Isfahan University of Medical Sciences

Science Communicator Platform

Stay connected! Follow us on X network (Twitter):
Share By
Availability and Affordability of Essential Medicines for Diabetes Across High-Income, Middle-Income, and Low-Income Countries: A Prospective Epidemiological Study Publisher Pubmed



Chow CK1, 2 ; Ramasundarahettige C2 ; Hu W2 ; Alhabib KF3 ; Cheng X5 ; Chifamba J6 ; Dagenais G7 ; Dans A8 ; Egbujie BA9 ; Gupta R10 ; Iqbal R11 ; Ismail N12 ; Keskinler MV13 ; Khatib R14 Show All Authors
Authors
  1. Chow CK1, 2
  2. Ramasundarahettige C2
  3. Hu W2
  4. Alhabib KF3
  5. Cheng X5
  6. Chifamba J6
  7. Dagenais G7
  8. Dans A8
  9. Egbujie BA9
  10. Gupta R10
  11. Iqbal R11
  12. Ismail N12
  13. Keskinler MV13
  14. Khatib R14
  15. Kruger L15
  16. Kumar R16
  17. Lanas F17
  18. Lear S18
  19. Lopezjaramillo P19
  20. Mckee M20
  21. Mohammadifard N21
  22. Mohan V22
  23. Mony P23
  24. Orlandini A24
  25. Rosengren A25
  26. Vijayakumar K26
  27. Wei L5
  28. Yeates K27
  29. Yusoff K28, 29
  30. Yusuf R30
  31. Yusufali A31
  32. Zatonska K32
  33. Zhou Y33
  34. Islam S34
  35. Corsi D2
  36. Rangarajan S2
  37. Teo K2
  38. Gerstein HC2
  39. Yusuf S2

Source: The Lancet Diabetes and Endocrinology Published:2018


Abstract

Background: Data are scarce on the availability and affordability of essential medicines for diabetes. Our aim was to examine the availability and affordability of metformin, sulfonylureas, and insulin across multiple regions of the world and explore the effect of these on medicine use. Methods: In the Prospective Urban Rural Epidemiology (PURE) study, participants aged 35–70 years (n=156 625) were recruited from 110 803 households, in 604 communities and 22 countries; availability (presence of any dose of medication in the pharmacy on the day of audit) and medicine cost data were collected from pharmacies with the Environmental Profile of a Community's Health audit tool. Our primary analysis was to describe the availability and affordability of metformin and insulin and also commonly used and prescribed combinations of two medicines for diabetes management (two oral drugs, metformin plus a sulphonylurea [either glibenclamide (also known as glyburide) or gliclazide] and one oral drug plus insulin [metformin plus insulin]). Medicines were defined as affordable if the cost of medicines was less than 20% of capacity-to-pay (the household income minus food expenditure). Our analyses included data collected in pharmacies and data from representative samples of households. Data on availability were ascertained during the pharmacy audit, as were data on cost of medications. These cost data were used to estimate the cost of a month's supply of essential medicines for diabetes. We estimated affordability of medicines using income data from household surveys. Findings: Metformin was available in 113 (100%) of 113 pharmacies from high-income countries, 112 (88·2%) of 127 pharmacies in upper-middle-income countries, 179 (86·1%) of 208 pharmacies in lower-middle-income countries, 44 (64·7%) of 68 pharmacies in low-income countries (excluding India), and 88 (100%) of 88 pharmacies in India. Insulin was available in 106 (93·8%) pharmacies in high-income countries, 51 (40·2%) pharmacies in upper-middle-income countries, 61 (29·3%) pharmacies in lower-middle-income countries, seven (10·3%) pharmacies in lower-income countries, and 67 (76·1%) of 88 pharmacies in India. We estimated 0·7% of households in high-income countries and 26·9% of households in low-income countries could not afford metformin and 2·8% of households in high-income countries and 63·0% of households in low-income countries could not afford insulin. Among the 13 569 (8·6% of PURE participants) that reported a diagnosis of diabetes, 1222 (74·0%) participants reported diabetes medicine use in high-income countries compared with 143 (29·6%) participants in low-income countries. In multilevel models, availability and affordability were significantly associated with use of diabetes medicines. Interpretation: Availability and affordability of essential diabetes medicines are poor in low-income and middle-income countries. Awareness of these global differences might importantly drive change in access for patients with diabetes. Funding: Full funding sources listed at the end of the paper (see Acknowledgments). © 2018 Elsevier Ltd
Other Related Docs