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Pharmaceuticals are an essential component of health care. But for
many people in low- and middle-income countries, access to the
medicines they need to prevent or treat severe illnesses is
limited. Typical problems are lack of availability, costs that
exceed the individual s purchasing power or lack of competent
agents health workers that are well trained to give the correct
advice on which medicines to take. Pharmaceutical policy is the
part of health policy that aims at addressing these problems and
increasing access to safe, effective and affordable medicines for
all patients. There are many obstacles against achieving these
goals. Such obstacles can arise from financial interests on the
side of suppliers and health care providers, who may benefit from
charging higher prices and issuing more prescriptions than might be
justified from a clinical and economic viewpoint. Or from rogue
suppliers trying to introduce low quality or counterfeit drugs into
markets with less effective regulation. Also, corruption and
ineffective bureaucracies sometimes interfere with well intended
programs to offer access to essential medicines for the poor. This
book offers policy makers a hands-on approach, tested in the World
Bank s field work in many countries, for assessing the
pharmaceutical sector, recognizing typical patterns of dysfunction
and developing strategies to quickly deal with the most urgent
problems while at the same time building a platform for sustainable
long term policy. It offers examples from a variety of low- and
middle income countries and provides practical assessment tools for
policy makers. The book ends with the author s outlook on future
developments in this complex policy field."
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