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Results of EAHP's 2023 shortages survey.
Miljkovic, Nenad; Polidori, Piera; Leonardi Vinci, Daniele; Kuruc Poje, Darija; Makridaki, Despina; Kohl, Stephanie; Süle, András.
Affiliation
  • Miljkovic N; Hospital Pharmacy, Institute of Orthopaedics Banjica, Belgrade, Serbia nenad.hedren@gmail.com.
  • Polidori P; European Association of Hospital Pharmacists, Brussels, Belgium.
  • Leonardi Vinci D; Hospital Pharmacy, The joined hospitals Villa Sofia-Cervello, Palermo, Italy.
  • Kuruc Poje D; Hospital Pharmacy, The joined hospitals Villa Sofia-Cervello, Palermo, Italy.
  • Makridaki D; Hospital Pharmacy, General Hospital "Dr Tomislav Bardek", Koprivnica, Croatia.
  • Kohl S; Pharmacy Services, "Sismanoglio- Amalia Fleming", General Hospital of Attica, Athens, Greece.
  • Süle A; Policy and Advocacy, European Association of Hospital Pharmacists, Brussels, Belgium.
Eur J Hosp Pharm ; 2024 Feb 02.
Article in En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38307707
ABSTRACT
AIMS AND

OBJECTIVE:

The aim of the European Association of Hospital Pharmacists (EAHP)'s 2023 shortages survey was to collect data on causes and mitigation strategies of shortages of medicines and medical devices and their impact on patient care. The survey targeted hospital pharmacists (HPs), physicians (PHYs), nurses (NRS) and other healthcare professionals (OHCPs). A separate set of questions addressed patients (PTNs).

METHODS:

A 49-question survey was carried out by a team at EAHP, collecting information from European HPs, PTNs, NRS, PHYs and OTHCs on shortages of medicines and medical devices in their respective countries. The survey ran from 27 February to 19 May 2023. The results were analysed by EAHP.

RESULTS:

There were 1497 HP responses to the 2023 survey. While 95% (n=1429) of HPs and 86% (n=127) of OHCPs consider medicine shortages an ongoing problem, 84% (n=48) of PHYs and 68% (n=15) of NRS also agreed. Shortages of active pharmaceutical ingredients (77%, n=1148), manufacturing (67%, n=1007) and supply chain problems (50%, n=752) are major causes of shortages according to HPs as well as NRS and OHCPs; PHYs (49%, n=18) consider pricing to be the driver. More than 60% (n=765) of HPs, 55% (n=11) of NRS, 57% (n=30) of PHYs and 46% (n=56) of OHCPs experienced shortages of medical devices in 2022. Antimicrobials were most affected, according to all respondent groups, followed by analgesics, anaesthetics, cardiovascular and paediatric medicines. HPs (59%, n=269), NRS (57%, n=4), OHCPs (56%, n=37) and PHYs (54%, n=14) consider delays in care as the main consequence of medication shortages.

CONCLUSIONS:

Shortages of medicines and medical devices affect healthcare services and patient care. Increased transparency and access to information regarding ongoing and emerging shortages as well as better preparedness of healthcare professionals is crucial to their effective management.
Key words

Full text: 1 Collection: 01-internacional Database: MEDLINE Language: En Journal: Eur J Hosp Pharm Year: 2024 Type: Article

Full text: 1 Collection: 01-internacional Database: MEDLINE Language: En Journal: Eur J Hosp Pharm Year: 2024 Type: Article