Health equity, care access and quality in headache – part 2

Bianca Raffaelli, Eloísa Rubio-Beltrán, Soo-Jin Cho, Roberto De Icco, Alejandro Labastida-Ramirez, Dilara Onan, Raffaele Ornello, Ruth Ruscheweyh, Marta Waliszewska-Prosół, Roberta Messina, Francesca Puledda
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Abstract

Headache disorders are a global public health concern affecting diverse populations. This review examines headache service organizations in low-, middle-, and high-income countries. It addresses global challenges in pharmacological headache treatment, with a focus on safety, tolerability, reproductive and child health, and outlines disparities in accessing innovative treatments worldwide. Organized headache services are essential due to the wide prevalence and varying severity of headache disorders. The tiered headache service model is globally recognized, although its implementation varies based on financial and workforce considerations. Headache burden affects well-being, causing disability, economic challenges, and work limitations, irrespective of location or income. All nations still require improved diagnosis and treatment, and the majority of countries face obstacles including limited access, awareness, economic barriers, and inadequate health policies. Provided adequate internet availability, telemedicine could help improve health equity by expanding access to headache care, since it can offer patients access to services without lengthy waiting times or extensive travel and can provide healthcare unavailable in underserved areas due to staff shortages. Numerous health disparities restrict global access to many headache medications, especially impacting individuals historically excluded from randomized controlled trials, such as those with cardiovascular and cerebrovascular conditions, as well as pregnant women. Furthermore, despite advancements in researching migraine treatments for young patients, the options for treatment remain limited. Access to headache treatment relies on factors like medication availability, approval, financial coverage, and healthcare provider expertise. Inadequate public awareness leads to neglect by policymakers and undertreatment by patients and healthcare providers. Global access discrepancies are exacerbated by the introduction of novel disease-specific medications, particularly impacting Asian, African, and Latin American nations excluded from clinical trials. While North America and Europe experience broad availability of migraine treatments, the majority of countries worldwide lack access to these therapies. Healthcare disparities, treatment access, and medication availability are concerning issues in headache medicine. Variations in national healthcare systems impact headache management, and costly innovative drugs are widening these gaps. Healthcare practitioners and experts should acknowledge these challenges and work towards minimizing access barriers for equitable global headache care in the future.
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令人头痛的医疗公平、医疗服务的获取和质量--第 2 部分
头痛疾病是影响不同人群的全球性公共健康问题。本综述研究了低收入、中等收入和高收入国家的头痛服务机构。它探讨了头痛药物治疗所面临的全球性挑战,重点关注安全性、耐受性、生殖健康和儿童健康,并概述了世界各地在获得创新治疗方面存在的差异。由于头痛疾病发病率高且严重程度不同,有组织的头痛服务至关重要。分级头痛服务模式已得到全球认可,但其实施情况因财政和劳动力方面的考虑而有所不同。头痛负担影响着人们的福祉,导致残疾、经济困难和工作限制,与地点或收入无关。所有国家仍然需要改进诊断和治疗,而大多数国家都面临着各种障碍,包括获取途径有限、认识不足、经济障碍和卫生政策不完善。如果有足够的互联网可用性,远程医疗可以通过扩大头痛护理的可及性帮助改善健康公平,因为它可以为患者提供服务,而无需漫长的等待时间或长途跋涉,还可以为服务不足地区提供因人员短缺而无法提供的医疗保健服务。许多健康差异限制了全球对许多头痛药物的获取,尤其是对历来被排除在随机对照试验之外的人群造成了影响,如心脑血管疾病患者和孕妇。此外,尽管针对年轻患者的偏头痛治疗研究取得了进展,但治疗方案仍然有限。获得头痛治疗的途径取决于药物的可获得性、批准情况、经济保障和医疗服务提供者的专业知识等因素。公众认识不足导致政策制定者的忽视以及患者和医疗服务提供者的治疗不力。新型疾病特效药物的推出加剧了全球在获得药物方面的差异,尤其是对被排除在临床试验之外的亚洲、非洲和拉丁美洲国家的影响。虽然北美和欧洲广泛提供偏头痛治疗药物,但全球大多数国家都无法获得这些疗法。医疗保健差距、治疗机会和药物供应是头痛医学中令人担忧的问题。各国医疗体系的差异影响着头痛的治疗,而昂贵的创新药物正在扩大这些差距。医疗从业人员和专家应认识到这些挑战,并努力将治疗障碍降至最低,以在未来实现公平的全球头痛治疗。
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