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Getting Medicines to the Poor in ZambiaAuthorNewton Sibanda
Publication DateMay 15, 2008
SummaryThis article documents the results of face-to-face interviews in Zambia with citizen consumers, a pharmacist, a Ministry of Health (MOH) spokesperson, and the executive director of Transparency International Zambia on the subject of medicine availability and affordability in Zambia. Problems cited by interviewees include high costs of non-generic medicine; questionable quality of generic medicine; budget transparency in funding and sale of medicine; bribery and theft; and supply and distribution. Those interviewed in the Garden sector of the capital, Lusaka, describe the costs of medicine as being prohibitive for the economically poor. Costs can force people to visit traditional healers and buy generic (not always reliable) drug brands. Sometimes the cost forces a decision between buying food and buying medicine. As described here, malaria medication can cost the entire weekly wages of transportation workers or up to 5 weeks wages of a teacher. In order to save money, some pharmacy clients will buy only half their prescription of antibiotics. This can result not only in ongoing illness, but also in antibiotic-resistant diseases. ContactInternational MeTA Secretariat
Medicines Transparency Alliance (MeTA)
112 Malling Street
Lewes East Sussex
BN7 2RJ
United Kingdom (UK)
Tel: 44 0 1273 486 861
Fax: 44 0 1273 478 485
DFID Health Resource Centre
5-23 Old Street
London
EC1V 9HL
United Kingdom (UK)
Tel: 44 0 207 251 9555
Fax: 44 0 207 251 9552
Related SummariesSourceDepartment of International Development (DFID) United Kingdom website accessed on March 10 2009. Placed on the Communication Initiative site March 10 2009 Last Updated March 12 2009 How useful did you find the knowledge and contacts on this page to your work? Post your comments (review comments from others below):COMMENTS POSTED |
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