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Published in: Malaria Journal 1/2015

Open Access 01-12-2015 | Research

The Affordable Medicines Facility-malaria (AMFm): are remote areas benefiting from the intervention?

Authors: Yazoume Ye, Fred Arnold, Abdisalan Noor, Marilyn Wamukoya, John Amuasi, Samuel Blay, Blessing Mberu, Ruilin Ren, Catherine Kyobutungi, Frederick Wekesah, Hellen Gatakaa, Mitsuru Toda, Julius Njogu, Illah Evance, Kathryn O’Connell, Tanya Shewchuk, Sarah Thougher, Andrea Mann, Barbara Willey, Catherine Goodman, Kara Hanson

Published in: Malaria Journal | Issue 1/2015

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Abstract

Background

To assess the availability, price and market share of quality-assured artemisinin-based combination therapy (QAACT) in remote areas (RAs) compared with non-remote areas (nRAs) in Kenya and Ghana at end-line of the Affordable Medicines Facility-malaria (AMFm) intervention.

Methods

Areas were classified by remoteness using a composite index computed from estimated travel times to three levels of service centres. The index was used to five categories of remoteness, which were then grouped into two categories of remote and non-remote areas. The number of public or private outlets with the potential to sell or distribute anti-malarial medicines, screened in nRAs and RAs, respectively, was 501 and 194 in Ghana and 9980 and 2353 in Kenya. The analysis compares RAs with nRAs in terms of availability, price and market share of QAACT in each country.

Results

QAACT were similarly available in RAs as nRAs in Ghana and Kenya. In both countries, there was no statistical difference in availability of QAACT with AMFm logo between RAs and nRAs in public health facilities (PHFs), while private-for-profit (PFP) outlets had lower availability in RA than in nRAs (Ghana: 66.0 vs 82.2 %, p < 0.0001; Kenya: 44.9 vs 63.5 %, p = <0.0001. The median price of QAACT with AMFm logo for PFP outlets in RAs (USD1.25 in Ghana and USD0.69 in Kenya) was above the recommended retail price in Ghana (US$0.95) and Kenya (US$0.46), and much higher than in nRAs for both countries. QAACT with AMFm logo represented the majority of QAACT in RAs and nRAs in Kenya and Ghana. In the PFP sector in Ghana, the market share for QAACT with AMFm logo was significantly higher in RAs than in nRAs (75.6 vs 51.4 %, p < 0.0001). In contrast, in similar outlets in Kenya, the market share of QAACT with AMFm logo was significantly lower in RAs than in nRAs (39.4 vs 65.1 %, p < 0.0001).

Conclusion

The findings indicate the AMFm programme contributed to making QAACT more available in RAs in these two countries. Therefore, the AMFm approach can inform other health interventions aiming at reaching hard-to-reach populations, particularly in the context of universal access to health interventions. However, further examination of the factors accounting for the deep penetration of the AMFm programme into RAs is needed to inform actions to improve the healthcare delivery system, particularly in RAs.
Footnotes
1
Public health facilities and Part one pharmacies typically serve a large number of patients and may be the main providers of QAACT. However, few of these outlets were expected to be in any given cluster. Therefore, public health facilities and part one pharmacies were oversampled. For each sampled subdistrict, public health facilities and part one pharmacies found in the district in which the sub-district was located were censused [5], AMFm Independent Evaluation Team 2012).
 
2
Unit-dose packages intended for a 2-year old/10-kg child.
 
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Metadata
Title
The Affordable Medicines Facility-malaria (AMFm): are remote areas benefiting from the intervention?
Authors
Yazoume Ye
Fred Arnold
Abdisalan Noor
Marilyn Wamukoya
John Amuasi
Samuel Blay
Blessing Mberu
Ruilin Ren
Catherine Kyobutungi
Frederick Wekesah
Hellen Gatakaa
Mitsuru Toda
Julius Njogu
Illah Evance
Kathryn O’Connell
Tanya Shewchuk
Sarah Thougher
Andrea Mann
Barbara Willey
Catherine Goodman
Kara Hanson
Publication date
01-12-2015
Publisher
BioMed Central
Published in
Malaria Journal / Issue 1/2015
Electronic ISSN: 1475-2875
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1186/s12936-015-0904-z

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