作者
Karin Wiedenmayer, Romuald Mbwasi, William Mfuko, Ezekiel Mpuya, James Charles, Fiona Chilunda, Denis Mbepera, Ntuli Kapologwe
发表日期
2019/12
期刊
Journal of pharmaceutical policy and practice
卷号
12
期号
1
页码范围
1-10
出版商
BioMed Central
简介
The availability of medicines in public health facilities in Tanzania is problematic. Medicines shortages are often caused by unavailability at Medical Stores Department, the national supplier for public health facilities. During such stock-outs, districts may purchase from private suppliers. However, this procedure is intransparent, bureaucratic and uneconomic. To complement the national supply chain in case of stock-outs with a simplified, transparent and efficient procurement procedure based on a public-private partnership approach with a prime vendor at the regional level. To develop a successful pilot of a Prime Vendor system with the potential for national scale-up. A public-private partnership was established engaging one private sector pharmaceutical supplier as the Prime Vendor to provide the complementary medicines needed by public health facilities in Tanzania. The Dodoma pilot region endorsed the concept involving the private sector, and procedures to procure complementary supplies from a single vendor in a pooled regional contract were developed. A supplier was tendered and contracted based on Good Procurement Practice. Pilot implementation was guided by Standard Operating Procedures, and closely monitored with performance indicators. A 12-step approach for national implementation was applied including cascade training from national to facility level. Each selected vendor signed a contract with the respective regional authority. In the pilot region, tracer medicines availability increased from 69% in 2014 to 94% in 2018. Prime vendor supplies are of assured quality and average prices are comparable to prices of …
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