首页> 外文期刊>BMC Health Services Research >“The number of clients is increasing but the supplies are reducing”: provider strategies for responding to chronic antiretroviral (ARV) medicines stock-outs in resource-limited settings: a qualitative study from Uganda
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“The number of clients is increasing but the supplies are reducing”: provider strategies for responding to chronic antiretroviral (ARV) medicines stock-outs in resource-limited settings: a qualitative study from Uganda

机译:“客户数量在增加,但供应却在减少”:在资源有限的情况下应对慢性抗逆转录病毒(ARV)药品缺货的提供者策略:来自乌干达的定性研究

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Despite the increasing frequency of ARV medicines stock-outs in Sub-Saharan Africa, there is little research inquiring into the mitigation strategies devised by frontline health facilities. Many previous studies have focused on ‘upstream’ or national-level drivers of ARVs stock-outs with less empirical attention devoted ‘down-stream’ or at the facility-level. The objective of this study was to examine the strategies devised by health facilities in Uganda to respond to the chronic stock-outs of ARVs. This was a qualitative research design nested within a larger mixed-methods study. We purposively selected 16 health facilities from across Uganda (to achieve diversity with regard to; level of care (primary/ tertiary), setting (rural/urban) and geographic sub-region (northern/ central/western). We conducted 76 Semi-structured interviews with ART clinic managers, clinicians and pharmacists in the selected health facilities supplemented by on-site observations and documentary reviews. Data were analyzed by coding and thematic analyses. Participants reported that facility-level contributors to stock-outs include untimely orders of drugs from suppliers and inaccurate quantification of ARV medicine needs due to a paucity of ART program data. Internal stock management solutions for mitigating stock-outs which emerged include the substitution of ARV medicines which were out of stock, overstocking selected medicines and the use of recently expired drugs. The external solutions for mitigating stock-outs which were identified include ‘borrowing’ of ARVs from peer-providers, re-distributing stock across regions and upward referrals of patients. Systemic drivers of stock-outs were identified. These include the supply of drugs with a short shelf life, oversupply and undersupply of ARV medicines and migration pressures on the available ARVs stock at case-study facilities. Health facilities devised internal stock management strategies and relied on peer-provider networks for ARV medicines during stock-out events. Our study underscores the importance of devising interventions aimed at improving Uganda’s medicines supply chain systems in the quest to reduce the frequency of ARV medicines stock-outs at the front-line level of service delivery. Further research is recommended on the effect of substituting ARV medicines on patient outcomes.
机译:尽管在撒哈拉以南非洲,抗逆转录病毒药物的库存增加,但很少有研究询问一线医疗机构制定的缓解策略。先前的许多研究都集中在ARV缺货的“上游”或国家层面驱动因素上,而“下游”或设施层面的经验较少。这项研究的目的是研究乌干达卫生机构为应对ARVs长期缺货而设计的策略。这是一个定性研究设计,嵌套在一个较大的混合方法研究中。我们有目的地从乌干达各地选择了16个医疗机构(以实现多样化;医疗水平(主要/第三级),环境(农村/城市)和地理区域(北部/中部/西部)。我们进行了76次半在选定的卫生机构内对ART诊所经理,临床医生和药剂师进行了结构化访谈,并进行了现场观察和文献审查,并通过编码和主题分析对数据进行了分析,参与者报告说,设施水平上缺货的原因包括不及时订购药品来自供应商的信息,以及由于ART计划数据的缺乏而导致对ARV药品需求的量化不准确;用于缓解出现的缺货情况的内部库存管理解决方案包括替换无库存的ARV药品,使某些药品库存过多以及使用最近过期的药品药物,用于缓解缺货的外部解决方案包括从同伴提供者“借用”抗逆转录病毒药物,跨地区电子分发股票和患者的向上推荐。确定了缺货的系统性驱动因素。其中包括保质期短的药品供应,抗逆转录病毒药物的供过于求和不足以及个案研究机构现有抗逆转录病毒药物库存的迁移压力。卫生机构制定了内部库存管理策略,并在缺货期间依靠抗病毒药物的同行提供商网络。我们的研究强调了制定旨在改善乌干达药品供应链系统的干预措施的重要性,以期减少一线服务水平上ARV药品缺货的频率。建议进一步研究替代抗逆转录病毒药物对患者预后的影响。

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