Sunday Times (Sri Lanka)

Urgent need to look at 'availabili­ty, accessibil­ity and affordabil­ity' of essential drugs

Former SLMA President and Family Physician, Dr. Ruvaiz Haniffa paints stark and chilling picture

- By Kumudini Hettiarach­chi and Ruqyyaha Deane

Essential medicines – the shortages and their disastrous repercussi­ons are the focus of the Sunday Times this week even as the COVID-19 pandemic is still around and Sri Lanka does not know what awaits at the next corner with regard to the new coronaviru­s.

“Availabili­ty, accessibil­ity and affordabil­ity, are the very basics that we need to look at when focusing on essential medicines,” reiterates a former Sri Lanka Medical Associatio­n (SLMA) President and respected Family Physician, Dr. Ruvaiz Haniffa.

He stressed that for the very first time in Sri Lanka, not just essential medicines but also others are not available, let alone being accessible or affordable. At any given time, among the people, especially with a rapidly- ageing population, 20% or 1 in 5 have at least one non-communicab­le disease ( NCD) and most often not just one but two or three. These people have to be on medication­s life- long and it is the responsibi­lity of the state to make these medicines available to them.

If these medicines are not available, the image Dr. Haniffa paints is stark and chilling.

A person who is a diabetic will take medicine to control his/ her blood sugar and prevent serious adverse impacts on his/her kidneys, eyes and other organs. The medicines help to postpone these adverse impacts and reduce grave risks to his/her life. With each NCD a person has, the risk to his/her life gets doubled or tripled and the one and only way to meet this danger is through the right medication.

Without these essential medicines to control NCDs such as diabetes, hypertensi­on (high blood pressure), cardiovasc­ular disease ( including heart attacks and stroke), renal failure ( severe kidney disease) and more, some will die immediatel­y. Others will suffer lingering illness. This will lead to a terrible quality of life.

Lack of essential medicines will “mess up” lives both the ‘quantity’ and ‘quality’, is the diagnosis of this Family Physician who sees a cross- section of patients – from babies through to adolescenc­e, to middle- age and old age……. from cradle to the grave.

He takes up those with mental illness, many who are not in hospitals but are on medication­s at home.

Can you even imagine the impact on the home and family of having someone with mental illness sans his/her medication­s, he asks detailing how these patients would react at home, while also highlighti­ng how abuse against such vulnerable patients could easily ensue. The family dynamics will certainly go awry and abuse could follow in its wake.

Without naming names, he says that some family members of mentally ill people have pleaded with him to “kohe hari dala denna” their kith and kin. This is because the family cannot cope with the pressure and that is understand­able.

Dr. Haniffa also looks at other vulnerable groups –

The elderly who are facing a terrible plight.

Cancer patients who are getting their lives shortened for lack of drugs and dying sooner than they normally would if drugs are available. Children who are prone to illnesses. Dr. Haniffa next looks at surgeries – routine and emergency. He takes up a simple and common emergency appendecto­my needed if a person has acute appendicit­is. This surgery is needed to remove the appendix when it is infected. If the anaestheti­c drug neostigmin­e is not available, where does Sri Lanka stand? Is it back in the Stone Age? What of urgent emergency operations after a road accident?

With regard to accessibil­ity, people are expecting the health sector including their doctors to see to this basic need, he says, moving onto affordabil­ity which has also become a major issue for people.

“Many people have undergone severe hardship after the pandemic hit. Some have lost their jobs and others have got pay cuts. Online education for their children or online facilities due to their job requiremen­ts has also made inroads into their meagre resources. Now people are grappling with shortages such as food, fuel and gas further eating into their resources,” he says, looking at the dire state Sri Lanka is in.

Into this situation comes a sharp rise in drug prices, he points out.

The example cited is a person on a cocktail of drugs ( at least 3 to 4, many take more) for NCDs. Metformin, an oral medication given to control blood sugar, has shot up in price 20-30% than what it was before.

Do you know what patients will do, asks Dr. Haniffa, pointing out that if a person has to take three tablets a day, he/ she would take it only once or twice a day. Another way that a patient will handle the drug price hike will be to take the medicine prescribed daily on alternate days. It is the same with drugs to control high blood pressure and also high cholestero­l.

He gives another example – many women are prone to urinary tract infections (UTIs). Some get it like the common cold. The medication which was not only cost- effective but also very effective in clearing UTIs was nitrofuran­toin, costing just seven or eight cents per pill. Now it is out of stock and availabili­ty is zero. So doctors have to prescribe more advanced third or fourth generation drugs for a simple ailment.

The repercussi­ons can be imagined with anti- microbial resistance ( AMR) being an imminent threat. AMR occurs when bacteria, viruses, fungi and parasites change over time and no longer respond to medicines making infections harder to treat.

Just this Monday, Dr. Haniffa had seen a person with intractabl­e or long-lasting hiccups which is not a major illness. The less costly chlorproma­zine is not available and now doctors have to prescribe gabapentin which is more expensive.

What happens then is – a family’s other urgent needs such as food which is costing a lot; children’s tuition fees etc will be met first and medicinal needs last, he adds.

 ?? ?? Dr. Ruvaiz Haniffa
Dr. Ruvaiz Haniffa

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