patterns, and the country's national drug list into the final formulary. After analyzing site‐specific factors, we determined which WHO Model List therapeutic classes were necessary for the clinic to address in the final formulary. Key findings  Of the drug products currently available in the inventory, 65.6% were expired, 29.8% of which were international donations. After removing expired medications from the inventory, seven Model List priority categories remained unaddressed by the clinic's initial inventory. Based on the results of a structured needs assessment, 54 products were selected for the final simplified formulary. Conclusions  Conscious selection of pharmaceuticals, resulting in a systematic formulary for drug distribution management, is critical so that a clinic can focus on procuring and prescribing the most needed medications. This selection process using the WHO Model List and a public‐health approach to drug management could serve as a private clinic model for pharmaceutical optimization and targeted international drug donations in sub‐Saharan Africa and other resource limited settings.
AbstractList Maintaining a well-stocked dispensary at a private non-profit clinic in a developing country can often be challenging due to limited financial and human resources. Organizations face frequent drug shortages, excesses of unnecessary medications and potentially inappropriate international donations. To promote adherence to international recommendations and enable targeted requests for international drug donations, this paper describes a process using a public-health approach to create a site-specific pharmacy formulary in a resource-poor setting using the World Health Organization's (WHO) Model List of Essential Medicines ('Model List'). The study site was a Malawian-run non-profit private clinic serving over 3000 people annually. The organization focuses on providing community support for orphans from the HIV/AIDS crisis in sub-Saharan Africa. While using the Model List as a backbone, we incorporated the clinic's drug inventory, patient needs, clinician prescribing patterns, and the country's national drug list into the final formulary. After analyzing site-specific factors, we determined which WHO Model List therapeutic classes were necessary for the clinic to address in the final formulary. Of the drug products currently available in the inventory, 65.6% were expired, 29.8% of which were international donations. After removing expired medications from the inventory, seven Model List priority categories remained unaddressed by the clinic's initial inventory. Based on the results of a structured needs assessment, 54 products were selected for the final simplified formulary. Conscious selection of pharmaceuticals, resulting in a systematic formulary for drug distribution management, is critical so that a clinic can focus on procuring and prescribing the most needed medications. This selection process using the WHO Model List and a public-health approach to drug management could serve as a private clinic model for pharmaceutical optimization and targeted international drug donations in sub-Saharan Africa and other resource limited settings.
Objectives Maintaining a well-stocked dispensary at a private non-profit clinic in a developing country can often be challenging due to limited financial and human resources. Organizations face frequent drug shortages, excesses of unnecessary medications and potentially inappropriate international donations. To promote adherence to international recommendations and enable targeted requests for international drug donations, this paper describes a process using a public-health approach to create a site-specific pharmacy formulary in a resource-poor setting using the World Health Organization's (WHO) Model List of Essential Medicines ('Model List'). Methods The study site was a Malawian-run non-profit private clinic serving over 3000 people annually. The organization focuses on providing community support for orphans from the HIV/AIDS crisis in sub-Saharan Africa. While using the Model List as a backbone, we incorporated the clinic's drug inventory, patient needs, clinician prescribing patterns, and the country's national drug list into the final formulary. After analyzing site-specific factors, we determined which WHO Model List therapeutic classes were necessary for the clinic to address in the final formulary. Key findings Of the drug products currently available in the inventory, 65.6% were expired, 29.8% of which were international donations. After removing expired medications from the inventory, seven Model List priority categories remained unaddressed by the clinic's initial inventory. Based on the results of a structured needs assessment, 54 products were selected for the final simplified formulary. Conclusions Conscious selection of pharmaceuticals, resulting in a systematic formulary for drug distribution management, is critical so that a clinic can focus on procuring and prescribing the most needed medications. This selection process using the WHO Model List and a public-health approach to drug management could serve as a private clinic model for pharmaceutical optimization and targeted international drug donations in sub-Saharan Africa and other resource limited settings. [PUBLICATION ABSTRACT]
OBJECTIVESMaintaining a well-stocked dispensary at a private non-profit clinic in a developing country can often be challenging due to limited financial and human resources. Organizations face frequent drug shortages, excesses of unnecessary medications and potentially inappropriate international donations. To promote adherence to international recommendations and enable targeted requests for international drug donations, this paper describes a process using a public-health approach to create a site-specific pharmacy formulary in a resource-poor setting using the World Health Organization's (WHO) Model List of Essential Medicines ('Model List').METHODSThe study site was a Malawian-run non-profit private clinic serving over 3000 people annually. The organization focuses on providing community support for orphans from the HIV/AIDS crisis in sub-Saharan Africa. While using the Model List as a backbone, we incorporated the clinic's drug inventory, patient needs, clinician prescribing patterns, and the country's national drug list into the final formulary. After analyzing site-specific factors, we determined which WHO Model List therapeutic classes were necessary for the clinic to address in the final formulary.KEY FINDINGSOf the drug products currently available in the inventory, 65.6% were expired, 29.8% of which were international donations. After removing expired medications from the inventory, seven Model List priority categories remained unaddressed by the clinic's initial inventory. Based on the results of a structured needs assessment, 54 products were selected for the final simplified formulary.CONCLUSIONSConscious selection of pharmaceuticals, resulting in a systematic formulary for drug distribution management, is critical so that a clinic can focus on procuring and prescribing the most needed medications. This selection process using the WHO Model List and a public-health approach to drug management could serve as a private clinic model for pharmaceutical optimization and targeted international drug donations in sub-Saharan Africa and other resource limited settings.
Objectives  Maintaining a well‐stocked dispensary at a private non‐profit clinic in a developing country can often be challenging due to limited financial and human resources. Organizations face frequent drug shortages, excesses of unnecessary medications and potentially inappropriate international donations. To promote adherence to international recommendations and enable targeted requests for international drug donations, this paper describes a process using a public‐health approach to create a site‐specific pharmacy formulary in a resource‐poor setting using the World Health Organization's (WHO) Model List of Essential Medicines (‘Model List’). Methods  The study site was a Malawian‐run non‐profit private clinic serving over 3000 people annually. The organization focuses on providing community support for orphans from the HIV/AIDS crisis in sub‐Saharan Africa. While using the Model List as a backbone, we incorporated the clinic's drug inventory, patient needs, clinician prescribing patterns, and the country's national drug list into the final formulary. After analyzing site‐specific factors, we determined which WHO Model List therapeutic classes were necessary for the clinic to address in the final formulary. Key findings  Of the drug products currently available in the inventory, 65.6% were expired, 29.8% of which were international donations. After removing expired medications from the inventory, seven Model List priority categories remained unaddressed by the clinic's initial inventory. Based on the results of a structured needs assessment, 54 products were selected for the final simplified formulary. Conclusions  Conscious selection of pharmaceuticals, resulting in a systematic formulary for drug distribution management, is critical so that a clinic can focus on procuring and prescribing the most needed medications. This selection process using the WHO Model List and a public‐health approach to drug management could serve as a private clinic model for pharmaceutical optimization and targeted international drug donations in sub‐Saharan Africa and other resource limited settings.
Author Jonkman, Lauren J.
Lange, C. Elliott
Lauffenburger, Julie C.
Sibale, Chakunja
Connor, Sharon E.
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  givenname: Lauren J.
  surname: Jonkman
  fullname: Jonkman, Lauren J.
  organization: Department of Pharmacy and Therapeutics, University of Pittsburgh School of Pharmacy
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  givenname: C. Elliott
  surname: Lange
  fullname: Lange, C. Elliott
  organization: University of Pittsburgh School of Medicine, Pittsburgh, PA, USA
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  givenname: Chakunja
  surname: Sibale
  fullname: Sibale, Chakunja
  organization: Malawi Children's Village, Mangochi, Malawi
BackLink https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/21554446$$D View this record in MEDLINE/PubMed
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CitedBy_id crossref_primary_10_1111_poms_13445
crossref_primary_10_1093_inthealth_ihz004
crossref_primary_10_1186_1475_2875_12_52
crossref_primary_10_1016_j_respe_2015_09_009
crossref_primary_10_2139_ssrn_3601808
Cites_doi 10.1186/1478-4491-2-17
10.1016/S0035-9203(02)90231-2
10.1186/1472-6963-7-86
10.1016/0277-9536(91)90035-B
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10.1016/S0140-6736(06)69158-7
10.1016/S0140-6736(03)13375-2
10.1371/journal.pmed.0040128
10.2471/BLT.06.033647
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Snippet Objectives  Maintaining a well‐stocked dispensary at a private non‐profit clinic in a developing country can often be challenging due to limited financial and...
Maintaining a well-stocked dispensary at a private non-profit clinic in a developing country can often be challenging due to limited financial and human...
Objectives Maintaining a well-stocked dispensary at a private non-profit clinic in a developing country can often be challenging due to limited financial and...
OBJECTIVESMaintaining a well-stocked dispensary at a private non-profit clinic in a developing country can often be challenging due to limited financial and...
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SubjectTerms Community support
essential medicines
Formularies as Topic
formulary
Humans
International
Inventory
Malawi
Nonprofit organizations
Pharmaceutical Services - supply & distribution
pharmacy
Public Health
sub-Saharan Africa
Title A public-health approach to site-specific formulary management: addressing deficient drug supplies in Malawi
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https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/abs/10.1111%2Fj.2042-7174.2011.00114.x
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/21554446
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https://search.proquest.com/docview/866045967
Volume 19
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