The Herald (South Africa)

Contract delays get blame for pill shortages

- Dave Chambers

FAILURE to sign new contracts before old ones expire is one of the main reasons patients in the public healthcare system are left without medicine.

The other factors are an absence of contracts for certain medicines and suppliers’ failure to meet contractua­l agreements‚ a team from the school of public health at the University of the Western Cape has found.

Writing in the South African Medical Journal‚ team leader Bvudzai Magadzire said the shortcomin­gs uncovered after questionin­g 70 health workers and managers in the Western Cape posed a critical problem.

“The challenges imposed by stockouts are becoming more evident against the backdrop of increased demand for chronic disease treatment‚ but they are not new‚” she said.

“Minimising stock-outs requires action at a national level‚ where procuremen­t takes place‚ to ensure that tenders are awarded timeously and supplier performanc­e is monitored.”

Magadzire and her team looked at the availabili­ty of five popular medicines between 2012 and 2014‚ and the health staff they questioned said late tender awards caused problems every two years‚ when contracts expired.

One respondent told the researcher­s: “The national Department of Health knows exactly when the tender is going to end but the process takes so long.

“Then they have to ask the current tender companies to extend their contract for one or two months.”

Another respondent said: “I think there is a lack of understand­ing with our tender guys that these pharmaceut­ical manufactur­ers sometimes plan two years in advance.”

Poor communicat­ion about medicine requiremen­ts was also a problem.

“A case in point: about 70 items were excluded from the most recent national tender at the time of the study without first consulting provinces‚” Magadzire said.

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