Author: Shukar, Sundus; Zahoor, Fatima; Hayat, Khezar; Saeed, Amna; Gillani, Ali Hassan; Omer, Sumaira; Hu, Shuchen; Babar, Zaheer-Ud-Din; Fang, Yu; Yang, Caijun
Title: Drug Shortage: Causes, Impact, and Mitigation Strategies Cord-id: y5bhl6j4 Document date: 2021_7_9
ID: y5bhl6j4
Snippet: Drug shortage is a global issue affecting low, middle, and high-income countries. Many countries have developed various strategies to overcome the problem, while the problem is accelerating, affecting the whole world. All types of drugs, such as essential life-saving drugs, oncology medicines, antimicrobial drugs, analgesics, opioids, cardiovascular drugs, radiopharmaceutical, and parenteral products, are liable to the shortage. Among all pharmaceutical dosage forms, sterile injectable products
Document: Drug shortage is a global issue affecting low, middle, and high-income countries. Many countries have developed various strategies to overcome the problem, while the problem is accelerating, affecting the whole world. All types of drugs, such as essential life-saving drugs, oncology medicines, antimicrobial drugs, analgesics, opioids, cardiovascular drugs, radiopharmaceutical, and parenteral products, are liable to the shortage. Among all pharmaceutical dosage forms, sterile injectable products have a higher risk of shortage than other forms. The causes of shortage are multifactorial, including supply issues, demand issues, and regulatory issues. Supply issues consist of manufacturing problems, unavailability of raw materials, logistic problems, and business problems. In contrast, demand issues include just-in-time inventory, higher demand for a product, seasonal demand, and unpredictable demand. For regulatory issues, one important factor is the lack of a unified definition of drug shortage. Drug shortage affects all stakeholders from economic, clinical, and humanistic aspects. WHO established global mitigation strategies from four levels to overcome drug shortages globally. It includes a workaround to tackle the current shortage, operational improvements to reduce the shortage risk and achieve early warning, changes in governmental policies, and education and training of all health professionals about managing shortages.
Search related documents:
Co phrase search for related documents- active pharmaceutical ingredient and low income: 1
- acute shortage and low income: 1
- adherence increase and low income: 1, 2
- adherence increase and low income middle income: 1
- administration fda and low income: 1
- administration food and low income: 1, 2, 3
- lmic institution and low income: 1
- lmic institution and low income country: 1
- lmic institution and low income middle income: 1
- lmics low middle income country and low income: 1, 2
- lmics low middle income country and low income country: 1, 2
- lmics low middle income country and low income middle income: 1
Co phrase search for related documents, hyperlinks ordered by date