* *
* * * Home: What MSH Does: TB: Managing Medicines and Supplies

Managing Medicines and Supplies
TB programs must ensure that patients receive drugs of high quality of the right dose at the right time. A young patient in India prepares to take her TB medication. Photo: WHO/TBP/Gary Hampton
Successful management of both first-line and second-line TB medicines and supplies is essential so that these commodities reach and are properly used by the people who need them. Success in Pharmaceutical management cyclecontrolling tuberculosis depends on more than a low price for first-line medicines. TB programs must also ensure that patients receive drugs of high quality in the right dose at the right time. They must support each patient’s treatment for six months or longer to achieve a cure. This requires an unbroken cycle of effectively selecting, procuring, distributing, and using TB medicines.

MSH provides global technical leadership in the management of TB commodities (medicines and supplies). We provide specialized assistance to global initiatives like the Global TB Drug Facility (GDF), Green Light Committee, and the Global Fund for AIDS, Tuberculosis, and Malaria. Through the USAID-funded Rational Pharmaceutical Management Plus (RPM Plus) Program, we strive to both increase global and national awareness of the crucial role of pharmaceutical management and to strengthen the capacity of local health systems so that communities have greater access to high-quality TB medicines and supplies. To pursue these goals, RPM Plus provides technical assistance at the national, regional, and local levels; capacity building and training for TB programs and staff; tools and resources to facilitate program management; and operations research to help identify interventions that improve TB program performance.

MSH’s major areas of work in pharmaceutical management for tuberculosis control include:

Related Country Work:

MSH is presently working in TB pharmaceutical management in Bangladesh, Brazil, China, Congo-Brazzaville, Democratic Republic of Congo, Dominican Republic, Ethiopia, India (Uttar Pradesh), Kenya, Moldova, and Romania.
 

MSH Resources on Managing Medicines:

Resources are in PDF format. Click here for information about installing Acrobat Reader.

Periodicals
Issues of The Manager
Books Tools
*
Highlights
* * * * *
*
* arrow * Managing Pharmaceuticals and Commodities: A Guide for National Tuberculosis Programs
 » English
 » Español
 » Français
*
*
* arrow * Kazakhstan: Assuring the Quality of TB Drugs *
*
* arrow * The Manager: Improving Drug Management to Control Tuberculosis *
*
* arrow * MSH’s International Drug Price Indicator Guide *
*
* arrow * Events *
*
*
*

Kenya

In Kenya, many patients frustrated with frequent stock-outs of TB drugs stopped going to the clinic long before they finished their 6-8 month course of treatment. These frequent interruptions in treatment placed patients—and the entire community—at greater risk for developing multidrug-resistant TB.

Through collaboration with the GDF, MSH has helped develop and implement the use of TB patient kits, each of which contains a full course of treatment for one patient. These patient kits include fixed-dose combination tablets, making the treatment process easier for both patients and health care providers. These kits have also eased the administrative burden on Kenyan supply chain managers by simplifying the treatment regimen.
0 0

*
*