|  | 
| 
Today, the European
  Association of Hospital Pharmacists (EAHP) released the results of its 2019 Medicines
  Shortages Survey which showed that the number of hospital
  pharmacists reporting shortages to be a problem in their hospital increased
  compared to data published by EAHP in 2014 and 2018.  
For the first time,
  EAHP also reached out to patients, nurses, physicians and other healthcare
  professionals to gather their impressions. EAHP’s data collection aimed at
  obtaining more information on reasons for and management of medicines
  shortages as well as details on their impact on patients. The survey was open
  between November 2019 and mid-January 2020 and therefore did not take into
  account the availability problems that are currently arising due to the
  COVID-19 pandemic. 
More than half of the
  participating hospital pharmacists indicated that they had experienced
  shortages having an impact on patient care in their hospital. A similar
  response rate was observed for physicians and other healthcare professionals.
  Delays in care or therapy, suboptimal treatment, including inferior efficacy,
  and cancellation of care were most frequently communicated. Hospital
  pharmacists, physicians and nurses named antimicrobial agents as the type of
  medicine mostly in shortages, while other healthcare professionals noticed
  more frequent shortages for oncology medicines.  
The 2019 EAHP
  Medicines Shortages Survey also collected impressions about the
  reasons for medicine shortages. For hospital pharmacists, the global shortage
  of an active pharmaceutical ingredient as well as manufacturing and supply
  chain problems ranked the highest, while physicians included the pricing of a
  medicine, supply chain problems and issues related to parallel export as the
  leading reasons for medicines shortages. Several patients that participated
  in the data collection activity stressed their dissatisfaction with how their
  problem was handled since they desired the provision of more detailed reasons
  behind not receiving the prescribed treatment.  
When comparing the
  percentage of hospital pharmacists disclosing that medicines shortages are a
  problem for delivering the best care to patients, it was observed that this
  figure rose between 2018 and 2019.  While in 2018 91.8% of hospital
  pharmacists stressed that shortages are a problem in hospitals, 95% of
  hospital pharmacists had this impression in 2019. Feedback from the other
  professions differed, with 89% of healthcare professionals taking the survey
  agreeing that medicines shortages are a problem, while only 62% of nurses and
  71% of physicians shared this view. 
Medicines shortages
  affect patient care and healthcare professionals’ daily work. Better
  enforcing the mandatory early notification requirements and requiring
  structured mitigation responses is recognised by all respondents as the best
  strategy to tackle shortages. EAHP consequently seeks to encourage all
  involved actors, including hospital pharmacists, to adopt reactive measures,
  such as carrying out prospective risk assessments, as well as proactive
  measures, like prudent tendering practices. Also, the Association would like
  to reiterate its request linked to the improvement of transparency and
  information sharing. Only a comprehensive communication strategy on shortages
  targeting all European states will ensure that all supply chain actors,
  including hospital pharmacists, receive adequate information on the shortage
  of medicines in their country. 
The information of the report is also summarised in
  infographics for: | 
No comments:
Post a Comment