Medicine quality in high-income countries: The obstacles to comparative prevalence studies.

Medicine access @ point of care Pub Date : 2021-10-21 eCollection Date: 2021-01-01 DOI:10.1177/23992026211052272
Bernard David Naughton, Ebru Akgul
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引用次数: 4

Abstract

The entry of falsified and substandard medicines into the legitimate pharmaceutical supply chain has negative impacts on healthcare systems, patient safety, and patient access to medicine. The COVID-19 pandemic has highlighted the importance of access to safe medicine through legitimate pharmaceutical supply chains and the willingness of criminals to target medical products such as PPE (personal protective equipment) and COVID-19 treatments. In this article, we analyse data from the United Kingdom (UK) national medicine alert and recall database to identify and understand recent cases of substandard and falsified medicine in the UK's healthcare systems. Using the UK as a case study, we describe that national drug alert and recall data are useful in their current form to record and understand cases of substandard and falsified medicines in the supply chain. However, if regulatory agencies published further data, these drug recall databases may be useful to support longitudinal and international comparative medicine quality studies. We suggest that regulatory agencies publish the number of affected medicine packs in each recalled batch, as part of the recall process. This will help policy makers, practitioners, and researchers to better understand, monitor and compare the quality of medicines within legitimate supply chains.

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高收入国家的药品质量:比较患病率研究的障碍。
伪造和不合格药品进入合法药品供应链对医疗保健系统、患者安全和患者获得药品产生负面影响。COVID-19大流行凸显了通过合法药品供应链获得安全药品的重要性,以及犯罪分子将个人防护装备(PPE)和COVID-19治疗等医疗产品作为攻击目标的意愿。在这篇文章中,我们分析了来自英国(UK)国家药品警报和召回数据库的数据,以识别和了解最近英国医疗保健系统中不合格和伪造药品的案例。以英国为例,我们描述了国家药品警报和召回数据在当前形式下对于记录和了解供应链中不合格和伪造药品的案例是有用的。然而,如果监管机构公布进一步的数据,这些药物召回数据库可能有助于支持纵向和国际比较医学质量研究。我们建议监管机构公布每个召回批次中受影响药品包装的数量,作为召回过程的一部分。这将有助于决策者、从业者和研究人员更好地了解、监测和比较合法供应链中的药品质量。
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A structural equation modeling of supply chain strategies for artemisinin-based combination therapies in Uganda. Antibiotic consumption at community pharmacies: A multicenter repeated prevalence surveillance using WHO methodology. Assessment of proton-pump inhibitor use at a tertiary teaching hospital in Nigeria. Point-of-care high-sensitivity assay on PATHFAST as the backup in the emergency room. Medicine quality in high-income countries: The obstacles to comparative prevalence studies.
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