Abstract

Despite increased investments in procurement of essential medicines, their availability at health facilities remains extremely low in many low- and middle-income countries. The lack of a well-functioning supply chain for essential medicines is often the cause of this poor availability. Using a randomized trial conducted in 439 health facilities and 24 districts in Zambia, this study helps understand the optimal supply chain structure for essential medicines distribution in the public sector in low-income countries. It shows that a more direct distribution system where clinics order and receive medicines supply directly from the central agency through a cross-docking arrangement significantly reduces the duration and frequency of stockouts compared to a traditional three-level drug distribution system. As an example, the frequency of stockouts for first line pediatric malaria medicines reduced from 47.9% to 13.3% and the number of days of stockout in a quarter reduced from 27 days to 5 days. The direct flow of demand and order information from health facilities to the central supply agency reduces the problem of diffuse accountability that exists in multi-tiered distribution systems. It also shifts the locus of decision making for complex supply chain functions such as scarce stock allocation and adjustment of health facility order quantities to levels in the system where staff competency is aligned with what the function needs. Even when supply chain system redesign such as the one evaluated in this paper are demonstrated to be technically robust using rigorous evidence, they often require navigating a complex political economy within the overall health system and its actors.

Highlights

  • The availability of essential medicines is a persistent challenge in developing countries

  • Using a randomized trial conducted in 439 health facilities and 24 districts in Zambia, this study helps understand the optimal supply chain structure for essential medicines distribution in the public sector in low-income countries

  • A prospective cluster randomized evaluation design with randomization of distribution models conducted at the level of the district was used to measure the comparative effectiveness of Models A and B vis-à-vis the control and with each other. 24 study districts were selected from 72 total districts in Zambia

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Summary

Introduction

The availability of essential medicines is a persistent challenge in developing countries. The Ministry of Health (MOH) of Zambia and its development assistance partners have invested substantial amounts of money in the public-sector drug procurement and distribution system in recent years. Despite these efforts, health centers across Zambia continue to face difficulties accessing drugs and medical supplies in appropriate quantities. Artemether-Lumefantrine, the first line treatment for malaria, was out of stock in 44% of the rural health facilities for an average duration as long as 9.5 weeks.[28] According to the results from the 2008 Malaria Indicator Survey (MIS), only 43% of children under the age of five took an antimalarial within 24 hours of onset of symptom. No more than 16.6% of children living in urban area and 11.5% of those in rural areas took Artemisinin-based combination therapy (ACT), the adopted first line treatment for malaria

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